Institution
Kiel Institute for the World Economy
Facility•Kiel, Germany•
About: Kiel Institute for the World Economy is a facility organization based out in Kiel, Germany. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Foreign direct investment & Productivity. The organization has 318 authors who have published 1909 publications receiving 42832 citations. The organization is also known as: Institut für Weltwirtschaft an der Universität Kiel.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that current economic analyses of climate policy tend to over-estimate the degree of carbon leakage, as they abstract from the effects of induced technological change, and conclude that the leakage rates reported in the literature may be too high, as these estimates neglect the effect of price changes on the incentives to innovate.
Abstract: Using a stylized theoretical model, we argue that current economic analyses of climate policy tend to over-estimate the degree of carbon leakage, as they abstract from the effects of induced technological change. We analyse carbon leakage in a two-country model with directed technical change, where only one of the countries enforces an exogenous cap on emissions. Climate policy induces changes in relative prices, that cause carbon leakage through a terms-of-trade effect. However, these changes in relative prices also affect the incentives to innovate in different sectors. This leads to a counterbalancing induced-technology effect, which always reduces carbon leakage. We therefore conclude that the leakage rates reported in the literature may be too high, as these estimates neglect the effect of price changes on the incentives to innovate.
123 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated three main questions: are affiliates of foreign multinationals more likely to exit than domestic firms? Does the exit probability of multinationals depend on its export orientation? And how the presence of multinational companies affect the survival of other firms in the economy?
119 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, an online-experiment on overconfidence in the context of financial markets is presented, which consists of institutional investors, investment advisors and individual investors, all of them being registered users of a large online platform for market sentiment data.
Abstract: This paper presents an online-experiment on overconfidence in the context of financial markets. Our subject pool consists of institutional investors, investment advisors and individual investors, all of them being registered users of a large online platform for market sentiment data. Due to their registration, several socioeconomic characteristics of participants can be controlled for in our analysis. It turns out that there are stable differences in overconfidence between the three investor groups. Moreover, investment experience and age have a significant impact on the degree of overconfidence which goes surprisingly in opposite direction. We argue that these results have important implications for studies analyzing the impact of experience on behavior in (financial) markets.
119 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors consider the empirical relevance of two opposing hypotheses on the causality between income and democracy: the Democratic Transition hypothesis claims that rising incomes cause a transition to democracy, whereas the Critical Junctures hypothesis denies this causal relation.
119 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the effects of corruption on productivity using enterprise data for the economies of Central and Eastern Europe and the CIS and found that bribery is more harmful for firm-level productivity than red tape.
Abstract: Using enterprise data for the economies of Central and Eastern Europe and the CIS, this study examines the effects of corruption on productivity. Corruption is defined as a "bribe tax" and is compared to another form of institutional inefficiency, which is often believed to be closely linked with corruption: the "time tax" imposed on firms by red tape. When testing their effects in the full sample, only the bribe tax appears to have a negative effect on firm-level productivity, while the effect of the time tax is insignificant. At the same time, there is no evidence of a trade-off between the time and the bribe taxes, implying that bribing does not emerge as a second-best option to achieve higher productivity by helping circumvent cumbersome bureaucratic requirements. When the sample is split between EU and non-EU countries, the time tax turns out to have a negative effect only in EU countries and the bribe tax only in non-EU countries. This suggests that the institutional environment influences the way in which firm behaviour affects firm performance. In particular, the impact of bribing for individual firms appears to vary depending on overall institutional quality: in countries where corruption is more prevalent and the legal framework is weaker, bribery is more harmful for firm-level productivity.
119 citations
Authors
Showing all 325 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Richard S.J. Tol | 116 | 695 | 48587 |
Axel Dreher | 78 | 350 | 20081 |
Holger Görg | 67 | 367 | 17161 |
J. Edward Taylor | 50 | 210 | 13967 |
Thomas Lux | 49 | 194 | 11041 |
Dennis J. Snower | 47 | 311 | 9689 |
Xinshen Diao | 46 | 251 | 6568 |
Gabriel Felbermayr | 45 | 272 | 6586 |
Peter Nunnenkamp | 42 | 250 | 5711 |
Ansgar Belke | 42 | 536 | 7383 |
Awudu Abdulai | 41 | 156 | 6555 |
Katrin Rehdanz | 40 | 161 | 6453 |
Martin F. Quaas | 39 | 189 | 5628 |
Michael Hübler | 36 | 194 | 4051 |
Mario Larch | 34 | 146 | 4040 |