Assessment of the environmental performance of European countries over time: addressing the role of carbon leakage and nuclear waste
In: Ilmenau economics discussion papers 90
17 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Ilmenau economics discussion papers 90
In: Industrial dynamics, entrepreneurship and innovation
In: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive
Innovation and Health investigates both the origin and the diffusion of novelty in the field of health. It also provides a critical discussion of the methodology and theory of health economics. Neoclassical and evolutionary elements are combined to produce a comprehensive view of the commodity of 'health' beyond a pure 'market' perspective. Thus, the intangible dimension of health is taken into account. The methodological framework developed serves as a basis for several theoretical and empirical applications such as the creation of medical knowledge, the evolution of networks and the process of invention, innovation and diffusion in the health care sector.
In: Studies in global competition 22
The entrepreneur has been neglected over the years in formal economic theorizing. Previously there has been only eclectic theories such as human capital theory and network dynamics which discuss certain perspectives of entrepreneurial behaviour. This insightful book closes this gap in entrepreneurship literature. Inspired by modern physics, author Thomas Grebel brings together an evolutionary methodology, along the way implicating quantum, graph, and percolation theory. Here, Grebel has provided a synthesis of all the main theories of entrepreneurship. Taking an interdisciplinary approach to the subject, this fascinating book opens up new ideas in modelling and the original thinking contained within will be of interest to all those working in the area of business and management as well as those in economics.
In: Studies in global competition Volume 22
part 1 Part I The Critical Path of the Entrepreneur in Economic Theory -- chapter 1 A Historical Sketch of the Research on Entrepreneurship -- chapter 2 The Neoclassical Era -- chapter 3 The Austrian School -- chapter 4 Synthesis and Summary -- part Part II From the Evolution of Economics to the Economics of Evolution -- chapter 5 Evolutionary Economics -- chapter 6 Synthesis of Evolutionary Ideas -- part 3 Part III Modelling Entrepreneurship from an Evolutionary Perspective -- chapter 7 Point of Departure -- chapter 8 The Homo agens in a Socio-Economic Context -- chapter 9 The Model -- chapter 10 Conclusions and Prospects.
In: Routledge Studies in Global Competition
The entrepreneur has been neglected over the years in formal economic theorizing. Previously there has been only eclectic theories such as human capital theory and network dynamics which discuss certain perspectives of entrepreneurial behaviour. This insightful book closes this gap in entrepreneurship literature. Inspired by modern physics, author Thomas Grebel brings together an evolutionary methodology, along the way implicating quantum, graph, and percolation theory. Here, Grebel has provided a synthesis of all the main theories of entrepreneurship. Taking an interdisciplinary approach to the subject, this fascinating book opens up new ideas in modelling and the original thinking contained within will be of interest to all those working in the area of business and management as well as those in economics.
In: List Forum für Wirtschafts- und Finanzpolitik, Band 43, Heft 3, S. 275-294
ISSN: 2364-3943
In: Structural change and economic dynamics, Band 27, S. 66-78
ISSN: 1873-6017
In: Structural change and economic dynamics, Band 20, Heft 4, S. 301-312
ISSN: 1873-6017
In: Ilmenau economics discussion papers vol. 28, no. 172
This paper argues that regional variation in the efficiency of labor allocation among German manufacturing plants plays a critical role in explaining regional disparities in productivity. In fact, we show that over 50% of the East-West productivity gap is associated with a less efficient labor allocation in former East Germany. Yet, we also demonstrate that the mere focus on East-West comparisons hides partially large differences between the German federal states. These results suggest that regional productivity differences could be substantially narrowed by a more efficient labor allocation among plants. With respect to the underlying causes, we find evidence that the regional differences in allocative efficiency are significantly correlated with differences in export intensity, market concentration and plant size.
In: Ilmenau economics discussion papers vol. 27, no. 169
Since its introduction, the European Emissions Trading Scheme (EU ETS) has been struggling with an oversupply of emission allowances and a highly volatile allowance price. One reason for the price decline is technological progress and ist demand-reducing effect, which is only partially taken into account in the system. We propose a simple benchmark approach to endogenously adjust the supply of allowances to technical progress. Using a non-parametric benchmark approach, we measure the required adjustment of the allowance supply to avoid a technologyinduced price decline and to maintain the incentive to invest in low-carbon technologies.
In: Ilmenau economics discussion papers vol. 28, no. 180
This paper argues that the typical practice of performing growth decompositions based on log-transformed productivity values induces fallacious conclusions: using logs may lead to an inaccurate aggregate growth rate, an inaccurate description of the microsources of aggregate growth, or both. We identify the mathematical sources of this log-induced fallacy in decomposition and analytically demonstrate the questionable reliability of log results. Using firm-level data from the French manufacturing sector during the 2009-2018 period, we empirically show that the magnitude of the log-induced distortions is substantial. Depending on the definition of accurate log measures, we find that around 60-80% of four-digit industry results are prone to mismeasurement. We further find significant correlations of this mismeasurement with commonly deployed industry characteristics, indicating, among other things, that less competitive industries are more prone to log distortions. Evidently, these correlations also a affect the validity of studies that investigate the role of industry characteristics in productivity growth.
SSRN
Working paper
In: Die europäische Energiewende
In: Ilmenau economics discussion papers vol. 28, no. 182
The COVID pandemic caused the political competition between the prime ministers of the German states to reach its peak. Whoever is the best at announcing, launching, or implementing policies to combat the pandemic can hope to capitalize most politically. In this paper, we attempt to document which state leaders are forerunners or latecomers in this political competition, when going more into depth of a region's contextual factors. Based on several databases, we perform a survival analysis to compare state leaders' relative determination to implement COVID policies. As our results show, the forerunners in the political discourse are not necessarily forerunners in the implementation, nor in the enforcement of COVID policies.