Aktuelle Trends: Industriebetriebe in den Neuen Ländern 2011: Kleiner und nach wie vor weniger exportintensiv als ihre westdeutschen Pendants
Gerhard Heimpold
Wirtschaft im Wandel,
No. 5,
2012
Abstract
Betriebe des Verarbeitenden Gewerbes, landläufig auch als Industriebetriebe bezeichnet, sind in den Neuen Ländern nach wie vor weniger intensiv als ihre westdeutschen Pendants in Exportmärkte eingebunden. In ostdeutschen Industriebetrieben beträgt der Anteil der Auslandsumsätze an den Gesamtumsätzen im Jahr 2011 im Durchschnitt 32,3%, der westdeutsche Vergleichswert liegt bei 45,9%. Die relativ niedrige Exportquote der Hamburger Industrie kann mit der Mineralölverarbeitung, die ihre Umsätze vor allem im Inland tätigt, erklärt werden.
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Wie können sich Hochschulen in stärkerem Ausmaß selbst finanzieren? – Das Beispiel Sachsen-Anhalt –
Peter Franz
Wirtschaft im Wandel,
No. 5,
2012
Abstract
Hochschulen gewinnen in einer heraufziehenden Wissensgesellschaft zwar stetig an Bedeutung, sehen sich aber gerade in finanzschwachen Ländern wiederholt mit Unsicherheiten ihrer Finanzierung konfrontiert. Unter diesem Aspekt erweitert der Wandel von der „administrierten“ zur „unternehmerischen Hochschule“ jedoch die
Handlungsspielräume der Hochschulen für eine höhere Selbstfinanzierung. In der vorliegenden Studie wird eruiert, welche neuen Einnahmepotenziale sich den Hochschulen durch diesen Wandel erschließen und welche strategischen Optionen zu einer Einnahmeverbesserung führen könnten. Die Analyse erfolgt am Beispiel der Hochschullandschaft Sachsen-Anhalts, einem Land, das bei schrumpfender Einwohnerzahl und sich verringernden finanziellen Spielräumen vergleichsweise viele Finanzmittel für Hochschulen ausgibt und mit einer wachsenden Zahl von Studierenden konfrontiert ist.
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Do Women Benefit from Competitive Markets? Product Market Competition and the Gender Pay Gap in Germany
Boris Hirsch, Michael Oberfichtner, Claus Schnabel
Economics Bulletin,
No. 2,
2012
Abstract
Using a large linked employer–employee dataset for Germany with a direct plant-level measure of product market competition and controlling for job-cell fixed effects, we investigate whether relative wages of women benefit from strong competition. We find that the unexplained gender pay gap is about 2.4 log points lower in West German plants that face strong product market competition than in those experiencing weak competition, whereas no such link shows up for East Germany.
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IWH-Flash-Indikator: II. und III. Quartal 2012
Katja Drechsel
IWH-Flash-Indikator,
No. 2,
2012
Abstract
Der IWH-Flash-Indikator prognostiziert für das zweite Quartal 2012 eine Wachstumsrate des Bruttoinlandsproduktes von 0,5% und damit eine Fortsetzung der kräftigen konjunkturellen Belebung vom Beginn des Jahres. Im dritten Quartal wird der Zuwachs wohl 0,3% betragen. Deutschland profitiert dabei neben einer wieder höheren Investitionstätigkeit und anhaltender Konsumlaune von einem Anziehen der außereuropäischen Nachfrage. Seit dem Jahreswechsel haben Welthandel und -produktion die Schwächephase während der zweiten Jahreshälfte 2011 überwunden. Eine weitere deutliche Beschleunigung der Expansion ist allerdings nicht zu erwarten.
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Specialization versus Diversification: Perceived Benefits of Different Incubation Models
Michael Schwartz, Christoph Hornych
International Journal of Entrepreneurship and Innovation Management,
No. 3,
2012
Abstract
Business incubator initiatives are a widespread policy instrument for the promotion of entrepreneurship, innovation and the development of new technology-based firms. Recently, there has been an increasing tendency for the more traditional diversified incubators to be superseded by incubators focusing their support elements, processes and selection criteria on firms from one specific sector, and its particular needs. Despite the increasing importance of such specialized incubators in regional innovation strategies, the question of whether they are advantageous has neither been investigated empirically nor discussed theoretically in detail. Drawing on large-scale survey data from 161 firms incubated in either diversified or specialized incubators in Germany, we investigate the benefits to firms of being part of a specialized business incubator as opposed to being part of a generalized business incubator. The investigation of the value-added contribution of specialized incubators, in particular regarding hardware components, business assistance, networking and reputation gains, reveals considerable differences compared to the more diversified incubation model.
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The Internationalization of Science and Its Influence on Academic Entrepreneurship
S. Krabel, D. S. Siegel, Viktor Slavtchev
Journal of Technology Transfer,
No. 2,
2012
Abstract
We examine whether scientists employed in foreign countries and foreign-educated native researchers are more “entrepreneurial” than their “domestic” counterparts. We conjecture that foreign-born and foreign-educated scientists possess broader scientific skills and social capital, which increases their likelihood that they will start their own companies. To test this hypothesis we analyze comprehensive data from researchers at the Max Planck Society in Germany. Our findings provide strong support for the conjecture that academic entrepreneurship can be stimulated by facilitating the mobility of scientists across countries.
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Climate Innovation - The Case of the Central German Chemical Industry
Wilfried Ehrenfeld
IWH Discussion Papers,
No. 2,
2012
Abstract
In this article, we describe the results of a multiple case study on the indirect corporate innovation impact of climate change in the Central German chemical industry. We investigate the demands imposed on enterprises in this context as well as the sources, outcomes and determining factors in the innovative process at the corporate level. We argue that climate change drives corporate innovations through various channels. A main finding is that rising energy prices were a key driver for incremental energy efficiency innovations in the enterprises’ production processes. For product innovation, customer requests were a main driver, though often these requests are not directly related to climate issues. The introduction or extension of environmental and energy management systems as well as the certification of these are the most common forms of organizational innovations. For marketing purposes, the topic of climate change was hardly utilized so far. As the most important determinants for corporate climate innovations, corporate structure and flexibility of the product portfolio, political asymmetry regarding environmental regulation and governmental funding were identified.
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Does the ECB Act as a Lender of Last Resort During the Subprime Lending Crisis?: Evidence from Monetary Policy Reaction Models
Stefan Eichler, K. Hielscher
Journal of International Money and Finance,
No. 3,
2012
Abstract
We investigate whether the ECB aligns its monetary policy with financial crisis risk in EMU member countries. We find that since the outbreak of the subprime crisis the ECB has significantly increased net lending and reduced interest rates when banking and sovereign debt crisis risk in vulnerable EMU countries (Greece, Ireland, Italy, Portugal, and Spain) increases, while no significant effect is identified for the pre-crisis period and relatively tranquil EMU countries (Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, and the Netherlands). These findings suggest that the ECB acts as a Lender of Last Resort for vulnerable EMU countries.
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What Drives Innovation Output from Subsidized R&D Cooperation? — Project-level Evidence from Germany
Michael Schwartz, Michael Fritsch, Jutta Günther, François Peglow
Technovation,
No. 6,
2012
Abstract
Using a large dataset of 406 subsidized R&D cooperation projects, we provide detailed insights into the relationship between project characteristics and innovation output. Patent applications and publications are used as measures for the innovation output of an R&D project. We find that large-firm involvement is strongly positively related with the number of patent applications, but not with the number of publications. Conversely, university involvement has positive effects on projects’ innovation output in terms of the number of publications but not in terms of patent applications. In general, projects’ funding as measure of projects’ size is an important predictor of the innovation output of R&D cooperation projects. No significant effects are found for the number of partners as (an alternative) measure of projects’ size, for spatial proximity between cooperation partners, for the involvement of a public institute for applied research, and for prior cooperation experiences. We derive conclusions for the design of R&D cooperation support schemes.
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The Halle Economic Projection Model
Sebastian Giesen, Oliver Holtemöller, Juliane Scharff, Rolf Scheufele
Economic Modelling,
No. 4,
2012
Abstract
In this paper we develop an open economy model explaining the joint determination of output, inflation, interest rates, unemployment and the exchange rate in a multi-country framework. Our model -- the Halle Economic Projection Model (HEPM) -- is closely related to studies published by Carabenciov et al. Our main contribution is that we model the Euro area countries separately. In doing so, we consider Germany, France, and Italy which represent together about 70 percent of Euro area GDP. The model combines core equations of the New-Keynesian standard DSGE model with empirically useful ad-hoc equations. We estimate this model using Bayesian techniques and evaluate the forecasting properties. Additionally, we provide an impulse response analysis and a historical shock decomposition.
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