Low Skill but High Volatility?
Claudia M. Buch
CESifo Working Paper No. 2665,
2009
Abstract
Globalization may impose a double-burden on low-skilled workers. On the one hand, the relative supply of low-skilled labor increases. This suppresses wages of low-skilled workers and/or increases their unemployment rates. On the other hand, low-skilled workers typically face more limited access to financial markets than high-skilled workers. This limits their ability to smooth shocks to income intertemporally and to share risks across borders. Using cross-country, industry-level data for the years 1970 - 2004, we document how the volatility of hours worked and of wages of workers at different skill levels has changed over time. We develop a stylized theoretical model that is consistent with the empirical evidence, and we test the predictions of the model. Our results show that greater financial globalization and development increases the volatility of employment, and this effect is strongest for low-skilled workers. A higher share of low-skilled employment has a dampening impact.
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Development of Economy and Public Budgets in the Medium Term
Kristina vanDeuverden, Rolf Scheufele
Wirtschaft im Wandel,
No. 1,
2009
Abstract
Die derzeitige Lage der Weltwirtschaft ist von gravierender Unsicherheit gekennzeichnet. Ein Einbruch der wirtschaftlichen Aktivität hat stattgefunden; wie lang und wie schwer die Rezession aber sein wird, ist nicht leicht einzuschätzen. Gerade in dieser Situation ist eine Projektion der konjunkturellen, noch mehr aber der wirtschaftlichen Entwicklung in der mittleren Frist schwierig.
Allerdings müssen wirtschaftliche und politische Entscheidungen nicht nur in einfachen Zeiten getroffen werden. Die Entwicklung der wirtschaftlichen Grundtendenz ist eine wichtige Entscheidungsgrundlage. Auch die Lage der öffentlichen Haushalte und ihre Veränderung über die Zeit sind von grundlegender Bedeutung. Zwar werden neue politische Maßnahmen die Projektion schnell veralten lassen, dennoch ist sie eine hilfreiche Bestandsaufnahme im Vorfeld weiterer Beschlüsse.
In der hier vorgelegten Projektion ist angenommen, dass es gelingt, das Finanzsystem zu stabilisieren, und dass sich bis zum Ende des Projektionszeitraums bremsende Einflüsse auf die Realwirtschaft zurückgebildet haben werden.
Unter dieser Bedingung wird das Bruttoinlandsprodukt in Deutschland im Jahr 2009 um 1,9% sinken. In den Jahren 2010 bis 2013 wird es allerdings mit durchschnittlich 1½% wieder spürbar zulegen. Erste Impulse werden dabei vom Außenhandel ausgehen, später wird die wirtschaftliche Dynamik vor allem von der Inlandsnachfrage getragen werden.
Die Lage der öffentlichen Haushalte wird sich im Gefolge der Finanzkrise deutlich verschlechtern. Neben direkten Auswirkungen der Finanzkrise auf die öffentlichen Haushalte – so der „Schutzschirm“ für die Banken – werden vor allem die realwirtschaftlichen Folgen die Haushalte belasten. Insbesondere wenn die Rezession auf den Arbeitsmarkt übergegriffen hat, werden Mehrausgaben und Mindereinnahmen die Defizite anschwellen lassen. Außerdem sind bereits Maßnahmen zur Stützung der Konjunktur verabschiedet worden, die sich belastend auf die Budgets auswirken.
Nach der hier vorgestellten Projektion wird der öffentliche Gesamthaushalt bis zum Ende des Projektionszeitraums deutliche Defizite aufweisen, allerdings wird die Defizitgrenze des Maastrichter Vertrags nicht überschritten.
Das IWH legt in diesem Winter zum ersten Mal eine Projektion der mittelfristigen Wirtschaftsentwicklung vor. Die methodischen und theoretischen Grundlagen sind in einem Sonderkapitel am Ende des Beitrags ausführlich dargelegt.
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Spillover Effects of Spatial Growth Poles - a Reconciliation of Conflicting Policy Targets?
Alexander Kubis, Mirko Titze, Joachim Ragnitz
IWH Discussion Papers,
No. 8,
2007
Abstract
Regional economic policy faces the challenge of two competing policy goals - reducing regional economic disparities vs. promoting economic growth. The allocation of public funds has to weigh these goals particularly under the restriction of scarce financial re- sources. If, however, some region turns out to be a regional growth pole with positive spillovers to its disadvantaged periphery, regional policies could be designed to recon- cile the conflicting targets. In this case, peripheral regions could indirectly participate in the economic development of their growing cores. We start our investigation by defining and identifying such growth poles among German regions on the NUTS 3 administrative level based on spatial and sectoral effects. Using cluster analysis, we determine significant characteristics for the general identification of growth poles. Patterns in the sectoral change are identified by means of the change in the employment. Finally, we analyze whether and to what extent these growth poles ex- ert spatial spillover effects on neighbouring regions and thus mitigate contradictory in- terests in regional public policy. For this purpose, we apply a Spatial-Cross-Regressive- Model (SCR-Model) including the change in the secondary sector which allows to con- sider functional economic relations on the administrative level chosen (NUTS 3).
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Financial Development in Eastern Europe: The First Ten Years
Johannes Stephan, A. Winkler
TU Spektrum,
No. 2,
2000
Abstract
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Banks’ Internationalization Strategies: The Role of Bank Capital Regulation
Diemo Dietrich, Uwe Vollmer
IWH Discussion Papers,
No. 18,
2006
Abstract
This paper studies how capital requirements influence a bank’s mode of entry into foreign financial markets. We develop a model of an internationally operating bank that creates and allocates liquidity across countries and argue that the advantage of multinational banking over offering cross-border financial services depends on the benefit and the cost of intimacy with local markets. The benefit is that it allows to create more liquidity. The cost is that it causes inefficiencies in internal capital markets, on which a multinational bank relies to allocate liquidity across countries. Capital requirements affect this trade-off by influencing the degree of inefficiency in internal capital markets.
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Progressivity and flexibility in developing an effective competition regime: using experiences of Poland, Ukraine and South Africa for developing countries. Forschungsbericht innerhalb des EU-Projektes: Competition Policy Foundations for Trade Reform, Regulatory Reform, and Sustainable Development, 2005
Franz Kronthaler, Johannes Stephan
Einzelveröffentlichungen,
No. 5,
2005
Abstract
The paper discusses the role of the concept of special and differential treatment in the framework of regional trade agreements for the development of a competition regime. After a discussion of the main characteristics and possible shortfalls of those concepts, three case countries are assessed in terms of their experience with progressivity, flexibility, and technical and financial assistance: Poland was led to align its competition laws to match the model of the EU. The Ukraine opted voluntarily for the European model, this despite its intense integration mainly with Russia. South Africa, a developing country that emerged from a highly segregated social fabric and an economy dominated by large conglomerates with concentrated ownership. All three countries enacted (or comprehensively reformed) their competition laws in an attempt to face the challenges of economic integration and catch up development on the one hand and particular social problems on the other. Hence, their experience may be pivotal for a variety of different developing countries who are in negotiations to include competition issues in regional trade agreements. The results suggest that the design of such competition issues have to reflect country-particularities to achieve an efficient competition regime.
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Enhanced Cooperation in an Enlarged EU, CeGE-Discussion Paper No. 53
J. Ahrens, Renate Ohr, Götz Zeddies
,
2006
Abstract
The paper adresses the need for more flexibility in the integration process of the European Union after its recent eastward enlargement. Due to the increasing number of decision-makers and the increasing heterogeneity of economic structures, financial constraints, societal preferences, and political interests, European integration based on the uniformity principle is hardly feasible. In order to avoid a rank growth of integration and yet to strengthen the momentum of flexibility, so-called enhanced cooperation appears to be an appropriate instrument to be applied to the overall integration process. In this context the paper analyzes different possible developments of selected common policies in the EU if enhanced cooperation is practised by a sub-group of EU-members. Based on cluster analysis similarities and distinctions among the EU members with respect to some specific policy realms are elaborated to identify clusters, or clubs, of countries which may apply the instrument of enhanced cooperation in the specific policy fields.
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Progressivity and Flexibility in Developing an Effective Competition Regime: Using Experiences of Poland, Ukraine, and South Africa for developing countries
Franz Kronthaler, Johannes Stephan
IWH Discussion Papers,
No. 6,
2006
Abstract
The paper discusses the role of the concept of special and differential treatment in the framework of regional trade agreements for the development of a competition regime. After a discussion of the main characteristics and possible shortfalls of those concepts, three case countries are assessed in terms of their experience with progressivity, flexibility, and technical and financial assistance: Poland was led to align its competition laws to match the model of the EU. The Ukraine opted voluntarily for the European model, this despite its intense integration mainly with Russia. South Africa, a developing country that emerged from a highly segregated social fabric and an economy dominated by large conglomerates with concentrated ownership. All three countries enacted (or comprehensively reformed) their competition laws in an attempt to face the challenges of economic integration and catch up development on the one hand and particular social problems on the other. Hence, their experience may be pivotal for a variety of different developing countries who are in negotiations to include competition issues in regional trade agreements. The results suggest that the design of such competition issues have to reflect country-particularities to achieve an efficient competition regime.
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The integration of imperfect financial markets: Implications for business cycle volatility
Claudia M. Buch, C. Pierdzioch
Journal of Policy Modeling,
No. 7,
2005
Abstract
During the last two decades, the degree of openness of national financial systems has increased substantially. At the same time, asymmetries in information and other financial market frictions have remained prevalent. We study the implications of the opening up of national financial systems in the presence of financial market frictions for business cycle volatility. In our empirical analysis, we show that countries with more developed financial systems have lower business cycle volatility. Financial openness has no strong impact on business cycle volatility, in contrast. In our theoretical analysis, we study the implications of the opening up of national financial markets and of financial market frictions for business cycle volatility using a dynamic macroeconomic model of an open economy. We find that the implications of opening up national financial markets for business cycle volatility are largely unaffected by the presence of financial market frictions.
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East German demographic development and the Financial Equalization Scheme
Joachim Ragnitz
Wirtschaft im Wandel,
No. 3,
2005
Abstract
Die ostdeutschen Länder und Gemeinden sind aufgrund ihrer geringen Steuer- und Finanzkraft in erheblichem Maße von finanziellen Leistungen des Bundes und der westdeutschen Länder abhängig. Vielfach wird erwartet, dass diese Transferabhängigkeit in den kommenden Jahren abnehmen wird. Da insbesondere die Zuweisungen im Rahmen des Länderfinanzausgleichs (einschließlich der Umsatzsteuerverteilung und der Fehlbedarfs-Bundesergänzungszuweisungen) von der weiteren Entwicklung der Wirtschaftsleistung in den neuen Ländern abhängen, wird es hierzu aber nur kommen, wenn der Wachstumsprozess in Ostdeutschland in den nächsten Jahren erheblich an Dynamik zulegt.
Im vorliegenden Beitrag wird ausgehend von einer Projektion der gesamtwirtschaftlichen Entwicklung bis zum Jahre 2020 gezeigt, dass die Chancen für eine bedeutsame Verringerung der Zahlungen an die neuen Länder nicht besonders hoch einzuschätzen sind. Unter den hier getroffenen Annahmen zur Entwicklung von Produktivität und Erwerbsquote wird der Umfang des Länderfinanzausgleichs (einschließlich der damit verbundenen Ausgleichssysteme) im Untersuchungszeitraum sogar noch leicht zunehmen. Grund hierfür ist, dass die finanziellen Ausgleichssysteme eine weitgehende Nivellierung von Finanzkraftunterschieden zwischen den Ländern vorsehen und die Höhe der Zahlungen deswegen primär vom gesamtdeutschen Wirtschaftswachstum abhängen. Dennoch wird sich die Finanzlage der ostdeutschen Länder und Gemeinden von einem derzeit noch recht komfortablen Niveau deutlich verschlechtern, da gleichzeitig in diesem Zeitraum die Zuweisungen im Rahmen des Solidarpaktes II vollständig abgeschmolzen werden. Hieraus erwächst die Notwendigkeit, neben einer Anpassung der Ausgaben auch die eigenen Bemühungen zur Stärkung der Wachstumskräfte in Ostdeutschland zu erhöhen.
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