Does It Pay to Have Friends? Social Ties and Executive Appointments in Banking
Allen N. Berger, Thomas Kick, Michael Koetter, Klaus Schaeck
Journal of Banking and Finance,
No. 6,
2013
Abstract
We exploit a unique sample to analyze how homophily (affinity for similar others) and social ties affect career outcomes in banking. We test if these factors increase the probability that the appointee to an executive board is an outsider without previous employment at the bank compared to being an insider. Homophily based on age and gender increase the chances of the outsider appointments. Similar educational backgrounds, in contrast, reduce the chance that the appointee is an outsider. Greater social ties also increase the probability of an outside appointment. Results from a duration model show that larger age differences shorten tenure significantly, whereas gender similarities barely affect tenure. Differences in educational backgrounds affect tenure differently across the banking sectors. Maintaining more contacts to the executive board reduces tenure. We also find weak evidence that social ties are associated with reduced profitability, consistent with cronyism in banking.
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German Unification and the ‘Market Adoption’ Hypothesis
Udo Ludwig, John B. Hall
Cambridge Journal of Economics,
1995
Abstract
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Does Country Context Distance Determine Subsidiary Decision-making Autonomy? Theory and Evidence from European Transition Economies
Gjalt de Jong, Vo. van Dut, Björn Jindra, Philipp Marek
International Business Review,
2015
Abstract
We studied an underrepresented area in the international business (IB) literature: the effect of country context distance on the distribution of decision-making autonomy across headquarters and foreign affiliates. Foreign affiliates directly contribute to the competitive advantages of multinational enterprises, highlighting the importance of such intra-firm collaboration. The division of decision-making autonomy is a core issue in the management of headquarters–subsidiary relationships. The main contribution of our paper is that we confront two valid theoretical frameworks – business network theory and agency theory – that offer contradictory hypotheses with respect to the division of decision-making autonomy. Our study is among the first to examine this dilemma with a unique dataset from five Central and Eastern European transition countries. The empirical results provide convincing support for our approach to the study of subsidiary decision-making autonomy.
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Can R&D Subsidies Counteract the Economic Crisis? – Macroeconomic Effects in Germany
Hans-Ulrich Brautzsch, Jutta Günther, Brigitte Loose, Udo Ludwig, Nicole Nulsch
Research Policy,
No. 3,
2015
Abstract
During the economic crisis of 2008 and 2009, governments in Europe stabilized their economies by means of fiscal policy. After decades of absence, deficit spending was used to counteract the heavy decline in demand. In Germany, public spending went partially into R&D subsidies in favor of small and medium sized enterprises. Applying the standard open input–output model, the paper analyzes the macroeconomic effects of R&D subsidies on employment and production in the business cycle. Findings in the form of backward multipliers suggest that R&D subsidies have stimulated a substantial leverage effect. Almost two thirds of the costs of R&D projects are covered by the enterprises themselves. Overall, a subsidized R&D program results in a production, value added and employment effect that amounts to at least twice the initial financing. Overall, the R&D program counteracts the decline of GDP by 0.5% in the year 2009. In the year 2010 the effects are already procyclical since the German economy recovered quickly. Compared to the strongly discussed alternative uses of subsidies for private consumption, R&D spending is more effective.
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Environmental Performance Measurement
Edeltraud Günther, A. Sturm, Antje Berger
Externe Publikationen,
2001
Abstract
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A Novel Approach to Incubator Evaluations: The PROMETHEE Outranking Procedures
Michael Schwartz, Maximilian Göthner
IWH Discussion Papers,
No. 1,
2009
Abstract
Considerable public resources are devoted to the establishment and operation of business incubators (BIs), which are seen as catalysts for the promotion of entrepreneurship, innovation activities and regional development. Despite the vast amount of research that has focused on the outcomes or effectiveness of incubator initiatives and how to measure incubator performance, there is still little understanding of how to determine incubators that are more effective than others. Based on data from 410 graduate firms, this paper applies the multi-criteria outranking technique PROMETHEE (Preference Ranking Organization Method for Enrichment Evaluation) and compares the long-term effectiveness of five technology-oriented BIs in Germany. This is the first time that outranking procedures are used in incubator evaluations. In particular, we investigate whether PROMETHEE is a well-suited methodological approach for the evaluation and comparisons in the specific context of business incubation.
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Broadband Investment and the Threat of Regulation: Preventing Monopoly Exploitation or Infrastructure Construction?
Ulrich Blum, Christian Growitsch, Niels Krap
Review of Network Economics,
2007
Abstract
Die Investitionen seitens der Deutschen Telekom in die VDSL-Technologie wurden von ihr an die Bedingung der Regulierungsfreiheit geknüpft. Um eine Regulierungsstrategie zu entwickeln, die gleichzeitig Investitionen ermöglicht und monopolistische Preise verhindert, wird in diesem Beitrag die Investitionsentscheidung unter Regulierungsandrohung spieltheoretisch modelliert. Es wird gezeigt, daß die bloße Drohung einer Intervention durch den Regulierer Übergewinne verhindern kann. Der Regulierer kann die Investitionsentscheidung und den Preis des Investors über Signale über die Wahrscheinlichkeit des Eingreifens und den eventuellen Regulierungspreis beeinflussen.
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Risikomanagement als Werttreiber: volks- und betriebswirtschaftliche Perspektive
Ulrich Blum, Werner Gleißner
Wertorientiertes Management,
2005
Abstract
Worin unterscheiden sich erfolgreiche von weniger erfolgreichen "Bewältigern des Risikos", und welche Techniken sind verfügbar, die den Umgang mit Risiko erleichtern. Zunächst wird der Frage nachgegangen, was sich institutionell geändert hat, weshalb (ökonomische) Risiken möglicherweise stärker als zu früheren Zeiten auf das Individuum bzw. das Unternehmen (insbesondere das KMU) durchschlagen. Die Antwort findet sich vor allem in Prozessen, die mit den Begriffen "Globalisierung" und "Netzwerkökonomie" verbunden sind. Sodann werden ökonomische Aspekte des Risikos vertieft, dabei auch der Frage nachgegangen, wodurch eigentlich Wohlstand entsteht, um schließlich zu prüfen, welche Wirkungsbeziehungen in Richtung auf den Unternehmenswert bestehen. Dabei wird zwischen vollkommenen und unvollkommenen Märkten unterschieden. Darauf aufbauend wird schließlich eine Systematik des Risikomanagements vorgestellt und daran aufgezeigt, wie dieser "Wertreiber" zur Unternehmensentwicklung beitragen kann. Darauf baut eine Darstellung der Organisation des Risikomanagements im Unternehmen auf. Ein Ausblick zeigt auf, wie volkswirtschaftliche Institutionen weiterentwickelt werden können, um die Risikoallokation zu optimieren.
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Modul 3: Markt- und Trendanalyse
Ulrich Blum, Werner Gleißner
Future Value,
2004
Abstract
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