568 results
Search Results
2. Efficiency of Obstetric Services in Germany—The Role of Variation and Overheads.
- Author
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Flessa, Steffen
- Subjects
LENGTH of stay in hospitals ,HOSPITALS ,MEDICAL care ,SIMULATION methods in education ,MEDICAL care costs ,HOSPITAL maternity services ,VAGINA ,ECONOMICS ,SYSTEM analysis ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,DELIVERY (Obstetrics) ,POISSON distribution - Abstract
The number of obstetric departments in German hospitals has declined in the last decades. In particular, rural hospitals are challenged to sustain their delivery services. In this paper, we analyse the role of variation and overheads of obstetric departments from the perspective of current and future German hospital financing. For this purpose, we develop a Monte Carlo simulation model that analyses the workload of the labour room and the obstetric ward. The results show that a hospital with less than 640 deliveries per year cannot break even. In order to offer services 24 h per day, 365 days per year, five nurses, five midwives, and five gynaecologists are needed. This results in high fixed costs. At the same time, the variation coefficient of the labour room and the obstetric ward declines with an increasing number of deliveries. Consequently, small hospitals have a higher risk of over- and under-utilization in the course of the year. This paper acknowledges that economics is not the only decision dimension. The quality of the institution and the transport to the hospital have to be considered, as well as the population's wish for nearby services. However, the simulations clearly demonstrate that unless the hospital financing system is changed fundamentally, the decline in the number of hospitals offering delivery services will continue. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Relationship between Economic Growth and Energy Consumption from the Perspective of Sustainable Development.
- Author
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Dai, Liuyi, Jia, Rui, and Wang, Xinran
- Subjects
ECONOMIC expansion ,SUSTAINABLE development ,ENERGY consumption ,KUZNETS curve ,ECONOMIC development ,SOCIAL change ,INDUSTRIES ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
While promoting the economic growth, energy has also brought pollution problems to the world environment, which has gradually become a bottleneck impeding sustainable economic development. In view of the rapid evolution of urbanization and industrialization, economic growth is increasingly dependent on the energy consumption, the development of the two is difficult to coordinate, and the internal contradictions are becoming increasingly serious, which hinders the sustainable development of economic growth. This study establishes the relationship between energy consumption and economic growth according to the energy Kuznets curve and studies the future trend of China's sustainable development through the comparative analysis of the energy Kuznets curve of the United States and Germany. The results show that, at the turning point of energy consumption, China's energy economic rate is higher than that of Germany and the United States. In addition, in terms of urbanization rate and industrial structure, although China's tertiary industry has made a breakthrough, it is still lower than that of the United States and Germany, but the level of urbanization rate has made significant progress. In short, China has obvious advantages in future economic development and has a late developing advantage compared with the United States and Germany. This paper makes an empirical analysis of the relationship between energy consumption and economic growth in OECD countries and finds out the turning point of energy consumption, so as to provide a theoretical basis for coordinating China's energy consumption and economic growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Market access and value-based pricing of digital health applications in Germany.
- Author
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Gensorowsky, Daniel, Witte, Julian, Batram, Manuel, and Greiner, Wolfgang
- Subjects
SAFETY ,HEALTH services accessibility ,GOVERNMENT regulation ,DIGITAL health ,VALUE-based healthcare ,HEALTH insurance reimbursement ,DATA security ,COST effectiveness ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
In December 2019, the Digital Health Care Act ("Digitale-Versorgung-Gesetz") introduced a general entitlement to the provision and reimbursement of digital health applications (DiGA) for insured persons in the German statutory health insurance. As establishing a new digital service area within the solidarity-based insurance system implies several administrative and regulatory challenges, this paper aims to describe the legal framework for DiGA market access and pricing as well as the status quo of the DiGA market. Furthermore, we provide a basic approach to deriving value-based DiGA prices. To become eligible for reimbursement, the Federal Institute for Drugs and Medical Devices evaluates the compliance of a DiGA with general requirements (e.g., safety and data protection) and its positive healthcare effects (i.e., medical benefit or improvements of care structure and processes) in a fast-track process. Manufacturers may provide evidence for the benefits of their DiGA either directly with the application for the fast-track process or generate it during a trial phase that includes temporary reimbursement. After one year of \]reimbursement, the freely-set manufacturer price is replaced by a price negotiated between the National Association of Statutory Health Insurance Funds and the manufacturer. By February 2022, 30 DiGA had successfully completed the fast-track process. 73% make use of the trial phase and have not yet proven their benefit. Given this dynamic growth of the DiGA market and the low minimum evidence standards, fair pricing remains the central point of contention. The regulatory framework makes the patient-relevant benefits of a DiGA a pricing criterion to be considered in particular. Yet, it does not indicate how the benefits of a DiGA should be translated into a reasonable price. Our evidence-based approach to value-based DiGA pricing approximates the SHI's willingness to pay by the average cost-effectiveness of one or more established therapy in a field of indication and furthermore considers the positive healthcare effects of a DiGA. The proposed approach can be fitted into DiGA pricing processes under the given regulatory framework and can provide objective guidance for price negotiations. However, it is only one piece of the pricing puzzle, and numerous methodological and procedural issues related to DiGA pricing are still open. Thus, it remains to be seen to what extent DiGA prices will follow the premise of value-based pricing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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5. ZEITSCHRIFT FÜR DIE GESAMTE STAATSWISSENSCHAFT.
- Author
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König, Heinz, Thoss, Rainer, Hoffman, Lutz, Rott, W., Helmstädter, Ernest, Stegemann, Klaus, Gahlen, Bernhard, and Hesse, Helmut
- Subjects
ECONOMICS ,LINEAR programming ,PAPER industry ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
This article presents abstracts of several papers about economics published in the July 1965 of the journal Zeitschrift Für Die Gesamte Staatswissenschaft. In the article The Optimal Location of Industry: An Interregional Linear Program for the West German Paper Industry, Heinz König and Rainer Thoss gave a general formulation of an interregional optimization model and discussed the advantages and limitations of this method of regional analysis. While in the article Development Theories of Balanced and Unbalanced Growth: A Confrontation, Lutz Hoffman reviewed the discussion on balanced growth and unbalanced growth.
- Published
- 1965
6. THE RECOVERY OF GERMANY'S MERCHANT MARINE AFTER THE WAR.
- Author
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Magnes, Jacob
- Subjects
WEIMAR Republic, 1918-1933 ,WORLD War I ,ECONOMICS ,SHIPPING companies ,PUBLIC-private sector cooperation ,MARITIME shipping finance ,FINANCIAL policy ,BUSINESS finance ,BUSINESS conditions ,MERCHANT marine ,ECONOMIC recovery ,GOVERNMENT policy ,MANAGEMENT ,ECONOMIC policy ,COMMERCE - Abstract
The article focuses on the reestablishment of Germany's merchant marine after World War I. Early financing of the merchant marine by the German government and the shipping companies themselves is examined. Details related to the policies of German shipping companies concerning joint operations between German and foreign companies, especially American shipping companies, are discussed. Comparisons are made of the capabilities of the German merchant marine before and after World War I, and the improvements upon operation made by companies such as the Hamburg-American Line are presented.
- Published
- 1930
7. Review of evolution of the public long-term care insurance (LTCI) system in different countries: influence and challenge.
- Author
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Chen, Linhong, Zhang, Lu, and Xu, Xiaocang
- Subjects
MEDICAL care cost statistics ,LONG-term care insurance statistics ,LONG-term care insurance ,RESEARCH funding ,PEOPLE with disabilities ,ECONOMIC aspects of diseases ,LONG-term health care ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Background: The growing demand for LTC (Long-term care) services for disabled elderly has become a daunting task for countries worldwide, especially China, where population aging is particularly severe. According to CSY (China Statistical Yearbook,2019), the elderly aged 65 or above has reached 167 million in 2018, and the number of disabled elderly is as high as 54%. Germany and other countries have alleviated the crisis by promoting the public LTCI (Long-Term Care Insurance) system since the 1990s, while China's public LTCI system formal pilot only started in 2016. Therefore, the development of the public LTCI system has gradually become a hot topic for scholars in various countries, including China.Methods: This review has been systematically sorted the existing related literature to discuss the development of public LTCI (Long-Term Care Insurance)system form four aspects, namely, the comparison of public LTCI systems in different countries, the influence of public LTCI, challenge of public LTCI, and the relationship between public LTCI and private LTCI. We searched some databases including Web of Science Core Collection, Medline, SCOPUS, EBSCO, EMBASE, ProQuest and PubMed from January 2008 to September 2020. The quality of 38 quantitative and 21 qualitative articles was evaluated using the CASP(Critical Appraisal Skills Programme) critical evaluation checklist.Results: The review systematically examines the development of public LTCI system from four aspects, namely, the comparison of public LTCI systems in different countries, the influence of public LTCI, the challenge of public LTCI, and the relationship between public LTCI and private LTCI. For example, LTCI has a positive effect on the health and life quality of the disabled elderly. However, the role of LTCI in alleviating the financial burden on families with the disabled elderly may be limited.Conclusion: Some policy implications on the future development of China's LTCI system can be obtained. For example, the government should fully consider the constraints such as price rise, the elderly disability rate, and the substantial economic burden. It also can strengthen the effective combination of public LTCI and private LTCI. It does not only help to expand the space for its theoretical research but also to learn the experiences in the practice of the LTCI system in various countries around the world. It will significantly help the smooth development and further promote the in-depth reform of the LTCI system in China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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8. The geographies of the institutional and industrial constraints on the financialization of German brewing.
- Author
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Keenan, Liam
- Subjects
FINANCIALIZATION ,ECONOMICS ,BREWING industry ,BEER marketing - Abstract
In recent decades, financialization has reworked the ownership, organization and geographies of global brewing. However, the institutional constellations of national, regional and local markets continue to shape and mediate its processes in variegated ways. Presenting a more granular and spatially sensitive conceptualization of financialization, this article adopts a cultural political economy (CPE) framework to analyse its relationships with the German brewing industry. First, the article distils the key elements of firm-level financialization and identifies a range of core constituents which provide the foundations for observing how financialization is enacted as part of wider institutional and political economic contexts. Second, the paper explains how these core constituents unfold as part of the global brewing industry, where the growing importance of mergers and acquisitions (M&As), the cultivation of global brands and the strategic prioritization of value over volume have reconstituted mature beer markets. Analysis then turns to the brewing industry and market in Germany, where regional patterns of production, a localized culture of consumption and various forms of state intervention are shown to constrain the enactment of financialization. Building on this empirical evidence, it is argued that geographically particular social relations, cultural conditions and political economic structures intertwine to shape and mediate processes of financialization, in different ways, with geography both causal and constitutive in its uneven expression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Entrepreneurship and gender: differential access to finance and divergent business value.
- Author
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Sauer, Robert M and Wiesemeyer, Katharina H
- Subjects
ENTREPRENEURSHIP ,BUSINESSWOMEN ,GENDER role ,LIQUIDITY (Economics) ,BUSINESSPEOPLE ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
In this paper we examine differences in access to finance and business value by gender. Using recent data from the German Socio-Economic Panel, instrumented linear probability models show that an increase in personal wealth substantially affects the probability of being a business owner only among females. This is indicative of differential access to finance by gender. Among business owners, fixed-effects regressions reveal that obtaining a bank loan increases mean total business value more for females than for males. Thus, possession of a bank loan appears to be a critical factor in explaining the business value gender gap. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Bibliography.
- Subjects
BIBLIOGRAPHY ,GERMAN economy ,BOOKS ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Presents a list of books related to the economy of Germany.
- Published
- 2002
11. Opioid prescription patterns in Germany and the global opioid epidemic: Systematic review of available evidence.
- Author
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Rosner, Bastian, Neicun, Jessica, Yang, Justin Christopher, and Roman-Urrestarazu, Andres
- Subjects
CANCER pain ,META-analysis ,PRESCRIPTION writing ,OLDER people ,ANALGESICS ,EPIDEMICS - Abstract
Introduction: Opioids are one of the most important and effective drug classes in pain medicine with a key role in most medical fields. The increase of opioid prescription over time has led to higher numbers of prescription opioid misuse, abuse and opioid-related deaths in most developed OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) countries around the world. Whilst reliable data on the prevalence of opioid treatment is accessible for many countries, data on Germany specifically is still scarce. Considering Germany being the largest country in the European Union, the lack of evidence-based strategies from long-term studies is crucial. The aim of this work is to review and summarise relevant published literature on the prevalence of opioid prescription in Germany to adequately inform health policy strategies. Methods: A systematic review of the epidemiology of opioid prescription in Germany was conducted, searching PubMed and Web of Science. Eligibility criteria were defined prior to conducting the search. Literature concerning Germany, published in English and German was included and the search was replicated by three independent researchers. Two levels of screening were employed. Disagreement was resolved by face-to-face discussion, leading to a consensus judgement. Results: Our electronic search yielded 735 articles. Reviewing titles and abstracts yielded 19 relevant articles. Three authors examined each article’s full text more closely and determined that twelve papers should be included. Of the twelve identified studies—with publication dates ranging from 1985 to 2016—six were retrospective cross-sectional studies and six were retrospective repeated-measures cross-sectional studies. Sample sizes ranged from 92,842 to ≈ 11,000,000 participants. Data sources of included studies showed vast heterogeneity. The reviewed literature suggested an increase in the number of patients with opioid prescriptions and defined daily doses of opioids per recipient in Germany over time. The majority of opioid prescriptions was used for patients with non-cancer pain. Opioid use was more common in older people, women and in the north of Germany. Fentanyl was shown to be the most prescribed strong opioid in outpatient settings in Germany, despite not being the first-line choice for chronic pain conditions. All data published before 2000—but none of the more recent studies—suggested an insufficient treatment of pain using opioids. There were no signs for a current opioid epidemic in Germany. Conclusions: Despite some limitations of the review and the heterogeneity of studies, it can be stated that the number of opioid prescriptions overall as well as the number of people receiving opioid treatment have increased over time. Most prescriptions were found to be for strong opioids and patients with non-cancer pain. Even though patterns of opioid prescription follow trends observed in other developed countries, there are no signs of an opioid epidemic in Germany. Therefore, this review could currently not find a need for urgent health policy interventions regarding opioid prescription practices. However, critical gaps in the literature remain and more research is needed to make more reliable judgements. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Identifying technological sub-trajectories in patent data: the case of photovoltaics.
- Author
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Kalthaus, Martin
- Subjects
PHOTOVOLTAIC power generation ,ECONOMICS ,SILICON wafers ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,COMPETITIVE advantage in business ,PATENTS ,SILICON solar cells - Abstract
This paper proposes a patent search strategy for photovoltaics which allows distinguishing patents of the photovoltaic system into sub-trajectories. Identifying and analyzing sub-trajectories is of particular importance for understanding micro patterns of technological change. The proposed search strategy is modular and replicable. It performs similar to benchmark search strategies and allows us to distinguish three cell sub-trajectories and two system components. The identified sub-trajectories allow a more detailed economic analysis previously not possible. Descriptive analyses reveal that inventive activity differs between sub-trajectories and countries. The market dominating silicon wafer cell sub-trajectory shows hardly any patented inventive activity even though it dominates the market. Furthermore, there are shifts in relative patenting activity between sub-trajectories, previously unnoticed at the trajectory level. Country comparison reveals that Asian countries focus on the emerging cell sub-trajectory, fostering their competitive advantage. The USA focuses on the established thin-film sub-trajectory, and inventive activity in Germany focuses on module components. The results have several implications for policy, for example, questioning the effectiveness of demand pull policies for inventive activity, and economic theory. The empirical assessment of sub-trajectories can increase understanding of technological change and uncover dynamics not observable at the trajectory level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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13. Spatial mobility in elite academic institutions in economics: the case of Spain.
- Author
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Carrasco, Raquel and Ruiz-Castillo, Javier
- Subjects
STUDENT mobility ,CEREBRAL circulation ,BRAIN drain ,ECONOMICS ,GRADUATE education - Abstract
Using a dataset of 3540 economists working in 2007 in 125 of the best academic centers in 22 countries, this paper presents some evidence on spatial mobility patterns in Spain and other countries conditional on some personal, department, and country characteristics. There are productivity and other reasons for designing a scientific policy with the aims of attracting foreign talent (brain gain), minimizing the elite brain drain, and recovering nationals who have earned a Ph.D. or have spent some time abroad (brain circulation). Our main result is that Spain has more brain gain, more brain circulation and less brain drain than comparable large, continental European countries, i.e., Germany, France, and Italy, where economists have similar opportunities for publishing their research in English or in their own languages. We suggest that these results can be mostly explained by the governance changes introduced in a number of Spanish institutions in 1975–1990 by a sizable contingent of Spanish economists coming back home after attending graduate school abroad. These initiatives were also favored by the availability of resources to finance certain research-related activities, including international Ph.D. programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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14. Self-Identification of Polish Academic Economists with Schools of Economic Thought*.
- Author
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Konat, Grzegorz, Karpińska-Mizielińska, Wanda, Kloc, Kazimierz, Smuga, Tadeusz, and Witkowski, Bartosz
- Subjects
ECONOMISTS ,ECONOMICS ,INSTITUTIONAL economics ,ECONOMETRIC models ,SCHOOLS - Abstract
The paper presents the results of a research conducted in 2014–2016, aimed at characterising the milieu of the Polish academic economists with respect to their self-identification with modern schools of economic thought. Using econometric modelling, the social variables determining the theoretical choices made by the economists themselves were identified. We found that the largest group of the Polish academic economists identifies themselves with new institutional economics. Nearly half of the respondents declared their association with heterodox approaches, while only about a quarter of the respondents showed association with economic orthodoxy. Such a structure of self-identification of the Polish academic economists with schools of economic thought distinguishes it from the ones in other European countries, such as Italy and Germany. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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15. Regional Migration, Growth and Convergence – A Spatial Dynamic Panel Model of Germany.
- Author
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Kubis, Alexander and Schneider, Lutz
- Subjects
ECONOMIC impact of emigration & immigration ,ECONOMIC convergence ,MIGRANT labor ,SKILLED labor ,ECONOMIC models ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Copyright of Regional Studies is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. The Economic Trojan Horse is Actually a German Horse.
- Author
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Ionescu, Romeo-Victor
- Subjects
TROJAN horse (Greek mythology) ,IMMIGRANTS ,LABOR market ,SOCIAL isolation ,CRISIS management ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
The paper is focused on the immigrants' impact on the EU's economy in the context of the latest immigrant crisis generated by Germany and France. The analysis in the paper covers not only the economic negative effects, but the social effects as well. The scientific approach is based on the latest official data. A distinct part of the paper deals with forecasting procedures able to point out the powerful negative impact of the immigrants on the labor market and public finances on short and medium terms. The main conclusion of the paper is that Germany is not able to manage this immigrant crisis and it will try to solve the problem putting pressure on other Member States or translating the crisis management to the global organism, as Davos Conference, for example. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
17. Identification of Potential Off-Grid Municipalities With 100% Renewable Energy Supply for Future Design of Power Grids.
- Author
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Weinand, Jann M., Ried, Sabrina, Kleinebrahm, Max, McKenna, Russell, and Fichtner, Wolf
- Subjects
POWER resources ,ELECTRIC power distribution grids ,ENERGY futures ,RENEWABLE energy sources ,CITIES & towns ,GEOTHERMAL resources - Abstract
An increasing number of municipalities are striving for energy autonomy. This study determines in which municipalities and at what additional cost energy autonomy is feasible for a case study of Germany. An existing municipal energy system optimization model is extended to include the industrial, commercial and personal transport sectors. Multiple regression methods are benchmarked in order to identify the model best suited for the transfer of individual optimization results to a large proportion of German municipalities. The resulting levelized cost of energy (LCOE) from the optimization of representative case study municipalities are transferred using energy-relevant indicators. The study demonstrates that energy autonomy is technically feasible in 6,314 (56%) municipalities. Thereby, the LCOEs increase in the autonomous case on average by 0.41 €/kWh compared to the minimum cost scenario. Apart from energy demand, base-load-capable bioenergy and deep geothermal energy have the greatest influence on the LCOEs. Overall, it appears that municipal energy autonomy is not economically viable under current framework conditions. This study represents a starting point for defining possible scenarios in studies of future national energy system or transmission grid expansion planning, which for the first time consider completely energy autonomous municipalities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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18. Offshoring and Outsourcing Potentials: Evidence from German Micro-Level Data.
- Author
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Brändle, Tobias and Koch, Andreas
- Subjects
OFFSHORE outsourcing ,CONTRACTING out ,OCCUPATIONS ,BUSINESS relocation ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper provides two indicators that measure: (i) offshoring potentials (cross-country geographical relocation) and (ii) outsourcing potentials (organisational relocation) separately at the level of jobs, occupations, tasks and industries. We use four waves of the BIBB/ BAuA Labour Force Survey in Germany and apply principal component analysis based on a large set of potential determinants of offshoring and outsourcing derived from the literature. Our results show significant variation across these levels in the determinants of both dimensions. We provide a comprehensive empirical classification of the determinants of how easily jobs can be offshored and outsourced. This can serve as a basis for further research to investigate the economic effects of job offshoreability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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19. Nursing history as philosophy—towards a critical history of nursing.
- Author
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Foth, Thomas, Lange, Jette, and Smith, Kylie
- Subjects
ACCOUNTING ,HISTORICAL research ,NURSING ,HISTORY of nursing ,PHILOSOPHY of nursing ,NURSING career counseling ,PRACTICAL politics - Abstract
Abstract: Mainstream nursing history often positions itself in opposition to philosophy and many nursing historians are reticent of theorizing. In the quest to illuminate the lives of nurses and women current historical approaches are driven by reformist aspirations but are based on the conception that nursing or caring is basically good and the timelessness of universal values. This has the effect of essentialising political categories of identity such as class, race and gender. This kind of history is about affirmation rather than friction and about the conservation of memory and musealization. In contrast, we will focus on how we imagine nursing history could be used as a philosophical, critical perspective to challenge the ongoing transformations of our societies. Existing reality must be confronted with strangeness and the historically different can assume the function of this counterpart, meaning present and past must continuously be set in relation to each other. Thus, critical history is always the history of the present but not merely the pre‐history of the present – critique must rather present different realities and different certainties. In this paper, we use this approach to discuss the implementation of the nursing process (NP) in Germany. The nursing process appears to be a technology that helped to set up an infrastructure ‐ or assemblage ‐ to transform nursing interventions into a commodity exchangable between consumers and nurses in a free market. In our theoretical perspective, we argue that NP was a step in the realization of the German ordoliberal program, a specific variety of neoliberalism. In order to implement market‐orientation in the healthcare system it was necessary to transform hospitals into calculable spaces and to make all performances in the hospital calculable. This radically transformed not just the systems, but the ways in which nurses and patients conveived of themselves. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Services for homeless people in Germany during the COVID‐19‐pandemic: A descriptive study.
- Author
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Gräske, Johannes, Koppe, Louise, Neumann, Fränze, and Forbrig, Theresa A.
- Subjects
RISK factors of aggression ,MEDICAL masks ,STATISTICS ,HEALTH services accessibility ,COUNSELING ,RESEARCH methodology ,CROSS-sectional method ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL care costs ,MENTAL health ,HYGIENE ,BATHS ,GLOVES ,DESPAIR ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,AFFECTIVE disorders ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ANXIETY ,PERSONAL protective equipment ,DATA analysis software ,DATA analysis ,WORKING hours ,COVID-19 pandemic ,CORPORATE culture ,FOOD service ,CLOTHING & dress ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Design: A cross‐sectional study was conducted in December 2020/January 2021 in the five significant cities of Germany. Sample: 135 of 244 identified service institutions took part in the evaluation. Measurements: This evaluation included changes in institutions' operating hours as well as capacity for homeless people. Service institutions described changes in guests' characteristics, moods, and mental burden. Finally, equipment including face masks, coveralls, and gloves was investigated. In addition, the study examined how the cooperation with the health authorities works. Results: Institutions reduced their operating hours and capacity for guests (62.4%). Increased costs, which they had to cover themselves, were reported by 70.9% of institutions. Institutions reported, that guests showed more symptoms of aggression (15%), anxiety (25%), and desperation (32%) and fewer signs of being relaxed (75%). The institutions reported room for improvement in PPE supplies and collaboration with health authorities. Conclusions: Services are limited for a vulnerable population, which shows changes in moods and mental health. Health authorities are not sufficiently engaged to take over the role of institutions in caring for homeless people. In the future, in‐depth investigation to improve this is necessary. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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21. Resource use of geriatric nurses due to documentation practices: A cross‐sectional study of applied recording techniques in nursing homes.
- Author
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Larjow, Eugenia and Lingner, Tobias
- Subjects
NURSING care facility administration ,HEALTH services administration ,NURSES' attitudes ,REGULATORY approval ,DOCUMENTATION ,MEDICAL care use ,NURSING practice ,GERIATRIC nursing ,COST analysis ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Aim: To compare recent compliance cost estimates by nurses of German nursing homes who employ the new documentation approach structural model with those who use traditional documentation frameworks. Design: A cross‐sectional survey. Methods: For each documentation approach, five sub‐processes were surveyed employing standard activities. The postal and online surveys were based on the same self‐administered questionnaire. The measures addressed time investments and further costs to carry out the components of nursing documentation. Data were collected from a convenience sample of nurses (n = 264) from German nursing homes between October 2018 and June 2019. Results: The analysed sub‐processes consume between 26 min and 8 hr per fulfilment. For users of the structural model, collecting information on a new admission is the costliest part of the documentation, at €90 per case. For users of other documentation approaches, care planning requires the most expensive effort, at €130 per case. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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22. The Daily Market for Funds in Europe: What Has Changed with the EMU?
- Author
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QUIRÓS, GABRIEL PÉREZ and MENDIZÁBAL, HUGO RODRÍGUEZ
- Subjects
FINANCIAL services industry ,RESERVE requirements ,BANK deposits ,LOANS ,MONETARY policy ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper shows that the existence of deposit and lending facilities combined with an averaging provision for the reserve requirement are powerful tools to stabilize the overnight rate. We reach this conclusion by comparing the behavior of this rate in Germany before and after the start of the EMU. The analysis of the German experience allows us to isolate the effects on the overnight rate of these particular instruments of monetary policy. To illustrate that this outcome is a general conclusion and not a particular result of the German market, we develop a theoretical model of reserve management, which is able to reproduce our empirical findings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. „One of the bright spots in German economics“.
- Author
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Take, Gunnar
- Subjects
GERMAN economy ,WORLD War II ,GERMAN politics & government ,SCIENCE & politics ,TWENTIETH century ,HISTORY - Abstract
This paper analyses the relationship between the German Kiel Institute of World Economics and the Rockefeller Foundation in the years 1925-1950. It focuses on the role of politics in the promotion of science and shows the great difficulties the foundation had in developing a strategy to react to the Nazi’s seizure of power in 1933. The Kiel Institute disguised itself as an unpolitical and “objective” institute and managed to regain support after 1934. During the Second World War, the Rockefeller Foundation abandoned the idea of science as an area detached from politics by definition. In the late 1940s, it carefully reassessed the German academic landscape and, in the case of the Kiel Institute, came to the conclusion not to resume a significant amount of support. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Wider economic impacts of heavy flooding in Germany: a non-linear programming approach.
- Author
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Oosterhaven, Jan and Többen, Johannes
- Subjects
FLOODS ,NONLINEAR programming ,BUSINESS cycles ,INPUT-output analysis ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Copyright of Spatial Economic Analysis is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Quantifying a century of state intervention in rental housing in Germany.
- Author
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Kholodilin, Konstantin A.
- Subjects
RENTAL housing ,HOUSING ,RENT control ,HOUSING policy ,HOUSING laws ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
The paper aims at measuring the general state intervention in rental housing market in Germany from 1913 through 2015. Four policy classes are considered: Incentives for social housing, tenant protection, housing rationing, and rent controls. Based on a legislation analysis, for each class an index measuring the degree of regulation is constructed. The indices reflect dramatic increases in regulations during and after the World Wars. The 2010s are characterized by a surge in all classes of regulations related to the growing housing scarcity in large cities due to interregional migration leading to a geographical mismatch between housing supply and demand. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Allocating health care resources: a questionnaire experiment on the predictive success of rules.
- Author
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Ahlert, Marlies and Schwettmann, Lars
- Subjects
HEALTH care industry ,DECISION making ,ETHICS ,GOAL (Psychology) ,HEALTH care rationing ,HEALTH planning ,HEALTH status indicators ,INTUITION ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RULES ,PUBLIC sector ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Background: The topic of this paper is related to equity in health within a country. In public health care sectors of many countries decisions on priority setting with respect to treatment of different types of diseases or patient groups are implicitly or explicitly made. Priorities are realized by allocation decisions for medical resources where moral judgments play an important role with respect to goals and measures that should be applied. The aim of this study is to explore the moral intuitions held in the German society related to priorities in medical treatment. Methods: We use an experimental questionnaire method established in the Empirical Social Choice literature. Participants are asked to make decisions in a sequence of distributive problems where a limited amount of treatment time has to be allocated to hypothetically described patients. The decision problems serve as an intuition pump. Situations are systematically varied with respect to patients' initial health levels, their ability to benefit from treatment time, and the amount of treatment time available. Subjects are also asked to describe their deliberations. We focus on the acceptance of different allocation principles including equity concepts and utilitarian properties. We investigate rule characteristics like order preservation or monotonicity with respect to resources, severity, or effectiveness. We check the consistency of individual choices with stated reasoning. Results: The goals and allocation principles revealed show that the moral intuitions held by our experimental subjects are much more complex than the principles commonly applied in health economic theory. Especially, cost-utility principles are rarely applied, whereas the goal of equality of health gain is observed more often. The principle not to leave any patient untreated is very dominant. We also observe the degrees to which extent certain monotonicity principles, known from welfare economics, are followed. Subjects were able to describe their moral judgments in written statements. We also find evidence that they followed their respective intuitions very consistently in their decisions. Conclusions: Findings of the kind presented in this paper may serve as an important input for the public and political discussion when decisions on priorities in the public health care sector are formed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. New technological path creation: evidence from the British and German wind energy industries.
- Author
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Simmie, James, Sternberg, Rolf, and Carpenter, Juliet
- Subjects
WIND power industry ,CHANGE agents ,INVENTORS ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
The canonical economic literature on path dependence provides only a limited explanation of why and how new technological pathways are created initially. The motivation of this paper is to address this gap in the literature and argue that evolutionary economics theories of path dependence need to be linked with sociological explanations of how new technological pathways are created in the first instance by knowledgeable inventors and innovators. These arguments are developed by the authors in a hybrid socio-economic theory of new path creation. In this paper these theoretical arguments are illustrated empirically by a comparative analysis of the introduction and diffusion of new wind power technologies in Britain and Germany. The empirical analysis focuses on the key research question of why the introduction of these new technologies started earlier and has diffused sooner in Germany than in Britain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Economics and Social Sciences: Complements, Competitors, Accomplices?
- Author
-
Kubartz, Bodo, Lutke, Petra, and Roeder, Stefanie
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,ECONOMICS ,SOCIETIES - Abstract
In November 2000 the 10th annual conference of the European Association for Evolutionary Political Economy (EAEPE) took place in Berlin. The meeting drew together 164 academics and researchers from America, Asia and Europe. The conference was organized with the title "Economics and Social Sciences: Complements, Competitors, Accomplices?". As well addressing its central theme, the conference was opened to different economic topics. In this paper, three participants present selected sessions and papers which are of interest for and related to spatial perspectives, that is 'Technology', 'Economy, Society and Territory', 'The Firm', 'Culture and Technology', 'Economics and Social Sciences', 'Borrowing Ideas from the Social Sciences', 'Economic Methodology', 'Conceptual Frameworks' and, in addition to these sessions, Michael Storper's opening keynote address on 'Economic Geography in the Internet Age'. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. THE FINANCING OF ENTERPRISES IN GERMANY UNDER CONDITIONS OF DEPRECIATED CURRENCY.
- Author
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Leitner, Friedrich
- Subjects
DEVALUATION of currency ,BUSINESS finance ,INDUSTRIAL costs ,OPERATING costs ,GERMAN economy, 1918-1945 ,ECONOMIC indicators ,MARK (German currency) ,CURRENCY crises ,WEIMAR Republic, 1918-1933 ,BANKING industry ,RAW materials ,NATIONAL currencies ,FINANCIAL crises ,ECONOMICS ,ECONOMIC policy - Abstract
The article details the difficult situation that German businesses are finding themselves in as the German mark depreciates and businesses are unable to find capital to fund growth. The article explains that German business is facing low worker performance, an increase in overhead costs, a lengthening in time to process raw materials, and unstable product prices. The article examines the efforts to stabilize industry, including the attempt by some industrial firms to establish their own banking institutions to attract financing and the formation of branch factories in other countries. The issues of loans, "valorization," and interest rates from the Reichsbank and commercial banks are addressed. Because of instability, much German industrial financing is being backed by foreign currencies.
- Published
- 1924
30. THE REAL SIGNIFICANCE OF RECENT GERMAN STOCK EXCHANGE QUOTATIONS AND DIVIDENDS.
- Author
-
Kuczynski, R.R.
- Subjects
GERMAN economy, 1918-1945 ,GERMAN economy ,STOCK quotations ,DIVIDENDS ,STOCK prices ,CORPORATE finance ,VALUATION ,ECONOMICS ,WORLD War I ,FINANCIAL quotations ,STOCK exchanges ,GOLD standard ,REIGN of William II, Germany, 1888-1918 - Abstract
The article compares the German stock exchange quotations and dividends from before World War I to those up to 1923. The author suggests that to calculate the actual value of the current quotations, the par values of the shares before the war must be considered, as well as the par value of the shares issued in the meantime at their gold par value at the time of the issue. He includes tables showing the real values of stocks before and after the war in several different industries. Furthermore, he analyzes the real value of the stock before and after the war and presents several conclusions.
- Published
- 1923
31. Landslide impacts in Germany: A historical and socioeconomic perspective.
- Author
-
Klose, Martin, Maurischat, Philipp, and Damm, Bodo
- Subjects
LANDSLIDES ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,HAZARD mitigation ,PUBLIC welfare ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Landslide impacts on infrastructure and society in the Federal Republic of Germany are associated with damage costs of about US$300 million on annual average. Despite the large overall losses due to widespread landslide activity, there is a lack of historical impact assessments, not just for Germany's low mountain areas but those of entire Central Europe as well. This paper is a collection of three case studies from Germany that seek a better understanding of landslide impacts and their economic relevance at local and regional level. The first case study investigates damage types and mitigation measures at a representative landslide site in ways that support to gain insight into historical hazard interactions with land use practices. This case history is followed by a case study dealing with fiscal cost impacts of landslide damages for an example city and the highway system of the Lower Saxon Uplands, NW Germany. In addition to a cost-burden analysis for affected public budgets, an overview of the principles of disaster financing in landslide practice is given. The third case study is focused on the conflicts of urban development in hazard areas, with an economic approach to balancing safety and public welfare interests. Each case study is based on historical data sets extracted from Germany's national landslide database. This paper presents three different case studies that in combination are a first step towards assessing landslide impacts in integrated perspective. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Comparing knowledge networking in different knowledge bases in Germany.
- Author
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Plum, Oliver and Hassink, Robert
- Subjects
BIOTECHNOLOGY industries ,AUTOMOBILE industry ,COMMUNITY development ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
In order to learn more about sectoral differences of knowledge networking in a regional development context, we apply the knowledge base concept, distinguishing the analytical (science based) and synthetic (engineering based) knowledge base. We aim at comparing knowledge networking with the help of network analyses in two knowledge bases in Germany: the analytical knowledge base with the help of the biotechnology industry in the Aachen Technology Region and the synthetic knowledge base with the help of the automotive industry in Southwest Saxony. The paper concludes that there are some main differences found in the characteristics of knowledge networking between the two different knowledge bases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Age-Dependent Taxation and the Optimal Retirement Benefit Formula.
- Author
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Kifmann, Mathias
- Subjects
TAXATION ,ECONOMIC forecasting ,RATIONAL expectations (Economic theory) ,EMPLOYEE benefits ,COMPENSATION management ,ESTIMATION theory ,NUMERICAL analysis ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper presents a comprehensive view of lifetime taxation including both explicit taxation through the general tax system and implicit taxation via the retirement benefit formula. Differences in productivity between individuals are unobservable, which provides a rationale for the use of distortionary taxes. It is shown that the optimal structure of age-dependent taxation can be characterized by a generalized Ramsey formula. Furthermore, the paper derives the optimal retirement benefit formula in the presence of the general tax system and examines the compatibility with the financial stability of the pension system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. An Econometric Analysis of The Remittance Determinants Among Ghanaians and Nigerians in The United States, United Kingdom, and Germany.
- Author
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Ecer, Sencer and Tompkins, Andrea
- Subjects
REMITTANCES ,AFRICANS ,NIGERIANS ,GHANAIANS ,ALTRUISM ,IMMIGRANTS ,FOREIGN workers ,TRANSNATIONALISM ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper examines the determinants of remittance behavior relying on a dataset of migrants living in the United Kingdom, Germany and the United States who remit to Ghana and Nigeria. Controlling for endogeneity of several independent variables, the model measures the effects on the amount sent of the following variables: Home Country (Ghana or Nigeria), Host Country (United States, United Kingdom or Germany), Remittance Fees, Relationship to the Receiver, Purpose of Remittance, Financial Obligations in the Host Country, and Demographics. The results indicate that remittances are primarily influenced by the purpose of the remittance and from where the remittance is sent. It appears that different generations chose to migrate to different countries, creating differences in income, education and age. These differences along with financial obligations in the host country contribute to higher remittance levels. In regards to the development affects, the results of this paper hint that altruistic reasons for remitting may be associated with higher levels of remittances, while more self-interested reasons for remitting are associated with lower levels of remittances. These results indicate that it may be difficult to design policies to encourage the use of remittances for development purposes, as remittances are primarily used for basic needs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Exploratory comparison of Healthcare costs and benefits of the UK's Covid-19 response with four European countries.
- Author
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Thom, Howard, Walker, Josephine, Vickerman, Peter, and Hollingworth, Will
- Subjects
RESEARCH ,COVID-19 ,MEDICAL care costs ,COST control ,HOSPITAL care ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,DEATH ,GOVERNMENT aid ,COVID-19 testing ,QUALITY-adjusted life years ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Background In responding to Covid-19, governments have tried to balance protecting health while minimizing gross domestic product (GDP) losses. We compare health-related net benefit (HRNB) and GDP losses associated with government responses of the UK, Ireland, Germany, Spain and Sweden from UK healthcare payer perspective. Methods We compared observed cases, hospitalizations and deaths under 'mitigation' to modelled events under 'no mitigation' to 20 July 2020. We thus calculated healthcare costs, quality adjusted life years (QALYs), and HRNB at £20,000/QALY saved by each country. On per population (i.e. per capita) basis, we compared HRNB with forecast reductions in 2020 GDP growth (overall or compared with Sweden as minimal mitigation country) and qualitatively and quantitatively described government responses. Results The UK saved 3.17 (0.32–3.65) million QALYs, £33 (8–38) billion healthcare costs and £1416 (220–1637) HRNB per capita at £20,000/QALY. Per capita, this is comparable to £1455 GDP loss using Sweden as comparator and offsets 46.1 (7.1–53.2)% of total £3075 GDP loss. Germany, Spain, and Sweden had greater HRNB per capita. These also offset a greater percentage of total GDP losses per capita. Ireland fared worst on both measures. Countries with more mask wearing, testing, and population susceptibility had better outcomes. Highest stringency responses did not appear to have best outcomes. Conclusions Our exploratory analysis indicates the benefit of government Covid-19 responses may outweigh their economic costs. The extent that HRNB offset economic losses appears to relate to population characteristics, testing levels, and mask wearing, rather than response stringency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Cross-border purchasing of cigarettes among smokers in Six Countries of the EUREST-PLUS ITC Europe Surveys.
- Author
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Driezen, Pete, Thompson, Mary E., Fong, Geoffrey T., Demjén, Tibor, Tountas, Yannis, Trofor, Antigona C., Przewoźniak, Krzysztof, Zatoński, Witold A., Fernández, Esteve, Mons, Ute, and Vardavas, Constantine I.
- Subjects
BEHAVIORAL assessment ,SMOKING ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,POPULATION geography ,SURVEYS ,TAXATION ,TOBACCO ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,DATA analysis ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
INTRODUCTION The availability of lower-cost cigarettes in neighboring countries provides price-sensitive smokers with incentives to purchase cheaper out-of-country cigarettes. This study estimates the prevalence of and factors associated with cross-border purchasing of cheaper cigarettes among smokers from Germany, Greece, Hungary, Poland, Romania, and Spain. The prevalence of cross-border purchasing was estimated by residential location, defined as living in regions bordering a lower-price country (where prices were at least €1/pack lower), regions bordering a similar- or higher-price country, and internal non-border regions. METHODS Data were from a survey of nationally representative samples of adult smokers (n=6011) from Germany, Greece, Hungary, Poland, Romania, and Spain. The primary outcome was purchasing cheaper out-of-country cigarettes in the previous six months. Residential location was defined using The Nomenclature of Territorial Units for Statistics (NUTS2 in Germany and NUTS3 in the other countries). Multivariable logistic regression tested differences in purchasing cheaper out-of-country cigarettes by country and residential location. RESULTS Residential location was associated with purchasing cheaper out-of-country cigarettes in Germany and Poland (p<0.05): 31% of German and 11% of Polish smokers living in regions bordering lower-price countries reported purchasing cheaper out-of-country cigarettes in the previous six months. Smokers living in regions bordering lower-price countries had 4.21 times greater odds of purchasing cheaper out-of-country cigarettes compared to smokers living in non-border regions. CONCLUSIONS Overall, only a minority of smokers in the six countries purchased cheaper cigarettes outside their country. However, smokers living in regions bordering countries where cigarettes were at least €1/pack lower than their home country had significantly higher odds of purchasing cheaper out-of-country cigarettes. This effect was especially prominent among German smokers. Tax harmonization policies designed to minimize crossborder price differentials can eliminate lower-priced alternatives for price-sensitive smokers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Estimation of a physician practice cost function.
- Author
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Kwietniewski, Lukas, Heimeshoff, Mareike, Schreyögg, Jonas, and Schreyögg, Jonas
- Subjects
MEDICAL care ,HOSPITAL costs ,PHYSICIANS' attitudes ,COST effectiveness ,DECISION making ,MEDICAL practice ,GROUP medical practice ,MEDICAL specialties & specialists ,OFFICE management ,MEDICAL offices ,COMPARATIVE studies ,ECONOMICS ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MEDICINE ,PROBABILITY theory ,RESEARCH ,EVALUATION research - Abstract
Objective: The goal of the present paper is to provide evidence on the behavior of physician practice cost functions.Data Sources: Our study is based on the data of 3686 physician practices in Germany for the years 2006 to 2008.Study Design: We apply a translog functional form and include a comprehensive set of variables that have not been previously used in this context. A system of four equations using three-stage least squares is estimated.Principal Findings: We find that a higher degree of specialization leads to a decrease in costs, whereas quality certification increases costs. Costs of group practices are higher than of solo practices. The latter finding can be explained by the existence of indivisibilities of expensive technical equipment. Smaller practices do not reach the critical mass to invest in certain technologies, which leads to differences in the type of health care services provided by different practice types.Conclusions: This is the first study to use physician practices as the unit of observation and to consider the endogenous character of physician input. Our results suggest that identifying factors that influence physician practice costs is important for providing evidence-based physician payment systems and to enable decision-makers to set incentives effectively. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. HIGHER EDUCATION FOR HIGHER COMPETITIVENESS.
- Author
-
Komárek, Jaroslav, Dočkal, Jaroslav, Markovič, Peter, Březovská, Barbora Novotná, and Rigel, Filip
- Subjects
HIGHER education ,MANAGERIAL economics ,ECONOMIC competition ,EDUCATION - Abstract
The current criticism of higher education is that the education offered does not match the needs of practice. In terms of competitiveness, Germany is about the forefront in Europe, and logically the question of whether higher education is the source from which leads to this result. The objective of this paper is to compare the corresponding study programs of Czech and German universities in the area of Economics by identifying the relevant differences and to confirm or dismiss the validity of the research hypothesis „Business Economics programs at German universities differ in ways that can boost competitiveness“. In order to compare the study programs between Czech and German universities, the eight faculties of Economics geared towards Business and Economics and Bachelor degree program were selected. As an introductory information, the structure of the programs was compared in terms of course load and which courses being compulsory, elective, and various forms of actual work practice and Bachelor thesis. The portfolio analysis of compulsory courses was organized into more general course groups and the percentage share of the total extent of compulsory courses was evaluated and the percentage of the active part. The analysis of Bachelor’s degree programs justifies the validity of the research hypothesis such that German study programs are more focused on practical application in a work environment. To that, contribute significantly the German specific institutions, the universities of applied sciences, which are strongly geared towards the needs of actual practice. The reflection of findings may apply in the context of the forthcoming implementation of amendment to the Higher Education Act. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The underestimated relevance and value of vocational education in tertiary education – making the invisible visible.
- Author
-
Hippach-Schneider, Ute, Schneider, Verena, Ménard, Boris, and Tritscher-Archan, Sabine
- Subjects
POSTSECONDARY education ,VOCATIONAL education ,EDUCATION ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Increasing the number of tertiary graduates has been a priority on the political agenda of the EU for some years. The focus has mainly been on academic courses though, with less emphasis on the role of vocational education and training. International educational statistics indeed show a clear increase in the number of persons completing tertiary education programmes in recent years. In overall terms, this development is referred to as ‘academisation’. The present paper provides a critical analysis and uses examples from Germany, Austria and France to show that this interpretation is neglecting two crucial facts. One is that various academic programmes in fact are combining academic with vocational learning. The other is that there are vocational programmes in the tertiary education sector that are not adequately visible in international education statistics. This understanding is important in relation to future policy-making as well as individual decision-making. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. The incidence of Cash for Clunkers: Evidence from the 2009 car scrappage scheme in Germany.
- Author
-
Kaul, Ashok, Pfeifer, Gregor, and Witte, Stefan
- Subjects
USED car sales & prices ,USED cars -- Purchasing ,USED cars ,MICROPAYMENTS (Electronic commerce) ,PRODUCT obsolescence ,SUBSIDIES ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper investigates the German car scrappage program, focusing on the incidence of the premium. We ask how much of the €2500 ($3500) buyer subsidy is actually captured by the demand side. More precisely, we analyze the program's impact on different car segments, allowing for heterogeneity in incidence at different points in the vehicle price distribution. Using a unique microtransaction data set, we find that the incidence of the subsidy strongly and significantly varies across price segments. Subsidized buyers of cheap cars paid a little more than comparable buyers who did not receive the subsidy, indicating incidence amounts slightly below 100 %. For more expensive vehicles, subsidized buyers were granted large extra discounts on top of the government premium, translating into incidence amounts considerably greater than 100 %. Taken together, this results in an aggregate incidence amount of up to plus €350 million, suggesting that the positive effect for expensive cars overcompensates the negative effect for small cars. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Acceptance of seniors towards automatic in home fall detection devices.
- Author
-
Feldwieser, Florian, Marchollek, Michael, Meis, Markus, Gietzelt, Matthias, and Steinhagen-Thiessen, Elisabeth
- Subjects
ACCIDENTAL fall prevention ,MEDICAL care costs ,RISK factors of falling down ,ACCELEROMETERS ,GERIATRIC assessment ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,HEALTH status indicators ,MONITOR alarms (Medicine) ,PATIENT monitoring ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,SAFETY ,SIGNAL processing ,TECHNOLOGY ,VIDEO recording ,ASSISTIVE technology ,PRE-tests & post-tests ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,BARTHEL Index ,OLD age ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Purpose Senior citizen falls are one of the highest-cost factors of healthcare within this population group. Various approaches for automatic fall detection exist. However, little is known about the seniors’ acceptance of these systems. The purpose of this paper is to investigate the acceptance of automatic fall detection devices as well as the technological commitment and the health status in community-dwelling adults with a predefined risk of falling.Design/methodology/approach Seniors with a risk of falling were equipped with either an accelerometer or an accelerometer with an additional visual and optical fall detection system in a sub-group of the study population for a period of eight weeks. Pre- and post-study questionnaires were used to assess attitudes and acceptance toward technology.Findings In total, 14 subjects with a mean age of 75.1 years completed the study. Acceptance toward all sensors was high and subjects were confident in their ability to handle technology. Medical assessments showed only very mild physical and no mental impairments. Measures that assured subjects privacy protection were welcomed. Sensor technology should be as unobtrusive as possible.Originality/value Privacy protection and uncomplicated use of the fall detection equipment led to high acceptance in seniors with high-technical commitment and good health status. Issues to further improve acceptance could be identified. Future research on different populations is necessary. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. The (Ir)relevance of Disclosure of Compliance with Corporate Governance Codes: Empirical Evidence from the German Stock Market.
- Author
-
Mahr, Till G., Nowak, Eric, and Rott, Roland
- Subjects
CORPORATE governance ,STOCK exchanges ,FINANCIAL market reaction ,EVENT study (Finance) ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper studies short- and long-run effects of disclosure of compliance with the German Corporate Governance Code. First, we present an analysis of firms' compliance with the Code. Second, event-study results suggest that aggregate market and firm values are unaffected, although there was widespread belief that market reactions would follow the disclosure of the declaration of conformity. Third, for the long horizon, we find that neither levels nor changes in Code compliance levels have an impact on stock price performance. Our results add evidence to the hypothesis that self-regulatory corporate governance reforms relying on disclosure without monitoring and legal enforcement are ineffective. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Endogenous skill biased technical change: testing for demand pull effect.
- Author
-
Bogliacino, Francesco and Lucchese, Matteo
- Subjects
INNOVATION adoption ,LABOR market ,TAX reform ,TREND analysis in business ,GERMAN economy ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
In this article we use the unification of Germany in 1990 to test the hypothesis that an increase in the supply of a production factor generates skill biased technical change. We test for this mechanism in the context of the model presented by Acemoglu and Autor (2011, Skills, tasks and technologies: implications for employment and earnings', in O. Ashenfelter and D. Card (eds), Handbook of Labor Economics, Vol. 4B. Amsterdam: North Holland) that allows endogenous assignment of skills to tasks in the economy. We use cohorts of workers from comparable countries as a control group. After discussing the possible confounding factors, we conclude that this effect is absent. The differential pattern among the countries seems to be determined by labor market flexibilization and tax reform. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Zur Beschäftigungsentwicklung in Deutschland.
- Author
-
Schnabel, Hubert
- Subjects
EMPLOYMENT ,ECONOMICS ,CONTRACTS for work & labor ,LABOR market - Abstract
Copyright of Zeitschrift fur Wirtschaftspolitik is the property of De Gruyter and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Base Salaries, Bonus Payments, and Work Absence among Managers in a German Company.
- Author
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Pfeifer, Christian
- Subjects
MANAGEMENT ,WAGES ,WAGE payment systems ,EXECUTIVES ,EXECUTIVE compensation ,EMPLOYEE bonuses ,INCENTIVE awards ,JOB absenteeism ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper provides scarce insider econometric evidence on the structure of management compensation and on the incentive effects of fixed base salaries and bonus payments. Six years of personnel data of 177 managers in a German company are analyzed with special emphasis on the highest achievable bonuses under a Management-by-Objectives ( MBO) incentive scheme. The main finding of panel negative binomial regressions is that higher achievable bonus payments are correlated with fewer absent working days, which supports the incentive effect of performance pay for managers. The fixed base salary component is, however, not significantly correlated with managers' work absence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Trends in production relocation and backshoring activitiesChanging patterns in the course of the global economic crisis.
- Author
-
Kinkel, Steffen
- Subjects
MANUFACTURED products ,ECONOMICS ,INVESTMENTS ,BUSINESS relocation ,DECISION making - Abstract
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to present an empirical investigation of recent trends and changes in companies' production relocation and backshoring behaviour against the background of the global economic crisis. Design/methodology/approach – The empirical research is based on a large data set of 1,484 German manufacturing companies as part of the European Manufacturing Survey (EMS). The paper employs a structured set of probit analyses to identify the differences of production relocation and backshoring determinants before and within the crisis. Findings – Against common belief the paper finds that not only the relocation of production to emerging countries, but also the backshoring of once offshored manufacturing capacities to the home base is a relevant phenomenon. Since the emergence of the global economic crisis, relocation activities declined significantly, whereas the level of backshoring activities has remained stable. Far-shore destinations in Asia gain in attractiveness over near-shore locations in Eastern Europe. Particularly export-intensive companies tended recently towards (re-)concentrating of their production capacities, trying to exploit the benefits of higher capacity utilisation and a superior relation of variable costs to fix costs at their existing locations. Research limitations/implications – Although covering a significant range of industrial sectors in Germany, more empirical evidence is needed from other branches and countries. Looking forward it is proposed to systemically integrate scenarios on the future development of the most influential environmental factors in future research frameworks for global production decisions and value chains. Practical implications – The findings strongly recommend a revision of established decision-making schemes for production relocations based on pure cost efficiency considerations. Decision-making should integrate qualitative environmental factors and dynamic considerations using scenario-based tools. Companies need to understand and prepare for dynamic developments at different locations which can strategically necessitate backshoring after a certain time. Originality/value – The research considerably widens the empirical knowledge on recent trends in relocation activities and their inherent risks, which in a dynamic perspective are sometimes forcing backshoring activities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. A network analysis of intra-EU migration flows: how regulatory policies, economic inequalities and the network-topology shape the intra-EU migration space.
- Author
-
Windzio, Michael, Teney, Céline, and Lenkewitz, Sven
- Subjects
EMIGRATION & immigration ,UNEMPLOYMENT ,GROSS domestic product ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Using a network approach, we investigate the determinants of intra-EU migration flows between all 28 EU member states in the years 2001, 2005, 2008 and 2013. Our descriptive analysis of the networks of intra-EU migration flows shows that the EU migration space is dominated by two core destination countries (Germany and United Kingdom). The results of our cross-sectional exponential random graph models (ERGM) reveal that the status of Germany and the United Kingdom (UK) as core destination countries remains a robust characteristic of the network of intra-EU migration flows over time, even when controlling for GDP, unemployment rates or shared geographical borders between destination and source countries. Furthermore, our results point to the differentiated effects of national economic performance on outgoing and ingoing flows: GDP per capita mainly affects intra-EU inflows, while unemployment rates tend to influence outmigration. Lastly, regulatory linkages – measured with the accession to the EU of source countries and the opening of the labour market of destination countries – exert a moderate effect on intra-EU migration flows when taking into account the national economic performances of source and destination countries, the core status of Germany and the United Kingdom, and the shared borders between destination and source countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. What drives patent performance of German biotech firms? The impact of R&D subsidies, knowledge networks and their location.
- Author
-
Fornahl, Dirk, Broekel, Tom, and Boschma, Ron
- Subjects
BIOTECHNOLOGY ,ECONOMICS ,PATENTS ,RESEARCH ,BUSINESS enterprises - Abstract
This paper aims at explaining whether R&D subsidies, the engagement in collaboration networks and the location influence the patent activities of biotech firms in Germany! We demonstrate that R&D subsidies focusing on single firms do not increase patent intensity, while subsidies which are granted to joint R&D projects do so to a certain extent. The number of knowledge links firms have is not influencing performance, but the type of network partners has an effect. We found strong evidence that some but not too much cognitive distance between collaboration partners and being located in a cluster have a positive effect. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. GLOBALIZATION AND PRODUCTIVITY IN THE UNITED STATES AND GERMANY.
- Author
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Mann, Catherine L.
- Subjects
GLOBALIZATION ,GROWTH rate ,MANUFACTURING industries ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper investigates the impact of globalization on productivity growth and the procyclicality of productivity growth in manufacturing industries in the United States and Germany. An increase in foreign demand for U.S. exports raises productivity growth, but less than a similar demand shock from domestic buyers. For Germany, neither international demand shocks nor exposure to international competition seem to be associated with productivity growth rates. Perhaps that is because German industries experience a smaller increase in exposure to international competition over time. This working paper can be found at the US Federal Reserve Board's International Finance Discussion Papers. You can access this by going to
- Published
- 1997
50. Trust in Financial Markets.
- Author
-
Mayer, Colin
- Subjects
STOCK ownership ,PROPERTY ,STOCK exchanges ,BANKING industry ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper examines contemporaneous and historical evidence on the structure of ownership and control of corporate sectors in developed countries to draw lessons for development of financial markets. It records the critical role that equity markets played in the ownership and financing of corporations at the beginning of the 20th century. It notes that this occurred in the absence of formal systems of regulation and that equity markets functioned on the basis of informal relationships of trust. These were sustained through local stock markets in the UK, banks in Germany, and business coordinators and family firms in Japan. The paper explores the concept of trust that is required to promote the development of financial markets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
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