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84 results, from 51
  • DIW Economic Bulletin 2 / 2011

    Leading Position Maintained: Six Questions for Alexander Schiersch

    2011
  • DIW Economic Bulletin 2 / 2011

    German R&D-Intensive Industries: Value Added and Productivity Have Recovered Considerably after the Crisis

    No large industrialized nation is as strongly specialized in the production of R&D-intensive goods as Germany. In the crisis year 2009 these export-oriented industries had to pass a crucial test. The slump in sales endangered both specialized jobs and the financing of high R&D expenditures, and thus the ability of these industries to compete technologically in the future. The Commission of Experts ...

    2011| Heike Belitz, Martin Gornig, Alexander Schiersch
  • Diskussionspapiere 1123 / 2011

    Who Marries Differently-Aged Spouses? Earnings, Ability and Appearance

    In direct contrast to conventional wisdom and most economic models of gender differences in age of marriage, we present robust evidence that men and women who are married to differently-aged spouses are negatively selected. Earnings analysis of married couples in the 1970, 1980, 1990 and 2000 Decennial Censuses finds that male earnings decrease with within-couple age difference, regardless of whether ...

    2011| Hani Mansour, Terra McKinnish
  • Externe Monographien

    Temporary Agency Work and Firm Performance

    Düsseldorf [u.a.]: Statistische Ämter des Bundes u. der Länder, 2011, 18 S.
    (FDZ-Arbeitspapier ; 35)
    | Sebastian Nielen, Alexander Schiersch
  • Diskussionspapiere 1112 / 2011

    Regional Patterns of Intangible Capital, Agglomeration Effects and Localised Spillovers in Germany

    We use a large micro-dataset to assess the importance of intangible capital - organisation, R&D and ICT capital - for the economic performance of establishments and regions in Germany. In 2003 self-produced intangible capital accounted for more than one fifth of the total capital stock of estab-lishments. More than half of the intangible capital is R&D capital. This high proportion is mainly due to ...

    2011| Kurt Geppert, Anne Neumann
  • Externe Monographien

    Regional Patterns of Intangible Capital, Agglomeration Effects and Localised Spillovers in Germany

    We use a large micro-dataset to assess the importance of intangible capital - organisation, R&D and ICT capital - for the economic performance of establishments and regions in Germany. In 2003 self-produced intangible capital accounted for one fifth of the total capital stock of establishments with more than 10 employees. More than half of the intangible capital is R&D capital. This high proportion ...

    Vaasa: Innodrive, 2010, 26 S.
    (Innodrive Working Paper Series ; 9)
    | Kurt Geppert, Anne Neumann
  • Externe Monographien

    Intangibles, Can They Explain the Dispersion in Return Rates?

    Vaasa: Innodrive, 2010, 19 S.
    (Innodrive Working Paper Series ; 6)
    | Bernd Görzig, Martin Gornig
  • Externe referierte Aufsätze

    Eastern Germany on the Brink of Closing the Productivity Gap? Firm Level Evidence from Manufacturing

    After 20 years of transition, productivity in Eastern Germany is still considerably below the Western level. We study the development of the East-West productivity gap at the firm level and link it to firms' product policy. Redesigning their product range was a major challenge for Eastern enterprises as they sought their place in the international division of labour. Based on data from manufacturing ...

    In: Post-Communist Economies 22 (2010), 4, S. 499-511 | Bernd Görzig, Martin Gornig, Ramona Voshage, Axel Werwatz
  • Weitere externe Aufsätze

    German Agricultural Employment, Production and Labour Productivity: A New Benchmark for 1936 and a Note on Hoffmann's Tales

    In: Automobilwirtschaft nach 1945
    Berlin : Akademie-Verl.
    S. 215-228
    Jahrbuch für Wirtschaftsgeschichte ; 2010/1
    | Rainer Fremdling
  • Diskussionspapiere 1035 / 2010

    Do External Technology Acquisitions Matter for Innovative Efficiency and Productivity?

    To quickly adapt to technological change and developments, and thus remain competitive, firms increasingly resort to the use of external technology. This paper investigates whether and to what extent the acquisition of external disembodied technology affects the efficiency and productivity in innovation of technology acquiring firms. Using the stochastic frontier analysis combined with a difference-in-difference ...

    2010| Tseveen Gantumur, Andreas Stephan
84 results, from 51
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