Filtern
Erscheinungsjahr
Dokumenttyp
- Dissertation (61)
- Wissenschaftlicher Artikel (3)
- Bericht (1)
- Arbeitspapier (1)
Sprache
- Deutsch (36)
- Englisch (29)
- Mehrsprachig (1)
Volltext vorhanden
- ja (66) (entfernen)
Schlagworte
- Deutschland (7)
- China (3)
- Entrepreneurship (3)
- Nachhaltigkeit (3)
- Simulation (3)
- Amtliche Statistik (2)
- COVID-19 (2)
- Crowdfunding (2)
- Diversifikation (2)
- European Union (2)
Institut
- Wirtschaftswissenschaften (66) (entfernen)
Mittels Querschnittserhebungen ist es möglich Populationsparameter zu einem bestimmten Zeitpunkt zu schätzen. Jedoch ist meist die Veränderung von Populationsparametern von besonderem Interesse. So ist es zur Evaluation von politischen Zielvorgaben erforderlich die Veränderung von Indikatoren, wie Armutsmaßen, über die Zeit zu verfolgen. Um zu testen ob eine gemessene Veränderung sich signifikant von Null unterscheidet bedarf es einer Varianzschätzung für Veränderungen von Querschnitten. In diesem Zusammenhang ergeben sich oft zwei Probleme; Zum einen sind die relevanten Statistiken meist nicht-linear und zum anderen basieren die untersuchten Querschnittserhebungen auf Stichproben die nicht unabhängig voneinander gezogen wurden. Ziel der vorliegenden Dissertation ist es einen theoretischen Rahmen zur Herleitung und Schätzung der Varianz einer geschätzten Veränderung von nicht-linearen Statistiken zu geben. Hierzu werden die Eigenschaften von Stichprobendesigns erarbeitetet, die zur Koordination von Stichprobenziehungen in einer zeitlichen Abfolge verwendet werden. Insbesondere werden Ziehungsalgorithmen zur Koordination von Stichproben vorgestellt, erarbeitet und deren Eigenschaften beschrieben. Die Problematik der Varianzschätzung im Querschnitt für nicht-lineare Schätzer bei komplexen Stichprobendesigns wird ebenfalls behandelt. Schließlich wird ein allgemeiner Ansatz zur Schätzung von Veränderungen aufgezeigt und es werden Varianzschätzer für die Veränderung von Querschnittschätzern basierend auf koordinierten Querschnittstichproben untersucht. Insbesondere dem Fall einer sich über die Zeit verändernden Population wird eine besondere Bedeutung im Rahmen der Arbeit beigemessen, da diese im Anwendungsfall die Regel darstellen.
The classic Capital Asset Pricing Model and the portfolio theory suggest that investors hold the market portfolio to diversify idiosyncratic risks. The theory predicts that expected return of assets is positive and that reacts linearly on the overall market. However, in reality, we observe that investors often do not have perfectly diversified portfolios. Empirical studies find that new factors influence the deviation from the theoretical optimal investment. In the first part of this work (Chapter 2) we study such an example, namely the influence of maximum daily returns on subsequent returns. Here we follow ideas of Bali et al. (2011). The goal is to find cross-sectional relations between extremely positive returns and expected average returns. We take account a larger number of markets worldwide. Bali et al. (2011) report with respect to the U.S. market a robust negative relation between MAX (the maximum daily return) and the expected return in the subsequent time. We extent substantially their database to a number of other countries, and also take more recent data into account (until end of 2009). From that we conclude that the relation between MAX and expected returns is not consistent in all countries. Moreover, we test the robustness of the results of Bali et al. (2011) in two time-periods using the same data from CRSP. The results show that the effect of extremely positive returns is not stable over time. Indeed we find a negative cross-sectional relation between the extremely positive returns and the average returns for the first half of the time series, however, we do not find significant effects for the second half. The main results of this chapter serve as a basis for an unpublished working paper Yuan and Rieger (2014b). While in Chapter 2 we have studied factors that prevent optimal diversification, we consider in Chapter 3 and 4 situations where the optimal structure of diversification was previously unknown, namely diversification of options (or structured financial products). Financial derivatives are important additional investment form with respect to diversification. Not only common call and put options, but also structured products enable investors to pursue a multitude of investment strategies to improve the risk-return profile. Since derivatives become more and more important, diversification of portfolios with dimension of derivatives is of particularly practical relevance. We investigate the optimal diversification strategies in connection with underlying stocks for classical rational investors with constant relative risk aversion (CRRA). In particular, we apply Monte Carlo method based on the Black-Scholes model and the Heston model for stochastic volatility to model the stock market processes and the pricing of the derivatives. Afterwards, we compare the benchmark portfolio which consists of derivatives on single assets with derivatives on the index of these assets. First we compute the utility improvement of an investment in the risk-free assets and plain-vanilla options for CRRA investors in various scenarios. Furthermore, we extend our analysis to several kinds of structured products, in particular capital protected notes (CPNs), discount certificates (DCs) and bonus certificates (BCs). We find that the decision of an investor between these two diversification strategies leads to remarkable differences. The difference in the utility improvement is influenced by risk-preferences of investors, stock prices and the properties of the derivatives in the portfolio. The results will be presented in Chapter 3 and are the basis for a yet unpublished working paper Yuan and Rieger (2014a). To check furthermore whether underlyings of structured products influence decisions of investors, we discuss explicitly the utility gain of a stock-based product and an index-based product for an investor whose preferences are described by cumulative prospect theory (CPT) (Chapter 4, compare to Yuan (2014)). The goal is that to investigate the dependence of structured products on their underlying where we put emphasis on the difference between index-products and single-stock-products, in particular with respect to loss-aversion and mental accounting. We consider capital protected notes and discount certificates as examples, and model the stock prices and the index of these stocks via Monte Carlo simulations in the Black-Scholes framework. The results point out that market conditions, particularly the expected returns and volatility of the stocks play a crucial role in determining the preferences of investors for stock-based CPNs and index-based CPNs. A median CPT investor prefers the index-based CPNs if the expected return is higher and the volatility is lower, while he prefers the stock-based CPNs in the other situation. We also show that index-based DCs are robustly more attractive as compared to stock-based DCs for CPT investors.
Zum Einfluss von Transformationen schiefer Verteilungen auf die Analyse mit imputierten Daten
(2015)
Die korrekte Behandlung fehlender Daten in empirischen Untersuchungen spielt zunehmend eine wichtige Rolle in der anwendungsorientierten, quantitativen Forschung. Als zentrales flexibles Instrument wurde von Rubin (1987) die multiple Imputation entwickelt, welche unter regulären Bedingungen eine korrekte Inferenz der eigentlichen Schätzungen ermöglicht. Eine Reihe von Imputationsmethoden beruht im Wesentlichen auf der Normalverteilungsannahme. In der Empirie wird diese Annahme normalverteilter Daten zunehmend kritisiert. So erweisen sich Variablen auf Grund ihrer sehr schiefen Verteilungen für die Imputation als besonders problematisch. In dieser Arbeit steht die korrekte Behandlung fehlender Werte mit der Intention einer validen Inferenz der eigentlichen Schätzung im Vordergrund. Ein Instrument ist die Transformation schiefer Verteilungen, um mit Hilfe der transformierten und approximativ normalverteilten Daten Imputationen unter regulären Bedingungen durchzuführen. In der Arbeit wird ein multivariater Ansatz eingeführt. Anschließend wird im Rahmen mehrerer Monte-Carlo-Simulationsstudien gezeigt, dass der neue Ansatz bereits bekannte Verfahren dominiert und sich die Transformation positiv auf die Analyse mit imputierten Daten auswirkt.
Die vorliegende empirische Untersuchung nimmt eine gezielte Betrachtung der Auswirkungen des Working Capital Managements als Ganzem sowie seiner Teilkomponenten für die operative Profitabilität und das Bonitätsrating (d.h. im Ergebnis über seine Bedeutung für die Innen- und die Außenfinanzierung) deutscher mittelständischer Unternehmen vor. Darüber hinaus wird untersucht, in wie weit größenspezifische Unterschiede bei der Wirkung der einzelnen Komponenten des Working Capital Managements auf die operative Profitabilität und das Bonitätsrating bestehen, ob also die Stärke der ggf. zu beobachtenden Effekte für kleinere Unternehmen anders ausgeprägt ist als für größere Unternehmen. Zudem wird untersucht, ob sich die Stärke der zu beobachtenden Effekte in unterschiedlichen konjunkturellen Rahmenbedingungen jeweils verändert, um Erkenntnisse darüber zu gewinnen, ob und in wie weit Working Capital Management zur Verbesserung der Krisenresistenz mittelständischer Unternehmen beitragen kann.
Part-time entrepreneurship has become increasingly popular and is a rather new field of research. Two important research topics are addressed in this dissertation: (a) the impact of culture on part-time and full-time entrepreneurship and (b) the motivational aspects of the transition from part-time to full-time entrepreneurship. Specifically, this dissertation advances prior research by highlighting the direct and indirect differential impact of macro-level societal culture on part-time and full-time entrepreneurship. Gender egalitarianism, uncertainty avoidance and future orientation have a significantly stronger impact on full-time than on part-time entrepreneurship. Furthermore the moderating impact of societal culture on micro-level relationships for both forms of entrepreneurship is explored. The age-old and well-established relationship between education and entrepreneurial activity is moderated by different forms of collectivism for part-time and full-time entrepreneurship. Regarding the motivation of part-time entrepreneurs to transition to full-time entrepreneurship, the entrepreneurial motives of self-realization and independence are significantly positively associated with the transition, whereas the entrepreneurial motives of income supplementation and recognition are significantly negatively associated with the transition. This dissertation advances academic research by indicating conceptual differences between part-time and full-time entrepreneurship in a multi country setting and by showing that both forms of entrepreneurship are impacted through different cultural mechanisms. Based on the findings, policy makers can identify the direct and indirect impact of societal culture on part-time and full-time entrepreneurship. As a result, policy makers can better target support and transition programs to foster entrepreneurial activity.
Service innovation has increasingly gained acknowledgement to contribute to economic growth and well-being. Despite this increased relevance in practice, service innovation is a developing research field. To advance literature on service innovation, this work analyzes with a qualitative study how firms manage service innovation activities in their organization differently. In addition, it evaluates the influence of top management commitment and corporate service innovativeness on service innovation capabilities of a firm and their implications for firm-level performance by conducting a quantitative study. Accordingly, the main overall research questions of this dissertation are: 1.) How and why do firms manage service innovation activities in their organization differently? 2.) What influence do top management commitment and corporate service innovativeness have on service innovation capabilities of a firm and what are the implications for firm-level performance? To respond to the first research question the way firms manage service innovation activities in their organization is investigated and by whom and how service innovations are developed. Moreover, it is examined why firms implement their service innovation activities differently. To achieve this a qualitative empirical study is conducted which included 22 semi-structured interviews with 15 firms in the sectors of construction, financial services, IT services, and logistics. Addressing the second research question, the aim is to improve the understanding about factors that enhance firm-level performance through service innovations. Deploying a dynamic capabilities perspective, a quantitative study is performed which underlines the importance of service innovation capabilities. More specifically, a theoretical framework is developed that proposes a positive relationship of top management commitment and corporate service innovativeness with service innovation capabilities and a positive relationship between service innovation capabilities and the firm-level performance indicators market performance, competitive advantage, and efficiency. A survey with double respondents from 87 companies from the sectors construction, financial services, IT services, and logistics was conducted to test the proposed theoretical framework by applying partial least squares structural equation modeling (PLS-SEM).
Financing of Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises in Europe - Financing Patterns and 'Crowdfunding'
(2015)
Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) play a vital role for the innovativeness, economic growth and competitiveness of Europe. One of the most pressing problems of SMEs is access to finance to ensure their survival and growth. This dissertation uses both quantitative and qualitative exploratory research methods and increases with its holistic approach the transparency in SME financing. The results of a cluster analysis including 12,726 SMEs in 28 European countries reveal that SME financing in Europe is not homogenous but that different financing patterns exist which differ according to the number of financing instruments used and the combinations thereof. Furthermore, the SME financing types can be profiled according to their firm-, product-, industry- and country-specific characteristics. The results of this analysis provide some support for prior findings that smaller, younger and innovative SMEs suffer from a financing gap which cannot be closed with traditional financing instruments. One alternative to close this financing gap is crowdfunding. Even though crowdfunding has shown tremendous growth rates over the past few years, little is known about the determinants of this financing alternative. This dissertation systematically analyses the existing scientific literature on crowdfunding as an alternative in SME financing and reveals existing research gaps. Afterwards, the focus is on the role of investor communication as a way to reduce information asymmetries of the crowd in equity-based crowdfunding. The results of 24 interviews with market participants in equity-based crowdfunding reveal that crowd investors seem to replace personal contacts with alternative ways of communicating, which can be characterized as pseudo-personal (i.e., by using presentation videos, social media and investor relations channels). In addition, it was found that third party endorsements (e.g., other crowd investors, professional investors, customers and platforms) reduce the information asymmetries of crowd investors and hence, increase the likelihood of their investment.
Kooperationen sind in den unterschiedlichsten Industrien und Wirtschaftszweigen ein fester Bestandteil zur Entwicklung von Unternehmensstrategien und vielfach die Reaktion auf branchenspezifische wie auch -übergreifende Bedingungen des Unternehmensumfeldes. Durch das Eingehen von Kooperationen wird sich erhofft Zugang zu Ressourcen zu gewinnen, Marktbarrieren zu umgehen, Kostensenkungspotenziale durch Synergieeffekte zu realisieren, spezifisches Know-how zu erlangen, Informations- und Wissenstransfer zu ermöglichen oder integrativ Kompetenzen in einem technologisierten Umfeld aufzubauen. Angesichts seit Jahren steigender weltweiter Tourismusausgaben für Urlaubsreisen, einem zunehmendem Wettbewerbsdruck zwischen Reisezielen und touristischen Anbietern sowie branchenspezifisch hoher Krisenanfälligkeit sind Kooperationen auch in der Tourismuswirtschaft omnipräsent. Vor dem Hintergrund sich wandelnder Aufgaben traditioneller Tourismusorganisationen (Touristen Info) einerseits sowie der den Kooperationen inhärenten Spannung zwischen Zusammenarbeit und Wettbewerb der beteiligten Akteure (Leistungsträger, Stakeholder) andererseits, steht im Mittelpunkt dieser Untersuchung die Frage: "Kooperationen von Destinationen: zufällige Einzelphänomen oder Entscheidungen eines strategischen Destinationsmanagements?" Dabei beschränkt sich der Untersuchungsgegenstand nicht auf Kooperationen zwischen Leistungsträgern innerhalb einer Destination, sondern setzt jene Kooperationen in den Fokus, die sowohl zwischen konkurrierenden Touristenorganisationen als auch zwischen Touristenorganisationen und nicht-originär touristischen Unternehmen zu beobachten sind. Ziel der Arbeit ist die theorie- und empiriegeleitete Exploration von Zielsystemen und Erfolgsfaktoren, um so einen Beitrag zum effektiven Kooperationsmanagement von Tourismusorganisationen liefern zu können. Somit positioniert sich diese Arbeit im Kontext der wirtschaftswissenschaftlichen Kooperationsforschung im strategischen Dienstleistungs- sowie Tourismus- und Destinationsmanagement. Basierend auf einem kritisch-reflektierenden Literaturüberblick wird ein konzeptioneller Bezugsrahmen entwickelt und die verfolgte qualitative Forschungsstrategie einer Fallanalyse in ein konkretes empirisches Untersuchungsdesign umgesetzt: die im Rahmen der Datenerhebung geführten Experteninterviews mit Geschäftsführern ausgewählter Unternehmen wurden transkribiert und mittels einer strukturierenden Inhaltsanalyse untersucht. Neben der Konzeption einer Systematisierung zu Kooperationen im Destinationskontext dienen die zentralen empirischen Ergebnisse der Identifikation neun eigenständiger Zielkategorien sowie sieben Erfolgsfaktoren. Davon abgeleitetes wird ein phasenorientiertes Entscheidungsmodell für Entscheidungsträger im Destinationsmanagement entwickelt.
This thesis deals with economic aspects of employees' sickness. In addition to the classical case of sickness absence, in which an employee is completely unable to work and hence stays at home, there is the case of sickness presenteeism, in which the employee comes to work despite being sick. Accordingly, the thesis at hand covers research on both sickness states, absence and presenteeism. The first section covers sickness absence and labour market institutions. Chapter 2 presents theoretical and empirical evidence that differences in the social norm against benefit fraud, so-called benefit morale, can explain cross country diversity in the generosity of statutory sick pay entitlements between developed countries. In our political economy model, a stricter benefit morale reduces the absence rate, with counteracting effects on the politically set sick pay replacement rate. On the one hand, less absence caused by a stricter norm, makes the tax-financed insurance cheaper, leading to the usual demand side effect and hence to more generous sick pay entitlements. On the other hand, being less likely to be absent due to a stricter norm, the voters prefer a smaller fee over more insurance. We document both effects in a sample of 31 developed countries, capturing the years from 1981 to 2010. In Chapter 3 we investigate the relationship between the existence of works councils and illness-related absence and its consequences for plants. Using individual data from the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP), we find that the existence of a works council is positively correlated with the incidence and the annual duration of absence. Additionally, linked employer-employee data (LIAB) suggests that employers are more likely to expect personnel problems due to absence in plants with a works council. In western Germany, we find significant effects using a difference-in-differences approach, which can be causally interpreted. The second part of this thesis covers two studies on sickness presenteeism. In Chapter 4, we empirically investigate the determinants of the annual duration of sickness presenteeism using the European Working Conditions Survey (EWCS). Work autonomy, workload and tenure are positively related to the number of sickness presenteeism days, while a good working environment comes with less presenteeism. In Chapter 5 we theoretically and empirically analyze sickness absence and presenteeism behaviour with a focus on their interdependence. Specifically, we ask whether work-related factors lead to a substitutive, a complementary or no relationship between sickness absence and presenteeism. In other words, we want to know whether changes in absence and presenteeism behaviour incurred by work-related characteristics point in opposite directions (substitutive), the same direction (complementary), or whether they only affect either one of the two sickness states (no relationship). Our theoretical model shows that the relationship between sickness absence and presenteeism with regard to work-related characteristics is not necessarily of a substitutive nature. Instead, a complementary or no relationship can emerge as well. Turning to the empirical investigation, we find that only one out of 16 work-related factors, namely the supervisor status, leads to a substitutive relationship between absence and presenteeism. Few of the other determinants are complements, while the large majority is either related to sickness absence or presenteeism.
Chapter 2: Using data from the German Socio-Economic Panel, this study examines the relation-ship between immigrant residential segregation and immigrants" satisfaction with the neighbor-hood. The estimates show that immigrants living in segregated areas are less satisfied with the neighborhood. This is consistent with the hypothesis that housing discrimination rather than self-selection plays an important role in immigrant residential segregation. Our result holds true even when controlling for other influences such as household income and quality of the dwelling. It also holds true in fixed effects estimates that account for unobserved time-invariant influences. Chapter 3: Using survey data from the German Socio-Economic Panel, this study shows that immigrants living in segregated residential areas are more likely to report discrimination because of their ethnic background. This applies to both segregated areas where most neighbors are immigrants from the same country of origin as the surveyed person and segregated areas where most neighbors are immigrants from other countries of origin. The results suggest that housing discrimination rather than self-selection plays an important role in immigrant residential segregation. Chapter 4: Using data from the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP) and administrative data from 1996 to 2009, I investigate the question whether or not right-wing extremism of German residents is affected by the ethnic concentration of foreigners living in the same residential area. My results show a positive but insignificant relationship between ethnic concentration at the county level and the probability of extreme right-wing voting behavior for West Germany. However, due to potential endogeneity issues, I additionally instrument the share of foreigners in a county with the share of foreigners in each federal state (following an approach of Dustmann/Preston 2001). I find evidence for the interethnic contact theory, predicting a negative relationship between foreign-ers" share and right-wing voting. Moreover, I analyze the moderating role of education and the influence of cultural traits on this relationship. Chapter 5: Using data from the Socio-Economic Panel from 1998 to 2009 and administrative data on regional ethnic diversity, I show that ethnic diversity inhibits significantly people- political interest and participation in political organizations in West Germany. People seem to isolate themselves from political participation if exposed to more ethnic diversity which is particularly relevant with respect to the ongoing integration process of the European Union and the increasing transfer of legislative power from the national to European level. The results are robust if an instrumental variable strategy suggested by Dustmann and Preston (2001) is used to take into account that ethnic diversity measured on a local spatial level could be endogenous due to residential sorting. Interestingly, participation in non-political organizations is positively affected by ethnic diversity if selection bias is corrected for.