Refine
Year of publication
- 2006 (21) (remove)
Document Type
- Working Paper (14)
- Doctoral Thesis (6)
- Conference Proceeding (1)
Language
- English (21) (remove)
Has Fulltext
- yes (21)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (21)
Keywords
- Absatzweg (1)
- Aktienmarkt (1)
- Altersversorgung (1)
- Bangalore (1)
- Bayesian estimation (1)
- Board Oversight (1)
- Bonitätsprüfung (1)
- Börse (1)
- Corporate Governance (1)
- Datenschutz (1)
Institute
- Wirtschaftswissenschaften (21) (remove)
We analyze the effect of committee formation on how corporate boards perform two main functions: setting CEO pay and overseeing the financial reporting process. The use of performance-based pay schemes induces the CEO to manipulate earnings, which leads to an increased need for board oversight. If the whole board is responsible for both functions, it is inclined to provide the CEO with a compensation scheme that is relatively insensitive to performance in order to reduce the burden of subsequent monitoring. When the functions are separated through the formation of committees, the compensation committee is willing to choose a higher pay-performance sensitivity as the increased cost of oversight is borne by the audit committee. Our model generates predictions relating the board committee structure to the pay-performance sensitivity of CEO compensation, the quality of board oversight, and the level of earnings management.
Inhaltsverzeichnis Liste der wissenschaftlichen Beiträge .................................................................................. III Inhaltsverzeichnis ..............................................................................................................IV Abbildungsverzeichnis I List of Figures ................................................................................ VII Tabellenverzeichnis I List of Tables ..................................................................................... VIII Abkürzungsverzeichnis .......................................................................................................... IX 1 Einleitung 1.1 Problemstellung .............................................................................................................. 1 1.2 Einordnung und Ergebnisse der wissenschaftlichen Beiträge ....................................... 3 Literaturverzeichnis ................................................................................................................ 9 2 Langes Leben und Wohlstand im Alter: Ein Überblick über die finanzwirtschaftlichen Alternativen zur Ausgestaltung des Ruhestandes ... 10 2.1 Einführung .................................................................................................................... 10 2.2 Produktalternativen fiir die Ausgestaltung der Entnahmephase .................................. 12 2.2.1 Leibrenten .......................................................................................................... 12 2.2.1.1 Charakteristika von Leibrenten und deren historische Entwicklung .... 12 2.2.1.2 Leibrentenmarkt und -produkte in Deutschland ................................... 15 2.2.1.3 Determinanten von Leibrentenprämien ................................................ 22 2.2.2 Entnahmepläne ................................................................................................... 28 2.2.2.1 Charakteristika von Entnahmeplänen ................................................... 28 2.2.2.2 Entnahmepläne als Instrument der Ruhestandsplanung ....................... 31 2.2.2.3 Leibrenten vs. Entnahmepläne .............................................................. 33 2.3 Forschungsergebnisse zur Ausgestaltung der Entnahmephase .................................... 36 2.3.1 Einleitende Bemerkungen .................................................................................. 36 2.3.2 Positive Literatur ................................................................................................ 37 2.3.2.1 Theoretische Arbeiten zur Bedeutung von Leibrenten ......................... 37 2.3.2.2 Vererbungsmotive als Erklärungsansatz fiir geringe Nachfrage nach Leibrenten ... 39 2.3.2.3 Kosten als Erklärungsansatz fiir geringe Nachfrage nach Leibrenten .. 42 2.3.2.4 Weitere Erklärungsansätze rur geringe Nachfrage nach Leibrenten .... 44 2.3.3 Normative Literatur ............................................................................................ 47 2.3.3.1 Untersuchungen zu reinen Entnahmeplänen ......................................... 47 2.3.3.2 Untersuchung von Entnahmeplänen unter Berücksichtigung von Leibrenten ..... 50 2.3.4 Sonstige Arbeiten ............................................................................................... 56 2.4 Schlussbetrachtung ....................................................................................................... 57 Anhang A: Berechnung von Leibrentenprämien ................................................................. 59 Anhang B: Abbildung der Biometrie ................................................................................... 62 Literaturverzeichnis .............................................................................................................. 67 3 Betting on Death and Capital Markets in Retirement: A Shortfall Risk Analysis of Life Annuities versus Phased Withdrawal Plans... 76 3.1 Introduction .................................................................................................................. 76 3.2 The Case of Phased Withdrawal .................................................................................. 79 3.2.1 Withdrawal Plans with Fixed Benefits ............................................................... 80 3.2.2 Phased Withdrawal Rules with Variable Benefits ............ : ................................ 80 3.3 Risk and Reward Analysis of Phased Withdrawal Plans Conditional on Survival... ... 82 3.3.1 Research Design ................................................................................................. 82 3.3.2 Analysis of Expected Benefits ........................................................................... 84 3.3.3 Shortfall Risk Analysis ...................................................................................... 86 3.3.4 Analysis of Expected Bequests .......................................................................... 89 3.4 Risk-Minimizing Phased Withdrawal Strategies ......................................................... 90 3.4.1 Optimized Withdrawal Rules in a Risk-Return Context... ................................. 90 3.4.2 Comparative Results: Annuity versus Phased Withdrawal Plans ...................... 92 3.4.3 Phased Withdrawal Plans with Mandatory Deferred Annuities ........................ 97 3.4.4 Comparative Results ........................................................................................ 100 3.5 Summary and concluding remarks ............................................................................. 101 Appendix A: Determining Annuity Benefits ..................................................................... 104 Appendix B: Determining Expected Benefits, Expected Bequest and the Risk of a Consumption Shortfall for Phased Withdrawal Plans with given Benefit-to-Wealth Ratios .......................................................................................................................... 105 References .......................................................................................................................... 107 4 Leistungsgarantien in der Auszahlphase von investmentbasierten Altersvorsorgeverträgen: Entwicklung eines konditionalen Eigenkapitalsystems und Analyse seiner ökonomischen Implikationen ... 111 4.1 Einführung .................................................................................................................. 111 4.2 Altersvorsorgeverträge in der Auszahlphase ............................................................. 114 4.2.1 Gesetzliche Regelungen ................................................................................... 114 4.2.2 Entnahmepläne vs. Leibrenten ......................................................................... 115 4.3 Konditionales Eigenkapitalsystem fiir Altersvorsorgeverträge ................................. 117 4.3.1 Einleitende Vorbemerkungen ........................................................................... 117 4.3.2 Konzeptionelle Grundlagen eines konditionalen EK-Systems ........................ 119 4.3.3 Deduktion eines Eigenkapitalsystems fiir die Entnahmephase ........................ 121 4.4 Eigenkapitalanforderungen in der Entnahmephase .................................................... 126 4.4.1 Vorbemerkungen zur empirischen Untersuchung ............................................ 126 4.4.2 Ex post Analyse von Altersvorsorge-Entnahmeplänen ................................... 128 4.4.3 Untersuchung der Eigenkapitalanforderungen im ex ante Kontext ................. 132 4.4.3.1 Untersuchungsansatz und Modellannahmen ....................................... 132 4.4.3.2 Analysen auf Einzelvertragsbasis ....................................................... 135 4.4.3.3 Analysen im Rahmen eines Geschäfts- und Absatzmodells ............... 140 4.4.3.4 Robustheitsanalysen ............................................................................ 145 4.5 Schlussbetrachtung ..................................................................................................... 147 Literaturverzeichnis ............................................................................................................ 149 Lebenslauf ............................................................................................................................. 151 Ehrenwörtliche Erklärung: ................................................................................................. 154
This thesis is concerned with the derivation of new methods for the analysis of nonstationary, cross correlated panels. The suggested procedures are carefully quantified by means of Monte Carlo experiments. Typical applications of the developed methods consist in multi-country studies, with several countries observed over a couple of decades. The empirical applications implemented here are the testing for trends in the investment share in European GDPs and the examination of OECD interest rates. In the first chapter, a panel test for the presence of a linear time trend is proposed. The test is applicable in cross-correlated, heterogeneous panels and it can also be used when the integration order of innovations is unknown, by means of subsampling. In the next chapter a cointegration test having asymptotic standard normal distributiun and not requiring exogeneity assumptions is derived. In panels exhibiting cross-correlation or cointegration, individual test statistics are asymptotically independent, which leads to a panel test statistic robust to dependence across units. The third chapter examines in an econometric context the simple idea of combining p-values from a series of statistical tests and improves its applicability in the presence of cross-correlation. The last chapter applies recent panel techniques to OECD long-term interest rates and differentials thereof, finding only rather week evidence in favor of stationarity when allowing for cross-correlation.
Die Börsenindustrie hat in den vergangenen zwei Jahrzehnten einen signifikanten Wandel durchlaufen - und das nicht nur in Deutschland. Börsen haben schon längst nicht mehr den Charakter vergangener Tage, in denen ihre Mitglieder auf dem Parkett um Aktienpakete und -kurse von inländischen Unternehmen feilschten und an den genossenschaftlich organisierten Handelsplätzen eher eine vertrauliche Clubatmosphäre herrschte. Eine Vielzahl der Börsen hat den Parketthandel abgeschafft, ist selbst an einer Börse gelistet und orientiert sich primär am Shareholder Value und somit an den Interessen einer internationalen Aktionärsbasis. Mittlerweile existieren Börsenplätze, die mehrere Länder umspannen. Der französisch dominierten Euronext kommt hier eine Vorreiterrolle zu. Aber auch andere Börsen, wie die Deutsche Börse und die Schweizer Börse, haben länderübergreifend ihre Derivatehandelsplattformen vereinigt und mit ihrem Jointventure Eurex die umsatzstärkste Derivatebörse der Welt geschaffen. In jüngster Zeit werden nun auch transatlantische Allianzen zwischen amerikanischen und europäischen Börsen angedacht. Sowohl die Strategie der Nasdaq, die bisher eine Sperrminorität von über 25% an der Londoner Börse hält, als auch die der New York Stock Exchange, die eine Fusion mit der Euronext anstrebt, belegen dies. Zudem stehen Börsen mittlerweile in direktem Wettbewerb mit ihren Kunden und ehemaligen Eigentümern, den Finanzintermediären wie Banken und Wertpapierhäuser. Sie konkurrieren um Wertpapieraufträge von Investoren, da Banken nicht mehr jede Order automatisch an sie weiterleiten. Stattdessen versuchen manche Finanzintermediäre, die erhaltenen Investorenaufträge im eigenen Haus mit einer entsprechenden reziproken Order zusammenzuführen, um somit die Geld-Brief Spanne des Wertpapiers als Gewinn einzubehalten. Diese Internalisierung von Auftragsausführungen ist seit einigen Jahren insbesondere in England und Deutschland eine bedeutende Einkommensquelle für Wertpapierhäuser geworden. Gleichzeitig stoßen Börsen immer stärker in Geschäftsbereiche vor, die bislang die Domäne ihrer Kunden repräsentierten. Hier sei der Handel von bestimmten Kreditderivateprodukten genannt, die bisher außerbörslich zwischen großen Wertpapierhäusern gehandelt wurden. Sowohl die Chicago Mercantile Exchange als auch die Eurex planen den Handel dieser Titel auf ihren eigenen Plattformen. Ein weiteres Beispiel ist die vertikale Integration von Wertpapierabwicklungs- und Wertpapierverwahrungsgeschäften. Große internationale Banken wie BNP Paribas, Citigroup und State Street kämpfen hier gegen Börsen um Marktanteile. Wie kam es zu dem hier beschriebenen Wandel? Der entscheidende Katalysator ist der gestiegene Wettbewerbsdruck auf traditionelle Börsen, welcher in vielen Fällen zu einer Umstrukturierung ihrer Organisationsform und Eigentümerstruktur führte. Diese neu ausgerichteten Börsen verstanden sich nun als reguläre, gewinnorientierte Firmen, die nicht mehr in erster Linie ihren Kunden, sondern ihren neuen Eigentümern, den Aktionären, verpflichtet waren. ...
The Indian IT industry has received great attention. Although most studies cover South Indian locations, clustering has rarely been a topic. This study focuses on Bangalore addressing questions related to Bangalore’s successful development and lessons thereof for other regions in and outside India. The approach pertains to economic geography and international business; hypotheses have been developed from a multi-disciplinary literature survey and interview fieldwork in Bangalore. I emphasize human and social capital and networks. While the first chapter delineates cultural foundations of human capital formation, the second and third deal with bonding and bridging social capital (or dense and loose networks), respectively; the fourth is an outlook on future opportunities through intersectoral upgrading. The main hypothesis is that a combination of both forms of social networks - contingent upon sub-sectors – has helped Bangalore developing a successful IT industry. Positive attitudes towards education led to relatively more human capital spawning two positive feedbacks: 1) establishment of national research and educational institutes resulting in large inflows of a diversity of people providing the required setting for creativity and innovation; 2) transnational networks linking to Silicon Valley are dominated by people from South India, allowing for additional knowledge spillovers corroborating the regional clustering.
The dissertation collects four self-contained essays which contribute to the literature on wage structures, heterogeneous labor demand, and the impact of trade unions. The first paper provides a detailed description of the evolution of wage inequality in East and West Germany in the late years of the twentieth century. In contrast to previous decades, wage inequality has been rising in several dimensions during that period. The second paper identifies cohort effects in the evolution of both wages and employment. Observed structures are consistent with a labor demand framework that incorporates steady skill-biased technical change. Substitutability between skill and age groups in the German labor market is found to be relatively high. Simulations based on estimated elasticities of substitution illustrate that higher wage dispersion between skill groups would have contributed to a reduction in unemployment. The third paper estimates determinants of individual union membership decisions and studies the erosion of union density in East and West Germany. Using corresponding predictions of net union density, the fourth paper analyzes the link between union strength and the structure of wages. A higher union density is associated with lower residual wage dispersion, reduced skill wage differentials, and a lower wage level. This finding is in line with an insurance motive for union action. The thesis comprises the following articles: (1) “Rising Wage Dispersion, After All! The German Wage Structure at the Turn of the Century,” IZA Discussion Paper 2098, April 2006. (2) “Skill Wage Premia, Employment, and Cohort Effects: Are Workers in Germany All of the Same Type?”, IZA Discussion Paper 2185, June 2006, joint with Bernd Fitzenberger. (3) “The Erosion of Union Membership in Germany: Determinants, Densities, Decompositions,” IZA Discussion Paper 2193, July 2006, joint with Bernd Fitzenberger and Qingwei Wang. (4) “Equal Pay for Equal Work? On Union Power and the Structure of Wages in West Germany, 1985–1997,” translation of “Gleicher Lohn für gleiche Arbeit? Zum Zusammenhang zwischen Gewerkschaftsmitgliedschaft und Lohnstruktur in Westdeutschland 1985–1997,” Zeitschrift für Arbeitsmarkt-Forschung, 38 (2/3), 125-146, joint with Bernd Fitzenberger, 2005.
We focus on a quantitative assessment of rigid labor markets in an environment of stable monetary policy. We ask how wages and labor market shocks feed into the inflation process and derive monetary policy implications. Towards that aim, we structurally model matching frictions and rigid wages in line with an optimizing rationale in a New Keynesian closed economy DSGE model. We estimate the model using Bayesian techniques for German data from the late 1970s to present. Given the pre-euro heterogeneity in wage bargaining we take this as the first-best approximation at hand for modelling monetary policy in the presence of labor market frictions in the current European regime. In our framework, we find that labor market structure is of prime importance for the evolution of the business cycle, and for monetary policy in particular. Yet shocks originating in the labor market itself may contain only limited information for the conduct of stabilization policy. JEL - Klassifikation: J64 , E32 , C11 , E52
Although stable money demand functions are crucial for the monetary model of the exchange rate, empirical research on exchange rates and money demand is more or less disconnected. This paper tries to fill the gap for the Euro/Dollar exchange rate. We investigate whether monetary disequilibria provided by the empirical literature on U.S. and European money demand functions contain useful information about exchange rate movements. Our results suggest that the empirical performance of the monetary exchange rate model improves when insights from the money demand literature are explicitly taken into account. JEL - Klassifikation: F31 , E41
The dynamic relationship between the Euro overnight rate, the ECB´s policy rate and the term spread
(2006)
This paper investigates how the dynamic adjustment of the European overnight rate Eonia to the term spread and the ECB’s policy rate has been affected by rate expectations and the operational framework of the ECB. In line with recent evidence found for the US and Japan, the reaction of the Eonia to the term spread is non-symmetric. Moreover, the response of the Eonia to the policy rate depends on both, the repo auction format and the position of the Eonia in the ECB’s interest rate corridor. JEL - Klassifikation: E43 , E52
Inflation and relative price variability in the Euro area : evidence from a panel threshold model
(2006)
In recent macroeconomic theory, relative price variability (RPV) generates the central distortions of inflation. This paper provides first evidence on the empirical relation between inflation and RPV in the euro area focusing on threshold effects of inflation. We ¯nd that expected inflation significantly increases RPV if inflation is either very low (below -1.38% p.a.) or very high (above 5.94% p.a.). In the intermediate regime, however, expected in°ation has no distorting effects which supports price stability as an outcome of optimal monetary policy. JEL classification: E31, C23