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Ist der Pflegenotstand unabwendbar? : Über die Zukunft der Pflegeversicherung: Defizite und Lösungen
(2007)
Über die gesetzliche Pflegeversicherung wird seit der Verabschiedung des Gesetzes zur sozialen Absicherung des Risikos der Pflegebedürftigkeit (PflegeVersG oder SGB XI) im April 1994 kontrovers diskutiert. Ganz oben auf der politischen Agenda steht dieses Thema wieder seit der jüngsten Debatte zur Gesundheitsreform. Während die CDU/CSU-regierten Länder für eine private, kapitalgedeckte Zusatzversicherung eintreten, favorisieren SPDLänder eine »Bürgerversicherung« auch für die Pflegeversicherung. ...
Wenn Angehörige die Pflege übernehmen : von Kosten und Nutzen intrafamiliärer Pflegevereinbarungen
(2007)
Ob ein Angehöriger im Alter zu Hause von der Familie versorgt werden kann, hängt von vielen Faktoren ab, nicht nur davon, ob die Familienmitglieder über die nötigen Pflegekenntnisse verfügen, motiviert sind oder ob sie sich moralisch verpflichtet fühlen. Bei der Frage nach den Möglichkeiten der Pflege in der Familie, man spricht auch von »intrafamiliären Pflegearrangements«, müssen auch ökonomische Gesichtspunkte berücksichtigt werden: Wer sich als Pflegebedürftiger entscheidet, keinen ambulanten Pflegedienst zu engagieren oder nicht ins Heim zu gehen, der bevorzugt – ökonomisch gesprochen – die Eigenproduktion in Form der Familienpflege gegenüber dem Kauf professioneller Pflegedienstleistungen von externen Märkten. Welche Gründe haben Familien für die Bevorzugung der intrafamiliären Pflege, welchen Nutzen und welche Kosten berücksichtigen sie bei ihrer (Pflege-)Entscheidung? Um die beobachtbare Stabilität und die möglichen Vorteile der Pflege in Familien und Privathaushalten zu erklären, kann die ökonomische Sicht interessante Aspekte erhellen. Letztere werden in diesem Beitrag mit den Ergebnissen einer schriftlichen Befragung zu den Auswirkungen der Gesetzlichen Pflegeversicherung in Hessen konfrontiert.
Seit Jahren wird von einem Krieg der Generationen fabuliert, der in den kommenden Jahrzehnten ausbrechen werde. Von einer Kündigung des Generationenvertrags in der Gesetzlichen Rentenversicherung ist die Rede, nach dem bisher die laufenden Renten aus den gleichzeitig gezahlten Beiträgen ohne Bildung eines Kapitalstocks finanziert werden (Umlageverfahren). Die Menschen werden zunehmend unsicherer, ob sie noch ein Alterseinkommen erwarten können, das einen Ruhestand ohne große finanzielle Sorgen erlaubt und das sie vor Armut im Alter bewahrt. Gleichzeitig spricht man aber von der Generation der Erben, die in den nächsten ein oder zwei Jahrzehnten Erbschaften in bisher nie gekannter Höhe erhalten werden. Diese Gemengelage bedarf der genaueren Durchleuchtung, um echte von vermeintlichen Problemen unterscheiden zu können.
Die Entscheidung, die »Regelaltersgrenze« von derzeit 65 auf 67 Jahre anzuheben, hat erneut der Debatte Auftrieb verschafft, wie der Übergang von der Erwerbsphase in den Ruhestand sinnvoll zu gestalten ist. Sind die betroffenen Altersjahrgänge noch leistungsfähig genug, um weiter berufstätig zu sein? Wie schätzen Arbeitgeber die Einsatzmöglichkeit älterer Arbeitnehmerinnen und Arbeitnehmer ein? Gibt es genügend Arbeitsplätze, um eine erweiterte Zahl von älteren Erwerbstätigen aufzunehmen? Mindert der spätere Ausstieg der Älteren die Einstiegschancen der Jüngeren? Ist der geplante Aufschub der Regelaltersgrenze lediglich ein »Trick«, um die Rentenabschläge hochzuschrauben?
Acquiring foreign firms far away might be hazardous to your share price: evidence from Germany
(2007)
This paper examines shareholder wealth effects of cross-border acquisitions. In a sample of 155 large acquisitions by German corporations from 1985–2006 international transactions in total do not lead to significant announcement returns. Geography, however, makes a difference: Shareholders of acquiring firms gain 6.5% in cross-border transactions into countries that have a common border with Germany but lose 4.4% in other international transactions. We find proximity to be one of the most important success factors in cross-border mergers and acquisitions, even when we control for firm, deal and country characteristics.
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.
Mutual insurance companies and stock insurance companies are different forms of organized risk sharing: policyholders and owners are two distinct groups in a stock insurer, while they are one and the same in a mutual. This distinction is relevant to raising capital, selling policies, and sharing risk in the presence of financial distress. Up-front capital is necessary for a stock insurer to offer insurance at a fair premium, but not for a mutual. In the presence of an owner-manager conflict, holding capital is costly. Free-rider and commitment problems limit the degree of capitalization that a stock insurer can obtain. The mutual form, by tying sales of policies to the provision of capital, can overcome these problems at the potential cost of less diversified owners.
This paper documents the methodology underlying the construction of a global database of gross foreign asset and liability positions for 153 countries over the period 1970 to 2004 and illustrates some key data characteristics. The data cover both inflows and outflows of capital and thus allow for an assessment of the degree of international financial integration. In addition to net foreign asset stocks, we also provide details on the composition of the main asset and liability categories, namely the foreign direct investment, equity investment and debt components. Finally, we report on valuation changes as one of the main sources of discrepancy between transaction-based capital flow data and stock values of investment positions. The dataset is available for download at www.ifk-cfs.de/fileadmin/downloads/data/cfs-icfd.zip. or http://publikationen.ub.uni-frankfurt.de/volltexte/2007/4855/original/cfs-icfd.zip JEL Classification: F21; F34; F32
In this paper we revisit medium- to long-run exchange rate determination, focusing on the role of international investment positions. To do so, we develop a new econometric framework accounting for conditional long-run homogeneity in heterogeneous dynamic panel data models. In particular, in our model the long-run relationship between effective exchange rates and domestic as well as weighted foreign prices is a homogeneous function of a country’s international investment position. We find rather strong support for purchasing power parity in environments of limited negative net foreign asset to GDP positions, but not outside such environments. We thus argue that the purchasing power parity hypothesis holds conditionally, but not unconditionally, and that international investment positions are an essential component to characterizing this conditionality. Finally, we adduce evidence that whether deterioration of a country’s net foreign asset to GDP position leads to a depreciation of that country’s effective exchange rate depends on its rate of inflation relative to the rate of inflation abroad as well as its exposure to global shocks. JEL Classification: F31, F37, C23
This paper documents the experiences of assurance evaluation during the early stage of a large software development project. This project researches, contracts and integrates privacy-respecting software to business environments. While assurance evaluation with ISO 15408 Common Criteria (CC) within the certification schemes is done after a system has been completed, our approach executes evaluation during the early phases of the software life cycle. The promise is to increase quality and to reduce testing and fault removal costs for later phases of the development process. First results from the still-ongoing project suggests that the Common Criteria can define a framework for assurance evaluation in ongoing development projects.
Die Unternehmensbesteuerung ist eines der Instrumentarien das im Wettbewerb um den mobilen Faktor Kapital von den Industriestaaten eingesetzt wird. Hinsichtlich der wissenschaftlichen Forschung, die den Zusammenhang zwischen der Unternehmensbesteuerung und dem unternehmerischen Kapitalstock untersucht, ist mittlerweile eine beträchtliche Zahl von Literatur entstanden. Aus der vorhandenen Literatur sind jedoch zwei Schwächen zu erkennen. Erstens basieren viele der empirischen Analysen auf makroökonomischen Zeitreihendaten und zweitens finden vor allem Reduzierte-Form-Modelle Anwendung. Die vorliegende Dissertation gliedert sich in die Reihe empirischer Arbeiten unter Verwendung von Mikrodaten ein, die Aspekte der Unternehmensbesteuerung untersuchen. Die Arbeiten liefern einen Beitrag zum tieferen Verständnis aus den Teilbereichen der Finanzierunkstruktur, der gemeinsamen Bemessungsgrundlage sowie der Messung der marginalen Steuerbelastung. Dabei konzentrieren sich die Analysen auf die Aktivitäten deutscher Unternehmen im In- und Ausland sowie ausländischer Unternehmen in Deutschland. Grundlage der empirischen Untersuchungen sind vor allem vertrauliche Mikrodaten der Deutschen Bundesbank. Im Rahmen der deskriptiven und multivariaten Analyse werden Hinweise für den Zusammenhang zwischen der Besteuerung und dem unternehmerischen verhalten nachgewiesen. Damit dienen die Resultate auch als Diskussionsgrundlage für die Ausgestaltung künftiger Steuerpolitik in Deutschland und der EU.
Using a unique data set on trade credit defaults among French firms, we investigate whether and how trade credit is used to relax financial constraints. We show that firms that face idiosyncratic liquidity shocks are more likely to default on trade credit, especially when the shocks are unexpected, firms have little liquidity, are likely to be credit constrained or are close to their debt capacity. We estimate that credit constrained firms pass more than one fourth of the liquidity shocks they face on to their suppliers down the trade credit chain. The evidence is consistent with the idea that firms provide liquidity insurance to each other and that this mechanism is able to alleviate the consequences of credit constraints. In addition, we show that the chain of defaults stops when it reaches firms that are large, liquid, and have access to financial markets. This suggests that liquidity is allocated from large firms with access to outside finance to small, credit constrained firms through trade credit chains.
Public employee pension systems throughout the developed world have traditionally been of the pay-as-you-go (PAYGO) defined benefit (DB) variety, where pensioner payments are financed by taxes (contributions) levied on the working generation. But as the number of retirees rises relative to the working-age group, such systems have begun to face financial distress. This trend has been exacerbated in many countries, among them Germany, by high unemployment rates producing further deterioration of the contribution base. In the long run, public sector pension benefits will have to be cut or contributions increased, if the systems are to be maintained. An alternative path sometimes offered to ease the crunch of paying for public employee pensions is to move toward funding: here, plan assets are gradually built up, invested, and enhanced returns devoted to partly defray civil servants’ pension costs. In this study, we evaluate the impact of introducing partial prefunding, paired with a strategic investment policy for the German federal state of Hesse. The analysis assesses the impact of introducing a supplementary tax-sponsored pension fund whose contributions are invested in the capital market and used to relieve the state budget from (some) pension payments. Our model determines the expectation and the Conditional Value-at-Risk of economic pension costs using a stochastic simulation process for pension plan assets. This approach simultaneously determines the optimal contribution rate and asset allocation that controls the expected economic costs of providing the promised pensions, while at the same time controlling investment risk. Specifically, we offer answers to the following questions: 1. How can the plan be designed to control cash-flow shortfall risk, so as to mitigate the potential burden borne by future generations of taxpayers? 2. What is the optimal asset allocation for this fund as it is built up, to generate a maximum return while simultaneously restricting capital market and liability risk? 3. What are reasonable combinations of annual contribution rates and asset allocation to a state-managed pension fund, which will limit costs of providing promised public sector pensions? We anticipate that this research will interest several sorts of policymaker groups. First, focusing on the German case, the state and Federal governments should find it relevant, as these entities face considerable public sector pension liabilities. Second, our findings will also be of interest to other European countries, as most have substantial underfunded defined benefit plans for civil servants. In what follows, we first offer a brief description of the structure of civil servant pensions in Germany, focusing on their benefit formulas, their financing, and the resulting current as well as future plan obligations for taxpayers. Next, we turn to an analysis of the actuarial status of the Hesse civil servants’ pension plan and evaluate how much would have to be contributed to fund this plan in a nonstochastic context. Subsequently we evaluate the asset-liability and decision-making process from the viewpoint of the plan sponsor, to determine sensible plan asset allocation behavior. A final section summarizes findings and implications.
Dynamische Aspekte im Kaufverhalten : die Determinanten von Kaufzeitpunkt, Marken- und Mengenwahl
(2007)
Die vorliegende Arbeit untersucht das Wahlverhalten von Konsumenten in differenzierten Produktkategorien des Konsumgütermarktes. Ausgangspunkt ist die Beobachtung, dass ein Marketing-Mix nicht nur die aktuellen Reaktionen der Konsumenten, sondern auch die resultierenden Konsequenzen für die Zukunft berücksichtigen muss. So führen insbesondere Preispromotions, welche den größten Anteil des Marketing-Budgets bei Konsumgütern in Anspruch nehmen, oft lediglich zu einer Vorverlagerung der Käufe statt zu einem Mehrabsatz durch Markenwechsel und sind daher durchaus kritisch zu bewerten. Anhand von Haushaltspaneldaten zweier Produktkategorien wird der Einfluss dynamischer Aspekte im Rahmen der Konsumentenentscheidungen hinsichtlich Kaufzeitpunkt, Marken- und Mengenwahl untersucht. Auf Grund kontroverser Diskussionen in der Marketing-Forschung bezüglich der korrekten Modellierung der drei Entscheidungen, steht diese neben der expliziten Spezifikation der Dynamiken im Fokus der Betrachtungen. Die empirischen Analysen sowie die anschließenden Simulationen von Marktszenarien zeigen zunächst die Überlegenheit einer getrennten gegenüber einer gemeinsamen Nutzenfunktion bei der Modellierung der drei Entscheidungen auf. Des Weiteren findet sich in einer Produktkategorie die Abhängigkeit der Preissensitivität der Konsumenten von der in der Vergangenheit beobachteten Häufigkeit von Preispromotions. Die Preissensitivität in der Mengenwahl ist dabei von dieser Häufigkeit wesentlich stärker betroffen als die der Markenwahl, was als Erklärungsansatz für die empirisch beobachtete Vorverlagerung von Käufen gewertet werden kann.
We propose a new approach to measuring the effect of unobservable private information or beliefs on volatility. Using high-frequency intraday data, we estimate the volatility effect of a well identified shock on the volatility of the stock returns of large European banks as a function of the quality of available public information about the banks. We hypothesise that, as the publicly available information becomes stale, volatility effects and its persistence should increase, as the private information (beliefs) of investors becomes more important. We find strong support for this idea in the data. We argue that the results have implications for debate surrounding the opacity of banks and the transparency requirements that may be imposed on banks under Pillar III of the New Basel Accord.
This paper traces the location of foreign banks in Germany from 1949 to 2006. As suggested by new economic geography models we find a ‘u’-shaped concentration of foreign banks in Germany. Only after a competition between several cities, Frankfurt has emerged as the pre-eminent financial centre, triggered by the ‘historical event’ of setting up the German central bank in Frankfurt. After a strong increase, Frankfurt’s share in the location of foreign banks in Germany decreases slowly but significantly since the mid 1980’s. We conclude that there will be a lesser role in Europe for secondtier financial centres in the future.
Many tax-codes around the world allow for special taxable treatment of savings in retirement accounts. In particular, profits in retirement accounts are usually tax exempt which allow investors to increase an asset’s return by holding it in such a retirement account. While the existing literature on asset location shows that risk-free bonds are usually the preferred asset to hold in a retirement account, we explain how the tax exemption of profits in retirement accounts affects private investors’ asset allocation. We show that total final wealth can be decomposed into what the investor would have earned in a taxable account and what is due to the tax exemption of profits in the retirement account. The tax exemption of profits can thus be considered a tax-gift which is similar to an implicit bond holding. As this tax-gift’s impact on total final wealth decreases over time, so does the investor’s equity exposure.
This paper analyses cross-border contagion in a sample of European banks from January 1994 to January 2003. We use a multinomial logit model to estimate the number of banks in a given country that experience a large shock on the same day (“coexceedances”) as a function of variables measuring common shocks and coexceedances in other countries. Large shocks are measured by the bottom 95th percentile of the distribution of the first difference in the daily distance to default of the bank. We find evidence in favour of significant cross-border contagion. We also find some evidence that since the introduction of the euro cross-border contagion may have increased. The results seem to be very robust to changes in the specification.
We compute the optimal dynamic asset allocation policy for a retiree with Epstein-Zin utility. The retiree can decide how much he consumes and how much he invests in stocks, bonds, and annuities. Pricing the annuities we account for asymmetric mortality beliefs and administration expenses. We show that the retiree does not purchase annuities only once but rather several times during retirement (gradual annuitization). We analyze the case in which the retiree is restricted to buy annuities only once and has to perform a (complete or partial) switching strategy. This restriction reduces both the utility and the demand for annuities.