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Author

  • Baumgärtner, Stefan (1)
  • Quaas, Martin F. (1)
  • Wagner, Joachim (1)

Year of publication

  • 2005 (1)
  • 2006 (1)

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  • ResearchPaper (2) (remove)

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  • English (2) (remove)

Keywords

  • Betriebsrat (1)
  • Haftpflichtrisiko (1)
  • Produktivität (1)
  • Stochastische Dominanz (1)
  • Versicherung (1)
  • Works councils (1)
  • ecosystem management (1)
  • ecosystem quality (1)
  • endogenous environmental risk (1)
  • insurance (1)
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  • Fakultät Wirtschaftswissenschaften (2) (remove)

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German Works Councils and Productivity: First Evidence from a Nonparametric Test (2005)
Wagner, Joachim
This paper presents the first nonparametric test whether German works councils go hand in hand with higher labor productivity or not. It distinguishes between establishments that are covered by collective bargaining or not. Results from a Kolmogorov-Smirnov test for first order stochastic dominance tend to indicate that pro-productive effects are found in firms with collective bargaining only. However, the significance level of the test statistic is higher than a usually applied critical level. This somewhat weak evidence casts doubts on the validity of results from recent parametric approaches using a regression framework that point to high positive effects of works councils on productivity.
Natural vs. financial insurance in the management of public-good ecosystems (2006)
Quaas, Martin F. ; Baumgärtner, Stefan
In the face of uncertainty, ecosystems can provide natural insurance to risk averse users of ecosystem services. We employ a conceptual ecological-economic model to analyze the allocation of (endogenous) risk and ecosystem quality by risk averse ecosystem managers who have access to financial insurance, and study the implications for individually and socially optimal ecosystem management, and policy design. We show that while an improved access to financial insurance leads to lower ecosystem quality, the effect on the free-rider problem and on welfare is determined by ecosystem properties. We derive conditions on ecosystem functioning under which, if financial insurance becomes more accessible, (i) the extent of optimal regulation increases or decreases; and (ii) welfare, in the absence of environmental regulation, increases or decreases.
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