Institute of Economics
Organisational unit: Institute
- Junior Professorship for Economics, in particular Microeconomics
- Professorship for Economics, Applied Microeconomics
- Professorship for Economics, in Particular Economic Policy
- Professorship for Economics, in particular Empirical Microeconomics
- Professorship of Economics, in particular empirical Macroeconomics
- Professorship of Economics, in particular Microeconometrics and Policy Evaluation
Organisation profile
In research and teaching, the Institute of Economics deals with economic issues covering a wide range of topics.
The Institute's thematic focuses include applied microeconomics, macroeconomics, empirical economic research, economic policy, economic theory and financial markets. The following pages provide a detailed insight into the research and teaching activities of the institute.
Main research areas
The main research areas of the Institute of Economics are:
- Microeconometric studies on international firm activity, firm demography and workplace dynamics, and industrial relations
- Economic analyses of regulation and deregulation
- Economic analyses of insurance markets
- Applied microeconomics with empirical focus (e.g. labour, health, education).
- Macroeconomic research questions in areas such as labour market research, inequality research, monetary policy, fiscal policy, foreign trade theory and growth theory.
- Published
The nexus between top managers’ human capital and firm productivity
Pfeifer, C., 13.08.2015, In: Applied Economics Letters. 22, 12, p. 982-986 5 p.Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
- Published
Determinants of Female Employment in Egyptian Firms
Abdelgouad, A. F. & Pfeifer, C., 2014, In: The Empirical Economics Letters. 13, 12, p. 1267-1275 9 p.Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
- Published
The impact of foreign takeovers: comparative evidence from foreign and domestic acquisitions in Germany
Weche Gelübcke, J. P., 13.02.2015, In: Applied Economics. 47, 8, p. 739-755 17 p.Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
- Published
A detailed decomposition for nonlinear econometric models
Schwiebert, J., 03.2015, In: Journal of Economic Inequality. 13, 1, p. 53-67 15 p.Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
- Published
Guest Editorial
Görg, H. & Wagner, J., 01.12.2014, In: Jahrbucher fur Nationalokonomie und Statistik. 234, 6, p. 660-661 2 p.Research output: Journal contributions › Other (editorial matter etc.) › Research
- Published
Testing for a break in the persistence in yield spreads of EMU government bonds
Sibbertsen, P., Wegener, C. & Basse, T., 04.2014, In: Journal of Banking and Finance. 41, 1, p. 109-118 10 p.Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
- Published
Computing regression statistics from grouped data
Schwiebert, J., 2015, In: Journal of Economic and Social Measurement. 39, 4, p. 283-303 21 p.Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
- Published
Neue Player im Gesundheitswesen - Steigerung der Effektivität oder der Kosten?
Wein, T., 2015, Privatisierung im Gesundheitswesen: Chance oder Risiko?. Rössler, W. (ed.). 1 ed. Stuttgart: Kohlhammer Verlag GmbH, p. 43-56 14 p. (Gesundheit im Focus; vol. 1).Research output: Contributions to collected editions/works › Contributions to collected editions/anthologies › Research › peer-review
- Published
Law versus Economics? How should insurance intermediaries influence the insurance demand decision.
Pape, A., 2014, Lüneburg, p. 1-22, 23 p. (Working Paper Series in Economics; no. 299).Research output: Working paper › Working papers
- Published
Liability rule failures? Evidence from german court decisions.
Pape, A., 2014, 300 ed., Lüneburg: Institut für Volkswirtschaftslehre der Universität Lüneburg, p. 1-32, 33 p. (Working Paper Series in Economics; no. 300).Research output: Working paper › Working papers