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The persistence of profits in banking: an international comparisonGugler, Klaus, Peev, Evgeni January 2018 (has links) (PDF)
This article examines the dynamics of bank profitability in the USA, Germany, Great Britain,
France, Italy and Switzerland over the period 1993-2014. We find long-run bank profit persistence
in all six countries in the period before the financial crisis in 2008. Banks with large capital
ratios are persistently more profitable, and there is little evidence of a link between bank size and
the persistence of bank profits. Commercial (saving) banks are persistently more (less) profitable
in four of the six countries. The effects of the financial crisis in 2008 differed dramatically across
countries as well as across ownership types. While US banks experienced dramatic declines in the
immediate aftermath of the crisis, they recovered much faster than their European counterparts
and essentially retain their long run profit potential by the year 2014.
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Network Centrality and Market Prices: Empirical EvidenceFirgo, Matthias, Pennerstorfer, Dieter, Weiss, Christoph 02 1900 (has links) (PDF)
We empirically investigate the importance of centrality (holding a central position in a spatial network) for strategic interaction in pricing for the Austrian retail gasoline market. Results from spatial autoregressive models suggest that the gasoline station located most closely to the market center - defined as the 1-median location - exerts the strongest effect on pricing decisions of other stations. We conclude that centrality influences firms' pricing behavior and further find that the importance of centrality increases with market size.
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Consumption & class in evolutionary macroeconomicsRengs, Bernhard, Scholz-Wäckerle, Manuel January 2018 (has links) (PDF)
This article contributes to the field of evolutionary macroeconomics by
highlighting the dynamic interlinkages between micro-meso-macro with a Veblenian
meso foundation in an agent-based macroeconomic model. Consumption
is dependent on endogenously changing social class and signaling, such as
bandwagon, Veblen and snob effects. In particular, we test the macroeconomic
effects of this meso foundation in a generic agent-based model of a closed
artificial economy. The model is stock-flow consistent and builds upon local
decision heuristics of heterogeneous agents characterized by bounded rationality
and satisficing behavior. These agents include a multitude of households
(workers and capitalists), firms, banks as well as a capital goods firm, a
government and a central bank. Simulation experiments indicate coevolutionary
dynamics between signaling-by-consuming and firm specialization
that eventually effect employment and consumer prices, as well as other
macroeconomic aggregates.
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Detecting Collusion in Spatially Differentiated MarketsFirgo, Matthias, Kügler, Agnes 10 1900 (has links) (PDF)
The empirical literature on mergers, market power and collusion in differentiated markets has mainly focused on
methods relying on output and/or panel data. In contrast to this literature we suggest a novel approach that allows for
the detection of collusive behavior among a group of firms making use of information on the spatial structure of horizontally differentiated products. By estimating best response functions using a spatial econometrics approach, we focus on differences in the strategic interaction in pricing between different groups of firms as well as on differences in price levels. We apply our method to the market for ski lift tickets using a unique data set on ticket prices and detailed resort-specific characteristics covering all ski resorts in Austria. (authors' abstract) / Series: Department of Economics Working Paper Series
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