Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
The Research and Service Departments Business Cycle Analyses and Financial Markets The work of this research department focuses on forecasting the business cycle in Germany, the European Union and in other industrialised countries. This presupposes constant observation and analysis of economic developments on the macroeconomic level. The systematic collection and methodological analysis of the Institute’s own survey findings and the official statistics provide the empirical basis for the forecasting work. Particular weight is given to the results of the Ifo Business Survey, the Ifo Investment Survey and the Ifo World Economic Survey (WES). The economic indicators from Ifo surveys and the official statistics are constantly examined for their usefulness in macroeconomic analysis and forecasts. This applies to both the forecasting instruments of the Ifo Institute, such as econometric approaches for business-cycle and growth-trend forecasts, and to model analyses of the macroeconomic effects of alternative economic-policy measures. Economics and Labour, along with the Deutsches Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung, DIW, Berlin, the HWWA-Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung, Hamburg, the Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung Halle, IWH, the Institut für Weltwirtschaft an der Universität Kiel, IfW, as well as the Rheinisch-Westfälisches Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung, RWI, Essen. Alongside these more nationally oriented activities, the department also collaborates in international projects. For example, together with INSEE (Paris) and ISAE (Rome) a short-term forecast of important macroeconomic variables for the euro area is published. New euro-zone forecast The theoretical models of the business cycle and economic growth are also examined for their suitability and relevancy. For this the department conducts various macroeconomic investigations either as self-initiated or contract research.These include the analysis of the links between long-term growth and economic development, the examination of the interaction of international economic activity, the analysis of the impact of institutional regulations, particularly on the labour market, on employment and output as well as the development of forecasting systems on the basis of modern, econometric timeseries methods. Special attention is placed on the importance of international financial markets, including the institutions of the European Monetary Union and the policy decisions of the European Central Bank.The analysis of the transmission mechanisms of monetarypolicy decisions is a particular focus of the department. In order to depict the business cycles reliably, analyses are made not only of the short-term fluctuations but also of longer-term growth processes of national economies, in particular in Europe. This includes the systematic comparison of policy measures and the special conditions in the individual countries, which can provide information on available policy options in Germany and Europe. The relationships between the business cycle and growth between countries are analysed and included in the forecasting. Business Cycle Forecasts Four times a year the Ifo Institute provides projections of the gross domestic product (by origin, disposition and distribution), the labour market, prices, and government revenues and expenditures. The quantification of the acceleration or weakening of economic activity as well as the diagnosis of business cycle turning points receive special attention. Economic policy, especially monetary, fiscal and wage policy, is examined for its effect on economic activity. The department frequently uses the media to address various economic-policy issues. These include questions of wage setting, the reform of financial institutions (Stability and Growth Pact) or the effects of commodity prices and exchange rate fluctuations on macroeconomic developments. The media resonance to the economic forecasts is great, but the press also regularly reports on the department’s other research studies. In the middle and at the end of the year, Ifo publishes its own forecasts. In spring and autumn the forecasting department participates in the Joint Forecast of the Working Group of German Economic Research Institutes, commissioned by the Federal Ministry of Media resonance The co-operation with universities is an important element of the department’s work. Two doctoral students are involved in the graduate programme of the LMU. Lectures and seminars in time-series eco- 17 Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 Business Cycle Analyses and Financial Mar kets nometrics are also conducted by members of the departments. Co-operation with the Ifo research professors (H. Berger, H. Rottmann, J.-E. Sturm, F. Westermann, U. Woitek) and Ifo research directors (G. Illing, S. Mittnik) is intense and finds expression in common projects and publications. equipment at 4 % was only slightly stronger than in Germany as a whole. In the last two years the relative drop in eastern Germany was more prominent. This relatively positive development for eastern Germany was the result of an increase in investments in eastern German manufacturing. While the investment activities of western German industry in 2003 were still affected by the general economic weakness, eastern German industry used its locational advantages vis-à-vis western Germany to disengage itself somewhat from the all-German business-cycle trend. In total, the share of eastern Germany in the total volume of investment in new plant and equipment, which had declined since 1995, stabilised in the past three years to a level of 16 %. Projects Completed in 2004: Estimation of Expenditures for Plant and Equipment in Eastern and Western Germany for 2003 E. Langmantel for the Federal Ministry of Economics and Labour, April 2004 to October 2004. In the official statistics, information on investment developments in eastern and western Germany is incomplete.The aim of this project is to fill the data gaps in the official statistics and to present an estimate of investment in plant and equipment in eastern and western Germany for 2003, divided into economic sectors. The study relies heavily on the Ifo Investment Survey. It also evaluates official and federation statistics, harmonising them with the key data of the Federal Statistical Office using a balance-mechanical consistency check. Exchange Rate Changes and Trade Flows – Evidence from Emerging Market Economies T. Wollmershäuser for the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), February 2004 to March 2004. This project examined the connection between changes in real effective exchange rates and indicators of foreign trade for a number of emerging market countries. The study provided the commissioner, UNCTAD, background information for the preparation of its Trade & Development Report 2004, and expanded and updated the study prepared for UNCTAD entitled Exchange Rate Shocks and Trade Flows in Developing Countries Share of Eastern Germana) Investment in Total Investment The main results were published in UNCTAD’s Trade and Development Report 2004, in Chapter IV (in particular in Appendix 2 to Chapter IV). Independently of the extent of change of real effective exchange rates, it was determined that most variables that were used as indicators of competitiveness behaved as expected. A real appreciation impairs competitiveness, a devaluation improves it. Major exchange rate fluctuations, in contrast to smaller ones, display a considerably higher exchange rate elasticity of the examined trade flows. A 10 % real effective revaluation, for example, worsens the balance of trade in goods, measured as a percentage of GDP, by 0.9 percentage points in the year of the revaluation. It should be kept in mind that with the Slight increase in investments in eastern German manufacturing Source: Ifo Institute. In eastern Germany in 2003, investments totalled EUR 67.5 billion, EUR 2.8 billion less than in the previous year. The drop in investments in plant and Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 18 Business Cycle Analyses and Financial Mar kets employed data set a quarter of all changes of the real effective exchange rate exceeds the 10-percent level. Such great changes occur all the more frequently the more flexible the underlying exchange rate regime is. On the other hand, very rigid exchange rate regimes (fixed exchange rates, crawling pegs) are frequently ended by speculative attacks that are accompanied by strong nominal and real devaluations. The implications for UNCTAD are clear. In the negotiations for the liberalisation of world trade, attention is paid too much to the reduction of tariff and non-tariff trade barriers. Here exchange rate policies can lead at least temporarily to similar distortions in the trade relations. For this reason monetary stability also be on the agenda of future trade negotiation rounds. Joint Economic Forecast G. Flaig, H. Bandholz,A. Gebauer, S. Henzel, O. Hülsewig, A. Kaltschütz, E. Langmantel,W. Nierhaus, M. Ruschinski, T. Wollmershäuser G. Flaig, A. Gebauer, S. Henzel, E. Langmantel,W. Nierhaus, M. Ruschinski, B. Schimpfermann, T. Wollmershäuser in co-operation with the Deutsches Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung, DIW, Berlin, the HWWA-Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung, Hamburg, the Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung Halle, IWH, the Institut für Weltwirtschaft an der Universität Kiel, IfW, as well as the Rheinisch-Westfälisches Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung, RWI, Essen, for the Federal Ministry of Economics and Labour, published regularly in ifo Schnelldienst. Study conducted for UNCTAD Forecast of the economy in Germany,Western Europe and the world up to 2005. Real Effective Exchange Rate und Trade Balance – Chile Estimation of Expenditures for Plant and Equipment in Eastern and Western Germany for 2004 E. Langmantel for the Federal Ministry of Economics and Labour, April 2005 to October 2004. An estimate of investment in plant and equipment in eastern and western Germany, divided into economic sectors. Forecasting German GDP:The Role of Inventory Assessment as Leading Indicator E. Langmantel in co-operation with Ifo research director, S. Mittnik, LMU Munich, autonomous research project, June 2004 to May 2005. Source: Ifo Institute. Using data collected by the Ifo Business Survey, this study assesses the suitability of firms’ assessments of order stocks for business-cycle forecasting. Current Projects: Ifo Economic Forecasts G. Flaig, H. Bandholz, A. Gebauer, S. Henzel, O. Hülsewig, A. Kaltschütz, O.-E. Kuntze, E. Langmantel, W. Nierhaus, M. Ruschinski, B. Schimpfermann, H.-W. Sinn, T. Wollmershäuser, published regularly in: ifo Schnelldienst. Institutions and Labour Market Performance G. Flaig in co-operation with Ifo research professor, H. Rottmann, University of Applied Science, AmbergWeiden, publication of interim results in: ifo Schnelldienst no. 17/2004. On-going analyses and forecasts of the economic situation in Germany, in Western Europe, and in the world. In this project the employment effects of labour market institutions are analysed in an international comparison. The focus is on dismissal protection laws, 19 Hiring hindered by protection against dismissal Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 Business Cycle Analyses and Financial Mar kets the determinants of wage formation, wage substitutes from unemployment aid as well as the taxation system. The empirical results should show where the German labour market system has the greatest need for reform. The Euro Zone Economic Outlook is a European joint initiative between the Ifo Institute, INSEE in Paris and ISAE in Rome.The focus is on an estimate (for the past quarter) and a forecast (for the current and following quarters) of real GDP, private consumption, industrial output and inflation in the euro zone. The forecasting is primarily carried out using econometric forecasting methods. These projections are then rounded off using the personal appraisals of the project team as well as other department researchers.The Euro Zone Economic Outlook is published quarterly – in January, April, July and October – as a two-page press release in German and English. The release date is on the day that Eurostat announces its second revision of the national accounts for a specific quarter. Macroeconomic Results of Asset Bubbles in an International Comparison H. Bandholz, O. Hülsewig, T. Wollmershäuser in cooperation with Ifo research director, G. Illing, LMU Munich, for the Federal Ministry of Finance, August 2004 to April 2005. Impact comparison of asset bubbles Strong fluctuations in asset prices are among the stylised facts of developed and globalised financial markets. Whereas exchange rate bubbles play an important role particularly in small, open national economies, stock-market and real-estate bubbles are components of all liberalised financial markets. The US stock-market crash of 1987, the bursting of the Japan bubble at the end of the 1980s, the Asian crisis of 1997 and the bursting of the New Economy bubble in 2000 are some prominent examples. The latter caused hard economic adaptation processses, also in Germany and the euro zone, since stock markets attained a stronger importance in the 1990s here as well. Private households increasingly turned to stocks as an investment option, and enterprises increasingly financed themselves by initial public offerings on the stock market. From a theoretical viewpoint changes in asset prices can influence the development of a national economy in various ways. In addition to theoretical reasons, this study aims to provide empirical evidence for the influence on macroeconomic activity from changes in asset prices in Germany, Britain, Japan and the United States. Using econometric time series, various relationships between GDP and its components, on the one hand, and asset stocks and prices, on the other hand, are estimated. Finally the economic-policy implications of the results are discussed for monetary and fiscal policies as well as for the regulation of financial markets. Gross Domestic Product Eurozone seasonally and workday adjusted 1.5 Forecast 1.0 4 0.5 2 0.0 0 -0.5 -2 1999 1999 2000 2001 2002 2002 2003 2004 2005 2005 against previous quarter (left-hand scale) against previous year (right-hand scale) Source: Eurostat and Ifo-INSEE-ISAE forecasts. European Economic Advisory Group (EEAG) O.-E. Kuntze, W. Nierhaus, H. Bandholz, published regularly in: EEAG Report on the European Economy. Analysis and forecast of economic developments in Europe and in the world. Published as a separate chapter in the Report on the European Economy. Credit Supply of the Banks and MonetaryPolicy Transmission O. Hülsewig and T. Wollmershäuser in co-operation with E. Mayer, University of Würzburg, autonomous research project. Euro Zone Economic Outlook H. Bandholz, B. Schimpfermann, T. Wollmershäuser in co-operation with INSEE, Paris, and ISAE, Rome. Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 6 20 Business Cycle Analyses and Financial Mar kets The project examines the role of bank lending in the transmission of monetary impulses in Germany. The analysis is based on a dynamic model that specifies the credit supply of the banks against the background of their expectations with regard to future monetarypolicy measures. The model parameters are estimated empirically by means of aggregated data to simulate the dynamic behaviour of credit supply and credit demand according to restrictive monetary-policy impulses. short-term, business-cycle forecasting. An empirical comparison of the prognostic capability of a large factor model vis-à-vis alternative time-series methods is offered for the euro area and Germany. Furthermore, the suitability of the model for the analysis of survey data at the dissaggregated level is examined. The structural interpretation and/or identification of the factors are the subject of the third module. Large structural factor models allow, for example, the simultaneous analysis of a large number of international transmission channels of economic shocks. The Interest-rate Structure of the Euro Interbank Money Market O. Hülsewig, B. Schimpfermann, autonomous research project. Short-term economic forecasting using factor models Investor Sentiment and the Stock Market O. Hülsewig, B. Schimpfermann, autonomous research project. Using a co-integration method, the interest-rate structure between money-market rates of various maturity periods in the euro area is empirically illustrated. The research deals in particular with the adaptation process to long-term equilibrium, which is modelled both symmetrically and asymmetrically. The results should help optimise the forecasting of short-term moneymarket rates. The reciprocal relationship between the sentiment of private and institutional investors, measured by a new survey, and the price formation process in important European stock markets is the subject of this research project. By means of a GARCH model the data will be examined with regard to specific implications in the theoretical literature on bubble formation in financial markets through limited arbitrage possibilities of professional investors and the existence of a group of irrational investors (noise traders). Macromodel for the Euro Area O. Hülsewig, T. Wollmershäuser, autonomous research project. The Quantification of Qualitative Inflation Expectations and an Examination of Inflation Dynamics in the Euro Area, Great Britain and the USA: Results of the Ifo World Economic Survey S. Henzel, autonomous research project, PhD thesis. On basis of a vector auto regression (VAR) a macromodel for the euro area, in which the price level and real output form the key variables, is empirically estimated.The research pursues two goals.The model is to be used both for forecasting and for the simulation of shocks (for example, interest- and exchangerate shocks as well as oil price shocks). Traditional quantification methods of qualitative survey data presuppose relatively restrictive assumptions concerning the expectation formation process of the survey participants. In particular, these methods assume undistorted expectations, on average – a necessary condition for rational expectations. In this study this assumption is avoided in order to create subjective expectation data that do not have to be rational a priori. For the quantification, threshold values are determined that must exceed the underlying variable for the survey to indicate a change. Instead of, as previously, deriving these thresholds from the Macroeconomic Applications of Large Dynamic Factor Models B. Schimpfermann, autonomous research project, PhD thesis, 2004 to 2006. The research uses three modules. In the first module, the competing models in the category of large dynamic factor models and estimating methods are documented and analysed. The second module deals with the use of factor models as an instrument of 21 How to quantify WES inflation expectations Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 Business Cycle Analyses and Financial Mar kets properties of past realisations, the values are determined independently using a special question in the Ifo World Economic Survey. The threshold values derived in this way are then used for computing expectations about the future development of the inflation rate and then examining them for their properties. Phillips Curve revisited Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 In the next step, the obtained expectation data are used for presenting inflation development in different countries. For every country we estimate a neoKeynesian Phillips Curve by using the subjective (quantitative) expectations of the World Economic Survey. The result is that the backwards-looking element in the Philips Curve is of greater importance than with assumed rational expectations. 22 Public Finance Analysing the German tax system, government financial equalisation systems, and overall fiscal policy under considerations of allocation, growth and distribution is the key task of the Public Finance department. The research comprises model-based theoretical and empirical analyses, which also include international experience with fiscal reforms. Efficiency and redistributive effects of fiscal policy are examined and concepts developed for assessing the consolidation of government budgets. the German economic research institutes and by providing input to the European Economic Advisory Group (EEAG). Projects Completed in 2004: Study on the Justification of Major Inhabitantweighting and the Subsidiary Pupil-weighting Schemes Applied for the Determination of Unconditional Grants in the Saxon Municipal Fiscal Equalisation System R. Parsche, Ch.W. Nam for the Saxon State Ministry of Finance, Dresden, December 2003 to February 2004, published in: ifo Forschungsberichte no. 22, Ifo Institute, Munich, April 2004. In the area of tax systems, the department researchers develop procedures for estimating tax revenue in the short and medium term as well as models for forecasting taxes on profits and elasticities of individual taxes. The fiscal studies deal with the theoretical and econometric assessment of tax equalisation systems at the municipal and Länder levels. Studies are also prepared on tax competition and mixed financing between the Länder and municipal levels. An important aspect of the work of this department concerns financial relationships within the EU. The department has also investigated the harmonisation of indirect taxes in the EU, having worked together often with the European Commission in this area. Efficiency of revenue sharing in Saxony The municipal fiscal equalisation scheme in Saxony is subject to continuous examination and adjustment since regional reforms but also changes in municipal tasks, and their spending and revenue situations produce a necessity for reallocation of the funds of municipal fiscal equalisation. Previously insignificant local requirement can develop into major burdens for municipal budgets that should be taken into consideration in the allocation of fiscal equalisation funds. Since the distribution criteria in fiscal equalisation law are general out of necessity and are not able to adjust to fundamental structural change, an on-going examination and up-dating of the regulations is necessary. This is especially the case in times in which local structural problems emerge because of budget restrictions at all levels of government not only become more manifest but are also more difficult to overcome. As a member of the working group for tax revenue estimation for the Federal Ministry of Finance, the Ifo Institute contributes its competence to the official forecasts of German tax revenue. In spring 2004, the meetings of this group dealt with the mid-term forecasts of German tax revenue up to 2008. In autumn 2004, the forecasts were updated for 2004 and 2005. In addition, researchers in this department give expert testimony at hearings of the Finance Committee of the German Parliament. For this reason, the research project commission by the State Ministry of Finance in Saxony examined, from a public finance perspective, the key elements of the municipal fiscal equalisation system in Saxony. In preparation for the equalisation 2005 and 2006, the appropriateness of the allocation key was analysed and adaptation requirements identified. It was especially examined whether the main distribution standards such as the main appropriation scale and pupil weighting still correspond with the current local requirements. Studies have been conducted on the municipal fiscal equalisation system in the individual Länder in recent years. Department researchers have completed studies for several Länder and have gained expertise on the functioning and economic impact of these equalisation systems. This expertise is the foundation for substantiated and authoritative analyses. The department contributes to the analysis and forecasting of the business cycle in Germany by participating in the semi-annual Joint Economic Forecast of 23 Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 Public Finance Changed needs call for adjustments The first part of the study is an examination of the extent to which adjustment requirements have arisen since the last reform in the major weighting system of the governmental units of the municipalities in regions and in the independent cities. Because of the changed local requirements, concrete proposals are made for a re-adjustment of the major weighting system on the basis of the subsidy requirement relations of the years 1999 to 2001. Due to the fluctuating values for these years, a slightly modified major weighting system is proposed for both the municipalities as well as the independent cities, based on an average of the years 1999 to 2001. Empirical Study on the Assessment of the Control System, Standards and Financing the Supra-local Social Welfare Scheme as well as Alternatives for Present Distribution of Tasks and Cost Unit Group for Social Welfare Benefits R. Parsche,Th. Fester, Ch. W. Nam for the Saxon State Ministry of Social Affairs, Dresden, March 2003 to January 2004, published in: ifo Forschungsberichte no. 21, Ifo Institute, April 2004. In many German Länder, the spending of regional social welfare agencies increased clearly in recent years. A significant reason for this development is the increasing number of relevant care-cases in the area of the so-called integration aid. This is also the case in Saxony. Here the numbers in 2002, at 25,464 cases, were almost twice as high as in 1993, at 13,410. In addition to this are the cost increases per case through increasing personnel costs and increasingly more extensive aid measures. Both effects have lead to a cost explosion in integration aid. Comparison of the Inhabitant-weighting and the Proposal Average of 1999 to 2001 The Ifo Institute, in co-operation project with consens (Hamburg), dealt with the above-mentioned issue.The focus of the Institute was specifically on the second part of the task, i.e., an evaluation of alternatives to the current distribution of responsibilities and financing of regional social welfare services in Saxony. Source: Calculation by the Ifo Institute. Expenditures (Gross) on Aid for Special Circumstances, 1998 – 2001 Reform requirements also result from the calculations of the current subsidy requirement relation to the subsidiary weighting system for pupils. Here the computed values of the year 2001 are proposed for a readjustment of the pupil weighting. By means of the changes that result from the adjustment of the main weighting system for the municipalities and the independent cities, but also indirectly for the regional districts, effects occur on the multipliers that are to correlate the subsidy requirements of a pupil with the subsidy requirements of an inhabitant in the three communal pillars. Source: Federal Statistical Office. Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 24 Public Finance The structure of the regional carrier of social welfare in Saxony, the Saxon State Welfare Association (Landeswohlfahrtsverband) was closely examined in the study. Both the organisational structure as well as the financing system, i.e. the distribution of costs, were the focus of the study. In addition the situation of regional social welfare in other Länder is examined, such as Brandenburg,Thuringia, Bavaria (District of Upper Palatinate and Lower Franconia), Baden-Wuerttemberg (LWV Baden and Wuerttemberg-Hohenzollern) and Hessia. This research builds on the above-mentioned study and will present an international comparison of how non-profit organisations are taxed in other countries (EU 25, USA, Japan).The particular aim is to document and compare the various profit, sales, inheritance and donation tax laws. In this way positive impulses for tax reform in Germany can be provided to strengthen civic commitment in future. Taxation of non-profit organisations Structural Policy of the European Union: Allocative and Distributive Effects of the Provision of Regional Public Goods in a Federal System (Part of the programme: “Institutional Design of Federal Systems”) H.-W. Sinn, R. Fenge for the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG), August 2003 to August 2005. On the basis of the preparatory work and the current structure of regional social welfare in Saxony, alternative proposals for a suitable distribution of individual responsibilities and costs are developed in the main part of the study, which are then discussed with representives of the Social, Finance and Interior Ministries, the main municipal agencies and the LWV. In addition to a status-quo presentation, the experts consider obligatory unification of the implementation and financing competencies at the level of the rural districts and independent cities with the simultaneous retention of central tasks with the regional social welfare agencies as a possible, feasible alternative as well as a suitable option model that could be implemented in several stages. The alternatives are described in detail and evaluated in terms of financial and general criteria, and compared with each other in order to present well-founded recommendations for the proper distribution of individual tasks and costs of regional social welfare in Saxony. Structural policy is a main task of the European Union, with a third of the EU budget allocated for it. Its importance will increase with EU Eastern enlargement. The EU supports the infrastructure in European regions with the goal of increasing economic strength and achieving a convergence of the economic performance of the regions. An economic analysis of the efficiency and the redistribution effects of European structural policy is the goal of this research project. With a view to the future organisation of a European finance system, the study examines the federal level of the EU to which this task should be assigned in terms of both efficiency and redistribution. Different aspects of structural policy must be considered: the financing instruments of federal regional authorities; the mobility of households, enterprises and factors of production that can be taxed for the financing of structural policy; the information of supra-regional authorities concerning regional preferences and regional tax strength. The analysis of vertical fiscal relations between federal levels that are involved in structural is a special focus of the study. Current Projects: The Taxation of Non-profit Organisations in an International Comparison R. Parsche, Ch. W. Nam, A. Kaltschütz for the Federal Ministry of Finance, June 2004 to February 2005. Civil commitment in Germany, i.e. the political, social and cultural activities of the population, is to receive more support. One option is to use the tax system to encourage civil commitment. The Federal Ministry of Finance has already commissioned a study on the role the federal government can play in the design of the legal and fiscal framework conditions. Ifo proposals for EU structural policy General Equilibrium Model for the Taxation of Capital Income in Germany D. M. Radulescu in co-operation with Ch. Keuschnigg, University of St. Gallen, and M. Stimmelmayr, CES, November 2002 to October 2005. 25 Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 Public Finance The goal of this research project is to develop a computable, dynamic general equilibrium model that allows simulations to be made of reforms in the areas of capital earnings taxation in Germany. This would make it possible to quantitatively register the effects on capital, investments, job demand, growth and welfare that result from the introduction of a dual earnings taxation. Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 26 Social Policy and Labour Markets The Department of Social Policy and Labour Markets carries out high-level academic research and is engaged in policy advising in the areas of social protection, labour market institutions, and employment, mainly focussing on long-term trends and structural aspects in the latter field. Particular attention is being paid to potential interactions between phenomena that are relevant in each of these areas, like repercussions of social policies on labour supply or demand or the effects of labour market regulations for financing social security via their impact on actual employment. Research in these areas involves extensive cooperation with other divisions of Ifo, researchers based at the Center for Economic Studies (CES) at the University of Munich and, increasingly, the international research community. The department has particular exper tise in collecting and assessing micro-data through special surveys conducted at a firm level. It participates in Ifo’s service activities by making these data accessible for external researchers, contributing to the Institute’s Database for Institutional Comparisons (DICE), and preparing reports on the economic performance in particular branches of industry. Results of the department’s research activities are regularly presented at international conferences and published in refereed journals. absence of fundamental labour market reforms, expectations that these problems will be cured simply through the decline in the active population that is expected to take place after 2010 may prove to be wrong. Increasing mobility of both goods manufactured and inputs used for production implies that systems competition is getting more and more intense. This places strong demands on the flexibility of national labour markets already today. Against this background, the department pays particular attention to analysing public transfers which may affect the level and structure of wages and wage-setting arrangements. In addition, the department is long experienced in doing empirical research using micro-data collected among private households or taken from surveys targeted at the firm-level. Building on these data, it is possible to evaluate the impact of a diversity of social policy measures and labour market regulations on the level and structure of employment, both on an aggregate level and for specific labour market segments (by sectors of industry, professions, qualifications, regions, etc.). Effects of social and labour market policy regulations Next to the institutional framework, labour market outcomes are also influenced by structural changes in labour demand and labour supply. Therefore, analysing the impact of technological progress and sectoral shifts on employment and vocational training, at a regional, national and a European level, is an important aspect in the department’s activities. In turn, the role of human capital in spreading new technologies and promoting aggregate growth is also examined, along with the issue of how to successfully manage international labour mobility, which may increase considerably in the future. In Germany, persistent high-level unemployment, prospective changes in the demographic structure, and long-term shifts in the patterns of labour force participation indicate that, in general, the demand for social protection will increase.At the same time, the scope for financing social security in its traditional form may well shrink in the future. The growing tension between claims and budgetary restrictions necessitates reforms in virtually every branch of the German welfare state. The department is running projections on the financial viability of several schemes of social insuranc and social assistance in order to identify where reforms are most urgent. Also, the incentives established by the measures that are currently in place are analysed, often in a comparative perspective, focussing on their employment effects. In the light of these findings, policy options and the scope for further reforms are discussed. In spite of recent reforms, “structural” unemployment appears to be extremely high in Germany. In the 27 Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 S o c i a l Po l i c y a n d L a b o u r M a r k e t s Projects Completed in 2004: (2004) 42.0 % of taxable gross wages to 45.5 % in the initial scenario, 48.9 % in the risk scenario. Following a methodology developed by the OECD and the EU Economic Policy Committee, these results point to “sustainability gaps” in German public finances which – depending on the scenario considered and on the precise definition of the indicator – would only disappear if other public expenditure were cut by 1.2 % to 2.9 % of GDP immediately and on a permanent basis. Simulations Regarding the Long-term Sustainability of Public Finances M. Werding, A. Kaltschütz for the Federal Ministry of Finance, December 2003 to November 2004, publication in: ifo Beiträge zur Wirtschaftsforschung no. 17, Ifo Institute, Munich 2005. Demographic change will be one of the most important challenges for economic policy and public finance during the coming decades. Among its consequences, particular attention should be given to the long-term effects on the sustainability of public finances in areas where expenditure is likely to be most sensitive to changes in the age structure of the population. Based on simulations for the future development of public expenditure on old-age provision, health care, long-term care, education and unemployment insurance, the project aimed at determining the potential dimension of these effects, thus providing a framework for continuously monitoring the impact of current political decisions on the sustainability of public finances. Public Debt if social security contributions are not adjusted to projected expenditure % of GDP 220 2050: 200.0% 200 180 160 140 Risik variant 120 100 80 2050: 111.1% 2006: 67.4% 2018: 58.9% 60 40 Initial variant 2003: 64.2% 2022: 54.5% 20 0 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 2020 2025 2030 2035 2040 2045 2050 Ifo recommends retirement age of 67 Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 Source: Calculations by the Ifo Institute. First, the simulations focus on two variants: a so-called “initial scenario” based on assumptions suggested by a government commission (Rürup Commission) for long-term projections regarding the statutory pension scheme and statutory health insurance that were prepared in 2003; and a “risk scenario” that is based on less optimistic assumptions regarding long-term trends in labour force participation and employment. Projections for both these scenarios refer to the legal framework as of summer 2004, including future changes that have already been legislated. In the initial scenario, the sum of all categories of public expenditure covered in the simulations goes up from a current (2003) 25.3 % of GDP – with some fluctuations during the projection period – to 27.8 % of GDP in 2050. In the risk scenario, the end-ofprojection level of the relevant expenditure is 29.8 % of GDP. If higher expenditure were entirely debt-financed, public debt would have to go up to 111 % of GDP until 2050 in the initial scenario, to 200 % in the risk scenario. Alternatively, social security contributions have to be increased from a current Sensitivity analyses show that the existence of a substantial sustainability gap is very robust if assumptions regarding relevant demographic and economic parameters are altered within plausible ranges. In a series of policy simulations, a number of options for closing the sustainability gap through reforms in the different branches of public expenditure are then looked at. It is shown that recent reforms regarding public old-age provision (2004) and the public health care system (2003) have definitely improved the sustainability of German public finances. Yet, further reforms are urgently needed. Considerable progress could be made, for instance, by gradually increasing the statutory retirement age (from 65 to 67) or by reductions of public health expenditure (through increased efficiency of services and/or a partial privatisation of the risks covered) as measures of this kind would strongly contribute to limiting expenditure of these systems. 28 S o c i a l Po l i c y a n d L a b o u r M a r k e t s Social Security Contributions benefits, and active support for searching and taking up work. Research focuses on a theoretical understanding of how these new elements of welfare programmes are expected to affect individual behaviour and labour market performance. In addition, the results are interpreted against the background of existing empirical evidence. While the existing literature mainly looks at how similar reforms affect work incentives for beneficiaries, the present study also takes into account consequences for those already employed, assuming that unemployment is largely involuntary. As a consequence, employment does not so much respond to changes in labour-supply behaviour but to changes in labour demand that follow from the new framework or to modifications of the matching process. with continuous adjustments to projected expenditure % of gross earnings 50 Risik variant 2050: 48.9% 48 46 44 Initial variant 2050: 45.5% effekt of recent reforms of public health insurance and public pensions 42 40 long-term effekt of demographic change 2003: 42.0% 38 36 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 2020 2025 2030 2035 2040 2045 2050 Source: Calculations by the Ifo Institute. Welfare-to-work policies in an international comparison The theoretical analysis highlights the impact of the new elements of welfare programmes on unemployment, factor prices, income distribution taxes and welfare of all the groups affected – capital owners, workers, and unemployed benefit recipients. In particular, it explains under which conditions reforms will stimulate employment. Among the results obtained, two aspects are truly remarkable. First, imposing time limits on welfare receipt as well as introducing work obligations can lead to a Pareto improvement if, as a consequence of declining gross wages and reduced tax rates, net wages remain constant or even increase. Second, on relative terms, benefit recipients who are immediately affected by the reforms considered turn out to be the winners when compared to those already in employment. Welfare to Work: A New Approach to Reforming Welfare Programmes? Theoretical Results and Evidence from Selected Industrialised Countries M. Werding, C. Holzner,V. Meier, W. Ochel, Ifo research project, funded by a research grant by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation), May 2003 to September 2004, publication in: C. Holzner,V. Meier und M.Werding,Time Limits on Welfare Use under Involuntary Unemployment, CESifo Working Paper no. 1220; C. Holzner, V. Meier und M. Werding, Workfare, Monitoring and Efficiency Wages, CESifo Working Paper (in preparation); C. Holzner, V. Meier und M. Werding, Job Search Assistance in a Model with Multiple Applications, CESifo Working Paper (in preparation); W. Ochel, Welfare-to-Work Experiences with Specific Work-First Programmes in Selected Countries, CESifo Working Paper no. 1153; W. Ochel, Welfare Time Limits in the United States – Experiences with a New Welfare-toWork Approach, CESifo Working Paper no. 1210. The analysis is augmented by a survey of the relevant experience based on welfare-to work reforms enacted in the US, the UK, Denmark and the Netherlands; also, a number of experiments conducted in Germany at a state or local level are looked at. Existing evaluations are summarised and compared to the theoretical predictions. The project aims at analysing the effectiveness of a welfare-to-work approach to reforming existing welfare programmes. Reforms of this kind that have been enacted in a number of countries are characterised by the introduction of a new set of incentives for welfare recipients through the introduction of time limits for benefit payments, obligations to work in public employment programmes in return for receiving Developments in Part-time Employment S. Munz, H. Hofmann, C. Holzner in co-operation with the Institut zur Erforschung sozialer Chancen (ISO), Cologne, for the Federal Ministry of Economics and Labour, September 2001 to December 2004, publication in preparation. 29 Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 S o c i a l Po l i c y a n d L a b o u r M a r k e t s Impact of part-time employment laws In Germany, the legal framework for a reduction of individual working hours changed considerably at the beginning of the year of 2001 through the Teilzeitund Befristungsgesetz (Part-Time and Fixed-term Employment Act, “TzBfG”). The Chamber of State Representatives (Bundesrat) obliged the Federal Government to submit an evaluation of the new law two years after it became effective. The Federal Dept. of Economics and Labour commissioned the Ifo Institute to prepare the evaluation study. Fertility and Prosperity: Links between Demography and Economic Growth in Selected OECD Countries M. Werding, V. Gács, S. Munz, Ifo research project, funded by Deutscher Arbeitskreis für Familienhilfe, December 2003 to July 2005. The project aims at detecting links between demographic characteristics, such as the age-structure of the active population, on the one hand, and productivity growth, on the other, which, in turn, may have affected aggregate economic growth.These links, given they exist, might become even more important in the course of demographic ageing. The inquiry is based on a macro-econometric analysis for a large panel of both industrialised and developing countries and a longer time series of data. Using the same set of data, potential repercussions of the economic performance on current fertility are also looked at. In a second step, the institutional framework for parental fertility decisions will be examined, focussing on a smaller selection of industrialised countries in order to identify instruments that may be suited to influence fertility and, hence, economic growth. Current Projects: German Outward FDI and its Impact on Domestic Labour Markets S. Becker, Center for Economic Studies (CES), R. Jäckle in co-operation with K. Ekholm, Stockholm, and M.-A. Mündler, San Diego, Ifo research project, funded by VolkswagenStiftung, December 2003 to June 2005, publication in: CESifo Working Paper no. 1374 and ifo Schnelldienst no. 1/2005. Over the past decades, globalisation has led to an increased international division of labour. As a consequence, high-income countries like Germany face changes in labour demand and structural shifts in their labour markets. Based on micro-econometric analyses, the research project investigates how outward foreign direct investment alters the multinational division of labour within German enterprises, and how it affects parent employment and home labour markets. In doing so, a unique, new data set is exploited in which anonymised worker data from the Federal Labour Office are matched with firm-level data on foreign direct investment from Deutsche Bundesbank. The following questions are addressed. How do labour forces and salaries differ across firms and time, depending on foreign direct investments? How does the displacement likelihood change? At what salaries and in which jobs do displaced workers find new jobs? The Fiscal Balance of Children in the German Tax-transfer System M. Werding, H. Hofmann for the Robert Bosch Foundation, December 2004 to May 2005. The Robert Bosch Foundation has installed a commission on Family and Demographic Change which will prepare a report on options for stimulating a recovery of fertility rates in Germany, that are currently low and still continue to decline. Ifo supports the commission by preparing comprehensive calculations regarding the “fiscal balance” of children under the current German tax and transfer system. Results are expected to indicate which fraction of the total cost of rearing and educating children is typically covered by public transfers and how this cost share relates to fiscal net returns arising from taxes and social security contributions paid by the children at later stages of their life cycles. Assuming that the overall result is a fiscal externality of considerable size, parental fertility decisions would be distorted. In turn, this should be corrected through changes in the existing tax-transfer system. Influencing demographic developments Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 30 S o c i a l Po l i c y a n d L a b o u r M a r k e t s The Impact of Family Policies on Fertility: An International Comparison V. Meier for the Robert Bosch Foundation, January 2005 to April 2005. In addition to the aforementioned project, Ifo also contributes to the activities of the commission on Family and Demographic Change, initiated by the Robert Bosch Foundation, by surveying instruments of family policies and their impact on levels and structural features of fertility in a small number of industrialised countries. All relevant kinds of cash transfers and transfers in-kind paid to families and children are covered. In addition to average fertility rates, potential effects for the timing of births, group-specific fertility behaviour, and the distribution of families with differing numbers of children are looked at. 31 Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 Human Capital and Structural Change New Ifo department focuses on: – educational economics and knowledge The research department of Human Capital and Structural Change, set up at the beginning of 2004, focuses on research in educational economics and knowledge generation, innovation and technological change as well as competition and industrial economics. The service tasks of the department consist particularly in the construction and maintenance of a network of European educational economists funded by a long-term project, in policy advice for ministries and international organisations as well as in the organisation of workshops and conferences for the main research areas of the department. ning the causes and consequences of international differences in educational performance was launched. The research department also co-ordinates the European Expert Network on Educational Economics (EENEE), a European expert pool financed by the European Commission. At the end of 2004 the department organised the first European symposium on educational economics on the subject, Efficient Use of Investments in Education and Training, in Brussels. In summer 2004 the department organised a workshop in Bonn, Investment in Human Capital, for the Federal Ministry of Education and Research. In autumn, together with the Program on Education Policy and Governance of Harvard University, the department conducted a CESifo conference on Schooling and Human Capital Formation in the Global Economy. generation – innovation and technological change, – competition and industrial economics Human capital accumulation and knowledge generation, as well as the innovations and dynamic structural changes in the economy that they induce, are of key importance for success in global competition and for the long-term growth outlook of a modern national economy. Only superior knowledge can help an economy escape the maelstrom of low-wage competition world-wide. With research on the costs and benefits of vocational training, the department made a contribution to the discussion on the causes of the shortage of training facilities. Related topics, such as the economics of research and development (R&D), entrepreneurship and qualification-specific technological progress, are linked with research on innovation and technological change, whereas other topics, such as the adaptability of human capital and the regulation of the “educational industry”, overlap with research on competition and industrial economics. Accordingly the department researches in the area of educational economics and knowledge generation, examining areas such as the formation of skills and knowledge, the institutional efficiency of the educational system, equal opportunity in education and the relative importance of basis competencies and specific knowledge. In the year under review, the department submitted some studies that were carried out on basis of extensive micro-data records of different international, comparative pupil tests such as TIMSS, PISA and IGLU. These projects, some carried out for the World Bank and the Volkswagen Foundation, supply microeconometric evidence on the most important determinants of pupil performance. In addition to the influence of family background and educational resources – for instance with respect to class sizes and computer equipment – important questions are how different educational institutions, centralised examinations, school autonomy and school competition influence pupil performance. As a basis for policy recommendations the results can contribute to an improvement of public management in the educational sector. In cooperation with Prof. E. A. Hanushek, Stanford University, who visited the department in the summer as Ifo visiting professor, a long-term project for exami- Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 In the research on innovation and technological change, three project areas stand in the foreground. The first is the economics of innovations and patents. The research department carries out micro-econometric research on the determinants and effects of innovations, drawing on the unique panel data of the Ifo Innovation Survey with more than 20 years of survey data from manufacturing companies in Germany. This allows, for example, an estimation of the effects of innovations on exports and employment – and vice versa. In preparation for the construction of the extensive micro-panel data set, a cross-sectional analysis of the effects of innovations on the export activity of enterprises was presented, using specific survey components of the Ifo Innovation Survey in the context of a variable instrument estimation. In 2004 the department also submitted a study to the German 32 Human Capital and Structural Change Office of Patents and Trademarks on indicators of patent systems, patent activities and patent rights. The results of the research projects of the department for Human Capital and Structural Change were presented at numerous international conferences with selection procedures and also at several CESifo conferences. Many articles were accepted for publication in international, peer-reviewed journals. The national and international press and radio/TV also reported on the various research results of the department. The department head holds lectures at the Faculty of Economics of the LMU, and four doctoral students participate in the LMU graduate seminar. The second project area covers the economics of the information society and B2B transactions, in which the department is currently heading an EU-financed project on statistical indicators for the information society. The third project area deals with the growth effects of investments in information technology (IT), the New Economy and structural change. Here the department works on a joint research project with Ifo research professor Th. Eicher, University of Washington, on the influence of IT investments on productivity differences in German manufacturing.The department also contributed to a study on the state and outlook of the New Economy in selected EU member states. A joint project with Prof. J. Temple, Bristol University, who visited the department in 2004, also as an Ifo visiting professor, examined the influence of structural change on long-term economic growth. Intersecting topics that link the department with research on competition and industrial economics are, for instance, the structure of electronic markets and the connection between market dynamics and structural change. Projects Completed in 2004: Educational Institutions and Pupil Performance L. Wößmann,T. Fuchs in co-operation with J. H. Bishop, Cornell University, M. Weiß, German Institute for International Pedagogical Research, Frankfurt am Main, and E. Gundlach, Institute for World Economics, Kiel, for the Volkswagen Foundation, October 2002 to September 2004, publications in: Education Economics, vol. 12, 1/2004; CESifo Working Paper no. 1235; Brussels Economic Review, vol. 48, (forthcoming); Education Economics, vol. 13, 2/2005. In addition to the already mentioned intersecting topics, the department devotes some of its work to competition policies, regulation and deregulation, and the privatisation of network industries, all in the field of competition and industrial economics. Examples are mergers in the energy market, the co-operation of regulatory authorities in telecommunications, and the liberalisation of the Californian electricity market. In co-operation with the Center for Information and Network Economics (CINE) of the Munich Ludwig Maximilian University (LMU) and the Kiel Institute for World Economics, the department conducted the KielMunich Workshop on the Economics of Information and Network Industries. The research department also examines problems of structural change in construction. Here, two expert opinions on fluctuations in real-estate markets and the economic importance of real estate were worked on in the year under review. Also the advisory services for the European construction industry at the semi-annual Euroconstruct conferences is a responsibility of this department and a long-standing emphasis of the Ifo Institute. The efficiency of the educational system The research project helped improve the state of research with regard to the influence of institutional conditions on the educational system and on pupil performance. A theoretical model was developed that can depict the influence of different educational institutions on pupil performance. In the empirical part the theoretical hypotheses were empirically validated to a large extent using the data of the international pupil performance test, Programmes for International Student Assessment (PISA). In addition the connection between the availability of computers and pupil performance was examined.The academic publications that resulted from the research project have already been presented at several top international conferences – the annual conference of the American Economic Association, the Verein für Socialpolitik, the European Association of Labour Economists and the Australasian Meeting of the Econometric Society – and have already been accepted in part for publication in leading international journals. 33 Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 Human Capital and Structural Change The research project succeeded in confirming the initial hypotheses with regard to the connection between educational institutions and pupil performance. Accordingly, educational institutions, such as central examinations, influence the distribution of responsibilities between schools and school administrations, the influence of parents and teachers on educational measures or the co-existence of private and public schools and average pupil performance, and this in a manner foreseeable from the model and to a significant extent quantitatively. This result offers an alternative perspective on the current debates for the reform of the educational system that have been focused to a large extent on a discussion of additional educational costs. Why some schools are successful School Autonomy, Central Examinations and Pupil Performance In total, student performance in TIMSS and TIMSS-Repeat is significantly higher in countries with central examinations than in states without central examinations. School autonomy regarding teacher's pay has a negative effect in systems without central examinations, which reverses into a positive effect in systems with central examinations. Source: Ifo Institute. Using the PISA micro-data it was shown that countries with central final examinations, such as a central Abitur, were considerably better with respect to pupil performance. External and comparable examinations inform the participants about achieved performance and in this way create stimulus for improving performance. As soon as an external account is given, performance is promoted if the schools receive autonomy in decision-making areas such as the selection and remuneration of teachers, the local administration of a school’s budget, and questions such as textbook selection. Competition from privately administered schools also proves to be performance enhancing. An efficient educational policy should accordingly combine central examinations with school autonomy and competition, that is to have standards determined and examined externally, and let the schools decide how they wish to achieve these standards. Use of International Pupil Performance Comparisons for the Improvement of Public Administration in the Educational Sector L.Wößmann,T. Fuchs for the World Bank, January 2004 to August 2004, publication as: World Bank Policy Research Working Paper, no. 3537, March 2005; further external publication planned. This project analysed the connection of family background and school qualities, on the one hand, and performance of elementary school pupils, on the other. Micro-econometric estimates using the pupil data of the Progress in International Reading Literacy Study (PIRLS, or IGLU in Germany) were conducted. The IGLU study is an internationally comparable, pupil performance study that tests the reading competence of fourth-grade pupils. In accordance with the commissioner’s specifications, the analysis focused on Argentina, Colombia and selected comparative countries. The better-performing countries tend to have neither smaller classes nor better equipment of the schools with computers, and they spend only slightly more. Reform proposals that merely argue for more spending on a given educational system are thus short sighted. From a policy viewpoint the emphasis should be on designing the educational system institutionally in such a way that all participants receive stimulus for the promotion of pupil performance, that is that performance-supporting behaviour is rewarded and that performance restricting behaviour is sanctioned. Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 The results of the analysis indicate a strong connection between the socio-economic background of the pupils and their performance in the IGLU study. The equipment level of the schools proved to be hardly correlated with pupil performance. In an international 34 Human Capital and Structural Change comparison, the estimated effects of family background on pupil performance are relatively high in Colombia and relatively low in Argentina.The results also showed that in both countries immigrated pupils that do not speak Spanish at home performed particularly poorly. This study was the first part of a larger international project in which the European, British, French and German patent offices are involved.The task of the Ifo Institute in this project was the evaluation of the existing literature for patent research with regard to existing economic analyses of patent data with the goal of identifying available and suitable indicators for the patent system, patent activities and for patent rights. Both Latin American educational systems also display particular effects. In Argentina, unlike most countries, there is no difference in performance between rural and urban areas. In Colombia, unlike most countries, there is no significant difference in performance between boys and girls.With regard to the institutional design of the educational system, the positive influence of a centralised curriculum and ability-based class composition on pupil performance proved to be the case in Argentina. Patents as innovation indicators Patent data can serve as indicators for innovations. Since the mid-1980s the economic analysis of patent data has been advanced and constantly refined and improved by the inclusion of additional information on patents, for example by the consideration of the duration of patents and the number of citations in subsequent patents. A summary and presentation is made of the theses found in the literature, the employed measurement variables as well as the results achieved using these variables. Level and Dispersions of Student Performance in the IGLU Primary School Study The subproject forms the basis for a further examination by the patent offices, whose goal is to extract and develop the indicators with the greatest economic relevance and to create new indicators. The analysis showed that indicators for the patent system itself are not available; likewise, indicators for the patenting process are also lacking in the literature. The patent literature concentrates on the analysis of the economic importance of patent rights.The indicators used up to now make only an ex-post analysis at the end of a patent duration. In contrast to the PISA results of the junior high school level, the IGLU results show that the performance of German students in primary school are, no average, way above the international average of 500 points.The dispersion of the test results is also still relatively small in primary school, quite in contrast to PISA. Source: Ifo Institute. B2B Metrics: Statistical Indicators for the Information Society H. Schedl, K. Sülzle in co-operation with the Nomura Research Institute, Tokyo, PREST, Manchester, RCS Conseil, Paris, and VATT, Helsinki, for the European Commission, January 2002 to July 2004, publication in: ifo Schnelldienst no. 19/2004. Identification of Available and Suitable Indicators for the Patent System, Patent Activities and for Patent Rights S. Lachenmaier, L. Wößmann for the German Patent and Trademark Office (DPMA), April 2004 to June 2004, publication in: Identification of Economic Indicators for Patent Research, mimeo, Ifo Institute. The development of indicators for the measurement of electronic business transactions between enterprises (hereafter B2B) was the task of the B2B Metrics project. The goal was to present the present stage of development, to identify factors that support or restrict development, to test the applicability of the approach and to develop tools for statistical surveys. 35 Measuring B2B activity Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 Human Capital and Structural Change The project developed a clear definition of B2B and a questionnaire that offers the commercial user the possibility of determining his own position, that enables statisticians to develop short questionnaires for various objectives and that allows politicians to examine the assumptions for the development of B2B and the efficiency of political planning. reflected in statistics and if there was a common pattern of structural change, but also if this would change the competitive situation, contribute to the development of export-linked clusters in the accession states and create spill-over effects on exports into non EU countries. Structure Change and Long-term Economic Growth L. Wößmann in co-operation with J. Temple, Bristol University, April 2003 to September 2004, publication in: CESifo Working Paper no. 1290. Preceding studies frequently neglected the conditions for a successful application of B2B: standardisation, organisational adaptation, process integration and data exchange between partners.Together with the defined basic processes of the enterprise (procurement, production planning and logistics, sales as well as planning and development), these factors form the structure of the project's measurement approach. Barriers to B2B development In this joint project with Prof. J. Temple of Bristol University, visiting researcher at the department in summer 2004, the influence of the structural change between the agriculture sector and other sectors of the economy on long-term economic growth was examined. Three linked observations served as a starting point for the research project. Firstly, models of the dual economy have for some time been a key component of developmental economics. Secondly, development economists in the 1960s and 1970s have thoroughly discussed the role of structural change on economic growth, and in particular the re-allocation of labour from the agricultural sector. Thirdly, these two aspects of economic development processes, dualism and structural change, have been largely neglected in empirical growth research in recent years. The project defined three stages of development in terms of the use of B2B: early – the use of simple, isolated transactions, expanded – including initial steps of process automatisation, and advanced – the use of collaborative processes via the network. For the surveyed firms in the automotive value chain in Germany, 72 % were advanced users, 20% expanded users and 7 % early users. The results also reveal no standard development path in B2B. A trend towards process-oriented B2B applications stimulated by enterprises with the power to shape markets was evident, but there was also a trend towards transactionoriented e-business between smaller enterprises. Major hindrances for a homogeneous B2B development include the low-level dissemination of standards and the reluctance to engage in external data exchange. The research project firstly determined analytically how structural change can be represented in an empirical growth model. Differences in the marginal product of labour between sectors can result in structural change being able to increase the aggregated total factor productivity of an economy in a non-linear manner. Empirical estimates of the model with the aid of growth regressions with international cross-sections show that the re-allocation of labour from agriculture to other sectors explains a significant part of the international variations in growth in total factor productivity between 1960 and 2000. In addition the empirical results imply that in many developing countries large inter-sectoral differentials in the marginal product of labour exist, which seems to be much less the case in developed countries. The results of the project were presented in 2004 at the The Integration of Accession States into Multinational Production Networks and their Effects on Exports and Development H. Schedl for the Tokyo Club Foundation for Global Studies, March 2004 to March 2005, publication in: Tokyo Club Foundation Papers, forthcoming. Tokyo Club study Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 By means of detailed evaluations of OECD foreign trade statistics, the project examined the impact of EU eastern enlargement and the associated foreign investments for the trade of the eastern European accession countries. The goal was not only to see how the integration into existing co-operation networks was 36 Human Capital and Structural Change European conference of the Econometrics Society as well as at the annual conference of the Verein für Socialpolitik. income levels as well as real-estate prices and sales are positively correlated. Data differentiated according to the age of a household's breadwinner were taken from the SocioEconomic Panel (SOEP) of the DIW for the empirical estimates. In all regression approaches a higher explanatory content was achieved, especially with the earnings of young households (up to 80 %), but the hypotheses were only confirmed with reservations. Scope still remains for a more thorough examination of the data base as well as for additional research. Division of Construction Activity and Real Estate Fluctuations on the Real-estate Market V. Rußig in co-operation with S. Rady, LMU, et al., for the Bavarian State Ministry of the Economy, Infrastructure,Traffic and Technology, October 1999 to February 2004, publication in: ifo Forschungsberichte no. 23, Ifo Institute, Munich, April 2004; extracts in: ifo Schnelldienst no. 11/2004. Causes of real-estate price fluctuations Business Activity and the Structure of the Construction Sector in Europe (Euroconstruct Network) V. Rußig for the partner institutes and organisers and participants of the Euroconstruct conferences as well as for the subscribers of the conference proceedings and for presentations at conferences, January 2004 to December 2004, publications in: ifo Schnelldienst no. 5/2004; no. 6/2004; no. 13/2004; no. 15/2004. Building on an empirically tested model of the housing market developed by S. Rady and Ortalo-Magné in the United States and Britain, this co-operation project between the Ifo Institute and the LMU first undertook an adaptation of this microeconomically based model to the situation in Germany. In the model housing market three active groups of buyers are found: creditlimited first buyers, credit-limited repeat customers and non-credit limited repeat customers. Activity in the housing markets, according to this model, is dominated particularly by young households as well as by older and more prosperous households. This formal, theoretical approach is used to explain the causes of the volatility of prices and sales of real estate and to formulate operational hypotheses for an empirical investigation for Germany (and Bavaria). The European research and consultancy network, Euroconstruct, in existence since 1975, presents at its semi-annual conferences in different European cities a standardised forecast of the value and quantity of construction activity for 15 western and 4 eastern European countries. At these conferences (June 2004 in Stockholm; December 2004 in Paris) special construction issues were also discussed: at the Stockholm conference R. Flanagan, University of Reading, UK, talked on the subject of Creating Competitive Advantages for Organisations in the Construction Sector; in Paris enterprise relocations and their effects on the building sector was the featured problem. Since Germany has no official data on real estate sales and prices, the data base was compiled from other sources with supplementary estimates and their informative value was examined. The most suitable data with long time-series for new residential buildings after 1975 were provided by Bulwien AG, Munich, which contain prices for standard row houses and owner-occupied flats. Also the price indicators for the housing market published by the German Bundesbank (for the first time in 2003) are based on these data. With these data the model-supported hypotheses were tested that the earnings of young households have a par ticularly strong impact on the dynamics of the real-estate market and that Recession in new residential construction continues The forecasts now use the nominal data for 2003 as the base for forecasting. Construction volume in the Euroconstruct area in the base year amounted to EUR 1.13 trillion.The broadly aggregated building volume is broken down into finer subdivisions for all the 19 member states according to building sectors and types of building services. The great structural differences between the two sub-areas are striking: In western Europe home building is clearly dominant (about half for the renovation of old buildings), and civil 37 Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 Human Capital and Structural Change Change in Housing Completionsa) in Europeb) from 2002 to 2004 and 2005 to 2007c) 2003 in new residential buildings. Up to 2005 an increase of 2.23 million units is expected; thereafter the housing completion numbers will again decline. The downward trend will be especially noticeable in owner-occupied homes, but also in apartment buildings the slightly increased level will not be maintained. Performance will differ greatly in the individual countries: whereas growth will continue in central and eastern Europe, the recession in western Europe in new residential construction, especially in owneroccupied houses and flats, will continue. Strong declines were recently recorded in Germany and Portugal in particular; but for these countries a significant improvement is expected for the forecast period. Construction Industry Forum at the Ifo Industry Colloquium 2004 V. Rußig in co-operation with the Chamber of Industry and Commerce for Munich and Upper Bavaria with support from the Bavarian State Ministry of the Economy, Infrastructure, Traffic and Technology, report in: ifo Schnelldienst no. 22/2004. Ifo construction forecast In continuation of the tradition of the ifo Baugespräche, a short- and medium-term forecast of construction activity in Germany was presented at the Construction Industry Forum (Forum 3) at the Ifo Industry Colloquium. The “lull” in construction has lasted – with a short interruption in 1999 – for ten years. In eastern Source: Euroconstruct/Ifo Institute (Paris, December 2004). engineering is of comparably small importance; in the eastern European member states non-residential construction and civil engineering achieve considerably higher shares, and in all building sectors new construction dominates. After stagnation in 2002, European building volume rose marginally in 2003 and somewhat more strongly in 2004. In the forecast years 2005 and 2006 as well as in 2007, a moderate increase is forecast with slightly falling rates of growth. The decisive stimulus here is from the four central and eastern European countries, despite their low weight overall. In contrast, the recovery will flatten again in the 15 western European countries; here the construction sector will again be a main constraint in overall economic growth up to the end of the forecast period. Building Investment in (Western and Eastern) Germany, 1991 to 2006a) In the 19 Euroconstruct countries, approximately 2.15 million housing units were completed in the base year Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 Source: Federal Statistical Office; calculations and forecasts by the Ifo Institute. 38 Human Capital and Structural Change Germany especially, construction has declined significantly and also in western Germany investment in new buildings and in renovation fell again in the year under review. The forecast presented was greeted with approval at the forum, but sceptical comments were made by some of the 100 participants. In particular it was pointed out construction investment as the key forecast variable for industry development paints a bright picture because an additional estimate is made of personal building activity.The decline in construction output is far more dramatic if, for example, it is analysed and forecast in terms of commercial construction turnover. contains an extensive researcher database in the field of educational economics in Europe that allows the user to find relevant experts and research centres on specific topics and countries. In the further course of the project it is planned to expand the website with a comprehensive bibliography on various sub-disciplines in educational economics. For the improvement of the exchange of ideas between researchers and politicians, EENEE organised for the European Commission the first European symposium on educational economics on the subject, The Efficient Use of Investments in Education and Training, which took place in November 2004 in Brussels. The symposium intensified the dialogue between high-ranking politicians and exceptional educational researchers on the state of research, policy-relevant research results and future research emphases. Within the framework of the project, these symposiums will occur annually. Current Projects: European Expert Network of Educational Economists (EENEE) L. Wößmann, T. Fuchs, G. Schütz in co-operation with experts of leading European and overseas universities, research institutes and international organisations for the European Commission, General Directorate of Education and Culture, December 2003 to December 2005. New network created for the European Commission The EENEE Website This project advises the European Commission on questions of educational-economic relevance, promotes educational-economic research in Europe and transfers the knowledge attained to political decision makers and the general public. To achieve this a network of leading European centres and experts in educational economics was created. The network supports and advises the European Commission as an expert pool in the area of educational policies and reform from an economic viewpoint. A major component of the EENEE project is a European exchange platform for educational economists on the website www.educationeconomics.org. Source: Ifo Institute. A website has been created, www.education-economics.org, to promote and strengthen joint European research in educational economics.This offers a forum for educational economists in Europe to exchange research results, to deepen and expand existing cooperations and numerous other possibilities to receive information on current developments in educational economics.The website is also addressed to politicians, journalists and the general public. These groups can receive a quick overview of the state of educationaleconomic research in Europe. The website also The network also advises the European Commission on concrete issues in educational economics, and it provides support in the drafting of policy documents, conference materials or replies to advice requests. Empirical Studies in Educational Economics L. Wößmann, habilitation thesis and further current research projects, various publications. 39 Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 Human Capital and Structural Change International pupil performance and educational systems Numerous current and concluded projects deal with how human capital can be produced best. The extensive micro data of different international pupil performance tests are analysed for this purpose using modern micro-econometric research methods. In addition to work on the project Educational Institutions and Pupil Performance, funded by the Volkswagen Foundation (see pp. 33 – 34) and the project for the World Bank on the use of international pupil performance comparisons (see pp. 34 – 35), work was also carried out in the following research areas in 2004. Together with the leading international educational economist, Prof. Hanushek of Stanford University, research is being conducted on a long-term project that examines the determinants and effects of international differences in pupil performance. Micro-econometric estimates are carried out using the extensive data sets of several international pupil performance tests such as PISA, IGLU and TIMSS. A part of this study, which deals with the effects of a multi-faceted structure of the educational system on school performance and its distribution, was published under the title “Does Early Tracking Affect Educational Inequality and Performance? Difference-in-Difference Evidence across Countries” as NBER Working Paper no. 11124 and CESifo Working Paper no. 1415. A study, which was revised in 2004, examines the influence of class sizes on pupil performance in different countries using the international TIMSS data set, which was accepted for publication by the European Economic Review ("Class-Size Effects in School Systems Around the World: Evidence from Between-Grade Variation in TIMSS, together with M. R. West, Harvard University). At the 40th panel meeting of Economic Policy in Amsterdam, a subsequent article on resources and institutional effects on pupil performance in various western European countries was presented (“Educational Production in Europe”). A further study on educational production in eastern European countries has been accepted for publication in the Economics of Education Review (“Schooling Quality in Eastern Europe: Educational Production During Transition”, together with A. Ammermüller, ZEW Mannheim, and H. Heijke, Maastricht University). Two more studies that focus on East Asian countries were accepted for publication in East Asian Economic Perspectives and the German Economic Review (“Family Background, Schooling Resources, Institutional Features: What Determines Student Performance in East Asian Countries?”, together with E. Gundlach, Institute for the World Economy, Kiel, as well as “Educational Production in East Asia”). A further project examined the development of firms training costs and benefits as a possible cause of the shortage of training facilities in Germany. School Competition, School Choice and School Autonomy T. Fuchs, autonomous research project, PhD thesis. The effects of school choice, competition and autonomy form a central and growing area of educational-economic research, which has been largely limited to the United States.This project, as part of a DFG research group, will examine the distribution aspects of school choice and competition using a computable general equilibrium model calibrated to the European educational systems. It will also empirically estimate the efficiency effects of school competition and autonomy by applying a non-parametric estimating model to international PISA micro-data sets. Ifo research professor K. Konrad, Berlin WZB, is project advisor. Equal Opportunity in the Educational System G. Schütz, autonomous research project, PhD thesis. Providing equal opportunity is an important task of an educational system. In this research the question of how equal opportunity can be measured is examined. The determining factors of equal opportunity are analysed using international micro data sets for educational systems. The Human Capital of Nations L. Wößmann in co-operation with E. A. Hanushek, Stanford University, tandem project, CESifo MIT Press book project, January 2004 to December 2006. Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 Effects and Determinants of Innovations in Germany S. Lachenmaier, autonomous research project, PhD thesis. 40 Human Capital and Structural Change The panel structure of the micro-data set of the Ifo Innovation Survey, which has been conducted for 20 years, is unique in its field. Using this detailed data set at the company level, a new micro-econometric contribution to the growth and innovation literature will be made. The causal connection between innovations on the one hand, and employment and sales growth as well as exports on the other, will be examined. A preliminary study was presented in 2004 as a micro-econometric, cross-sectional view entitled “Does Innovation Cause Exports? Evidence from Exogenous Innovation Impulses and Obstacles Using German Micro Data”.The CESifo Working Paper 1178 examines the influence of innovation activity on the export success of German manufacturing companies by means of an instrument-variable specification that uses particular data on innovation stimulus and constraints from the Ifo Innovation Survey. This research was accepted for presentation at the International Industrial Organisation Conference, the Australasian Meeting of the Econometric Society and annual conferences of the European Association for Research in Industrial Economics and the Verein für Socialpolitik. Germany in the period 1970 to 2001. The data is derived from the Federal Statistical Office and from the Ifo Investment Calculation, which contains more detailed, sector-specific information than the official statistics. The first research projects that use the database (constructed in 2004) for a growth-accounting analysis deal with the macroeconomic and sectoral development of (labour) productivity in Germany as well as the influence of international and national outsourcing on the development of sectoral productivity. Sector-specific productivity analyses using the “Ifo Productivity Data-base” Strategic Behaviour and Allocative Efficiency on Electronic Business-to-Business Markets K. Sülzle, autonomous research project, PhD thesis. This project is an economic analysis of the use, provision and development of electronic business-to-business (B2B). A B2B market is an inter-organisational information system that supplies market information on prices and products to the participating firms (both sellers and buyers) and provides the platform for business interaction. The analysis focuses on applications from industrial and network economics in the area of electronic B2B markets. The project will investigate trends and features of B2B markets, together with their effects on allocation efficiency, market structures and competition from an economic perspective. Preliminary results were presented in 2004 as a Dresden Discussion Paper in Economics (09/04) entitled, “Duopolistic Competition between Independent and Collaborative Business-to-Business Marketplaces”. The same research was also presented at conferences of the American Economic Association, the Verein für Socialpolitik and the European Association for Research in Industrial Economics as well as at the International Industrial Organisation Conference and the European Meeting of the Econometric Society. The Determinants of Investments in Research and Development in British Manufacturing B. Becker, autonomous research project, PhD thesis at Birkbeck College, London. The study examines the determinants of investments in research and development in British manufacturing. A part of the research was carried out at the National Institute of Economic and Social Research (NIESR), London, with funding from the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC). Interim results of the project were published in several discussion papers of the NIESR. Conference participation Privatisation of Network Enterprises A. Kuhlmann, autonomous research project, PhD thesis. Ifo Productivity Database T. Fuchs, A. Kuhlmann in co-operation with Ifo research professor Th. Eicher, University of Washington, Seattle, November 2003 to the end of 2005. The aim of this project is to show conditions under which privatisation can be promising in selected network industries. In addition to the general question of why governments should privatise, the study will primarily examine problems that arise in the electricity The research project will create and use an Ifo Productivity Database, which will allow macroeconomic and sector-specific productivity analyses for 41 Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 Human Capital and Structural Change and gas supply industry. The question will also be examined as to the extent to which the interests of national regulation authorities are in accord with deregulation intentions of the EU and to what extent harmonisation is reasonable at the EU level. In 2004 a study was published by the List Forum for Economic and Fiscal Policy entitled “The Electricity Crisis in California – How Risky is Deregulation in Network Sectors?” Initial project results were reported in 2004 at the European Meeting of the Econometric Society and the annual conferences of the International Institute of Public Finance and the Verein für Socialpolitik. old-age provision and supply, and as security for loans (examined in detail in the study). Net assets in property, at replacement prices, amounted to EUR 5.6 trillion at the beginning of 2004. More than half of this went to residential buildings and a little more than two fifths for non-residential structures (structural and civil engineering). The official statistics provide data in a sectoral differentiation – in which building land and residential property have an enormous share – but no further sub-division according to building categories. Composition of the Net Building Assets 2004 by Building Category Division of Construction Activity and Real Estate Civil engineering projects Economic importance of real estate: Ifo fills an information gap The Economic Importance of the Real-estate Sector V. Rußig, L. Dorffmeister, A. Kuhlmann, H. Schedl for gif, the society for real estate research, and other realestate organisations, June 2004 to March 2005. 1 6 One-family homes 3 26 5.6 Bill.€ 10 26 Two-family Homes 4 Multi-family houses 5 Residential establisments Private civil engineer. projects 4 Public civil engineer. projects 3 Educational buildings 4 Healthcare buildings 3 Factories and shops 21 We all live and work in buildings.We use real estate for mobility and communication as well as for training, leisure activities, sports and cultural events. Monuments are important identification points and trigger tourism. More than four fifths of the capital stock, in terms of replacement prices, amounting to more than EUR 6.5 trillion, is in construction (structural and civil engineering). For every individual and for the overall economy, real estate is of exceptional importance.This fact stands in strong contrast to conventional opinions in society and politics. Moreover, data and information as well as a solid analysis of this important section of the economy are lacking. Trade and storage build. Office, adminstrat. buildings Non-residential buildings Residential buildings Sports, cultural, leisure build. Other buildings Valued at replacement prices; Beginning of year. Source: Federal Statistical Office; calculations and estimates by the Ifo Institute. The study presents, for the first time, a consistent estimate of the share of building types in residential assets and for private and public non-residential buildings and civil engineering structures. The value of the non-residential structures is divided into six or seven building types. Further estimates lead to an assessment of built-on sites and to a fictitious operating potential, including the wide-spread “own-administration” of real estate. This research project will help fill the existing information gaps. The macroeconomic information from the official statistics on the size of the present stock (stocks of buildings and capital stock in buildings) and on the flow variables (construction spending, gross value added, turnover in land and housing) provide a starting point. In addition to its primary function for living and working, real estate has a number of supplementary functions, such as for education, in the transport of persons and goods, as monuments, in Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 10 Construction Activity in Western and Eastern Germany According to Sectors V. Rußig, E. Gluch, E. Langmantel for federal and Länder ministries, government offices, research and consultancy institutes, businesses and federations, on-going project, excerpts published in ifo Schnelldienst and in external publications, working tables on request. 42 Human Capital and Structural Change The Ifo Institute regularly forecasts German construction activity differentiated according to sectors: residential, commercial and public construction. The forecasting of the value and quantity variables relevant to the construction sector (construction spending, construction volume, completions of residential and non-residential buildings) are presented to the working group Bau- und Wohnungsprognostik as well as at the Ifo Industry Colloquium.The forecast estimates for the construction sector are used in the Joint Economic Analysis of the economic institutes and in the forecasts of the Ifo Institute; they are the basis for the German contribution to forecasts of European construction (Euroconstruct). No construction recovery in 2005 A revival of construction activity in Germany is also not expected in 2005, but a bottoming-out has probably at last occurred. Competition pressure in the building and supplier industries – also from abroad and especially after EU enlargement – remains intense. The number of the employees in construction will decline even further. The structural adaptation process in German construction continues. Business Activity and the Structure of the Construction Sector in Europe (Euroconstruct Network) V. Rußig, see page 37 for details. The 59th Euroconstruct conference is scheduled for 23 and 24 June 2005 in Cardiff (Wales/UK). In addition to the updated construction forecast, regional renewal processes and developments in China are special programme features. Information on the conference is available at www.euroconstruct.org or from the Ifo Institute. The winter conference will take place in Barcelona at the end of 2005. Construction Industry Forum at the Ifo Industry Colloquium 2005 V. Rußig, see page 38 for details. For the presentation at the fifth Ifo Industry Colloquium, in autumn 2005, the assumptions underlying the construction forecasts and early estimates will be critically examined and adapted to new factors.The forecast horizon presented will be extended by one year: to 2007. 43 Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 Industry Branch Research This department provides analyses of economic developments in industry sectors, such as manufacturing, the skilled trades and services as well as their various individual sectors. The analysis is meso-economic. Ex-post analyses form the basis for showing the reciprocal relationships and for forecasting future developments, also taking into consideration the latest data for the evaluation of short- and long-term developments. The analyses, statistics and forecasts for industries are just as much a part of the services of the department as feeding this information into the industry-branch information systems. Conference and the Ifo Industry Colloquium. The two-day, International Spring Conference occurs annually in Berlin. It provides a discussion forum for a European audience of business leaders and policy makers. On the first day the development of the world economy is the focus. The second day is devoted to developments in selected European industries. In 2005 the focus is on the regulatory setting for businesses in Europe.The German viewpoint on the Lisbon goals to make Europe a more dynamic economic region was presented by Dr. Bernd Pfaffenbach, under-secretary on the Ministry of Economics and Labour. Dr. Reichenback, General Director of the European Commission’s Directorate for Enterprises and Industry, presented the European position. The Ifo Industry Colloquium occurs in the autumn of year in Munich and offers a forum for representatives from business, federations and political organisation to discuss the current economic situation as well as the sales and employment forecasts for the coming two years in selected industries from the sectors manufacturing, construction, commerce and services. In addition a main topic is chosen every year: in 2004 is was the “innovation offensive”. A further on-going task of the department is the Ifo Construction Forecast.This is an annual updating and extension of short- and long-term forecasts of construction developments in western and eastern Germany according to construction sectors. Industry branch research has traditionally been a speciality of the Ifo Institute and distinguishes it from the other large German economy research institutes. The departmental structuring of industry branch research was often changed in the past and adapted to the changing requirements. Up to the end of the 1990s, there were separate departments for industry, commerce and construction. With the reorganisation of the Ifo Institute in 2000 these three departments and the research area on structural change were incorporated into a new department: Structural and Industrial Analyses. From the beginning of 2004, industry branch research became an independent department, with the creation of a new research department: Human Capital and Structural Change. Industry branch expertise One of the core activities of industry branch research is the special contribution that the Ifo Institute has made in the design and construction of the information system Branchen special. This information system consists of reports used by co-operative and agricultural banks to evaluate industry branches. Twice a year a report is prepared of each of more than 100 industries. Most of the reports are written by researchers in this department, and the remainder by other Ifo staff and by external experts.The administration and final editing is the exclusive task of this department. The project is financed by the publisher, DG Verlag (Wiesbaden). The industry branch research department is responsible for the updating and further development of this industry information system. In addition to these on-going tasks the department also conducts contract research primarily for the public sector. Studies are taken on that require an industrysector expertise. Examples are contract research in the area of trade-fair research, medium-term forecasts for the German machine tool industry as well as an industry-specific evaluation of the “New Economy” in Germany in comparison to selected EU member states. In 2005 the emphases of the new studies are on the competitiveness of European mechanical engineering in a global perspective and on the possible effects of the planned EU services directive on the German economy. In the field of trade-fair and real-estate research, new studies are also being prepared. The success of the Ifo Institute in the field of mesoeconomic research is particularly based on the knowhow of department staff and their on-going obser- Another major responsibility of the department is the organisation of the annual CESifo International Spring Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 44 Industr y Branch Research vation of economic developments in their special areas. Their expertise is a major prerequisite for the skilful examination of industry-sector-specific issues, so that their results and recommendations will be accepted as authoritative by both the principals of the studies and by industry representatives. in two parallel sessions. The forums for manufacturing and commerce were in the late morning; after the lunch hour the forums for construction and services occurred. At the moderated sessions, Ifo researchers presented the major industry developments and forecasts, which were supplemented and commented on by two external experts. Then the floor was open for discussion. The program included the following four forums: Projects Completed in 2004: Industry sector analyses Forum 1: Manufacturing (Introduction: R. Hild, Ifo Institute; moderator: Dr. R. Kudiss, BDI; external experts: Dr. H.-J. Frank, Deutsche Bank Research, and Dr.Th. Becker, German Automotive Federation). Ifo Industry Colloquium 2004 R. Hild, G. Nerb, V. Rußig, H. Blau, J. Gürtler, J. Lachner, H. Ruß in co-operation with the Chamber of Industry and Commerce for Munich and Upper Bavaria with support from the Bavarian State Ministry for the Economy, Infrastructure, Traffic and Technology, report in: Ifo Schnelldienst no. 22/2004. Forum 2: Commerce (introduction: J. Lachner and H. Ruß, Ifo Institute; moderator: W. Fisher, CityPartner, Munich; external experts: N. Malanowski, Federation of Retailers and Wholesalers and Dr. Th. Nassua, s’Oliver. The 4th Ifo Industry Colloquium took place on 26 October 2004. This annual conference of the Ifo Institute is in co-operation with the Chamber of Industry and Commerce for Munich and Upper Bavaria with support from the Bavarian State Ministry for the Economy, Infrastructure, Traffic and Technology. The Ifo Industry Colloquia provide a platform for competent and controversial discussions of economic and structural trends.They also critically discuss the economic analysis provided by the joint forecast of the German research institutes and apply it to the industry level. Forum 3: Construction (introduction: Dr V. Rußig, Ifo Institute; moderator: R. Scholl, Federal Ministry for Transportation, Construction and Housing; external experts: Dr. H. Stiepelmann, German Construction Federation and Dr. R. Häufele, Grohe Water Technology. Forum 4: Services sector (introduction: H. Blau and J. Gürtler, Ifo Institute; moderation: Dr. G. Nerb, Ifo Institute; external experts: Dr. H. Hildebrandt, Federation of Materials Management, Procurement and Logistics, and P. Polzer, Fujitsu-Siemens. “Germany’s Innovation Offensive” The one-day event, attended again by approximately 300 participants, took place at the IHK Academy in Munich and was divided into three parts. After a welcome by the executive director of the IHK for Munich and Upper Bavaria, Dr. Reinhard Dörfler, the president of the Ifo Institute, Prof. Hans-Werner Sinn spoke on “The Economic Situation in Germany and Europe – Competitive Position in an International Context”, and examined the economic and structural problems of the German economy. He discussed the reasons for the decoupling of the German economy from the world-wide economic trend. In the afternoon a plenary session was devoted to the subject, “Germany’s Innovation Offensive – Concept, Implementation, Impact”.The feature presentation was given by Dr. O. Wiesheu, Bavarian State Minister for Economic Affairs, Infrastructure,Traffic and Technology, who, using the example of innovation in Bavaria, explained how government can influence the competitiveness of the economy by promoting new products, processes, companies and markets. In the subsequent panel discussion, moderated by N. Piper, chief business editor of the Süddeutsche Zeitung, participants, Dr. R. Dörfler, IHK for Munich and Upper Bavaria, Dr. C. Kreklau, Federation of German Industry, M. Schöller, Schöller Holding, Dr. M. Weigoldt, IZB SOFT GmbH and Dr. E. Wurzel, OECD. The second part of the event provided a detailed analysis and forecasts of developments in individual branches of industry. Four industry forums were present 45 Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 Industr y Branch Research CESIfo International Spring Conference 2004 H.-G. Vieweg (project head) and B. Hebele organised the spring conference on economic activity on 18 and 19 March 2004 in Berlin. Ifo in the nation’s capital scriptive presentations and interpretations of selected economic data, providing an extensive overview of the major developments in Bavarian industry for 2004. R&D and Innovation Behaviour of Small and Large Enterprises under the Influence of the Business Cycle H. Penzkofer in co-operation with the Zentrum für Europäische Wirtschaftsforschung (ZEW), Mannheim, Stifterverband für die Deutsche Wissenschaft and the Deutsches Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung (DIW), Berlin, for the Federal Ministry for Education and Research, July 2002 to June 2004, publication in: Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung, Schwerpunktstudie zur technologischen Leistungsfähigkeit Deutschlands 22/2004. The International Spring Conference in Berlin has established itself as a forum for the presentation and discussion of economic developments.The first day was devoted to world economic activity. The speakers Jim O’Neill, Goldman Sachs, and John Llewllyn, Lehman Brothers, were featured presenters. Hans-Werner Sinn, Ifo Institute, presented the outlook for Europe in light of the prevailing economic and political conditions. A special topic was direct investments, which were an important stimulus for the development of many newly industrialised countries in the 1990s. The introduction to the subject was given by Torbjörn Fredriksson, UNCTAD.The second day was dedicated to changes on the financial markets. Presenters were Karl Cordewener, Bank for International Settlements, Jochen Flach, Bundesbank, and Dieter Glueder, KfW. Then the business trends for selected European industries were examined. Simon Hallamon, Cambridge of Econometrics, provided a medium-term forecast, and industry experts looked more closely at the auto-motive industry, mechanical engineering and the chemical industry. The study investigates the influence of the economic situation on the R&D and innovation behaviour of small and large enterprises located in West Germany for the period 1980 to 2002.The changes in behaviour between the 1980s and the 1990s was also analysed. For the investigation, different databases were selected and combined: business data on the scope and the structure of R&D expenditures (business statistics of the Stifterverband für die Deutsche Wissenschaft), business data of the Ifo Business and Innovation Surveys, business data of the ZEW and data on international R&D expenditures (OECD). Industry Report for Bavaria 2004 K. Bien, T. Kiessl, G. Krug, H. Penzkofer for the Bavarian State Ministry of Economic Affairs, Infrastructure, Transport and Technology, July 2004 to September 2004, publication in: Bayerisches Staatsministerium für Wirtschaft, Infrastruktur, Verkehr und Technologie (eds), Industriebericht Bayern 2004. New Bavarian industry report Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 The innovation activities of West German enterprises are more strongly affected by factors relating to the business cycle than the R&D expenditures. This applies, in particular, if the economic climate of the enterprises themselves are considered. Enterprises with a positive estimation of the current economic situation and with positive anticipations of the economic situation tend to be prepared to resume innovation activities. In addition, innovation activities fluctuate more strongly for smal enterprises than for large entrprises. Comparing the1990s with the1980s, only few differences are evident regarding the factors of influence relating to market conditions. A substantial difference concerns the importance of the export orientation as well as the estimate of the economic development on export markets. For both the positive influence on the innovation activities increased in the 1990s. The industry report gives a detailed overview of Bavarian industry, its development as well as the sectoral, size-specific and area profile. Besides information about the manufacturing industry, the documentation contains analyses of the 24 largest branches of industry in Bavaria as well as the construction industry, additional individual presentations of industry in the Bavarian administrative regions and the innovation activities of Bavarian industry. Besides general information on the structural importance of the manufacturing industry in Bavaria, the industry report contains, for all industry branches and administrative regions, de- 46 Industr y Branch Research The Economic Impact of the Cologne Trade Fairs H. Penzkofer for the Koelnmesse GmbH, November 2003 to August 2004, publication in: ifo Schnelldienst no. 21/2004. and logistics processes in distribution, the number of employees has been reduced in recent years, to a greater extent in wholesaling than in retailing (based on commerce statistics). Increasingly retailers are pursuing the strategy of working time fragmentation in order to respond to changing customer frequencies with a high flexibility of the sales force. As in previous years the trend towards employee reduction will continue in the coming years, albeit at a slower pace.The reason for the reductions will include the continued outsourcing activities of the bigger commercial enterprises particularly in wholesaling (e.g. in logistics and IT). The task of this project was to calculate the direct and indirect production and income effects as well as the resulting tax revenue of the Cologne trade fairs. Based on surveys conducted for the project among visitors and exhibitors at selected Cologne trade fairs, the total volume of visitors and exhibitors for a typical trade fair year was determined. An additional calculation was made for the trade-fair year 2003. Trade fair, commerce and SME research Share of Employee Activity Groups in % In 2003, the visitors of the Cologne trade fairs spent EUR 394 million; the exhibitors’ costs amounted to EUR 845 million.The direct costs of the exhibitors and visitors, totalling EUR 1.24 billion, led to total aggregate output of EUR1.5 billion, 55 % of which went to the Cologne area, about a quarter to North-Rhine Westphalia and about a sixth to the rest of Germany. The distribution of the employment effects (approximately 18,330 jobs) was different: Approximately 60 % were in the Cologne area and about a quarter in North-Rhine Westphalia. That supraregional fairs are also attractive for the public sector is seen in the tax revenues associated with the fairs. In 2003 this amounted to ca. EUR 300 billion, about half of which went to the federal government, 37 % to North-Rhine Westphalia, 8 % to regional authorities outside NorthRhine Westphalia and 4 % to the City of Cologne. Source: Ifo Institute. Foreign Success Strategies of Small and Medium-sized Commercial Enterprises in Poland, Slovakia, the Czech Republic and Hungary U. Chr. Täger in co-operation with R. Spannagel, FfHInstitut für Markt- und Wirtschaftsforschung GmbH, Berlin, and the Bundesverband des Groß- und Außenhandels, Berlin, July 2003 to November 2004. Effects of Rationalisation on the Employment Situation in Commerce H. Hofmann, U. Chr. Täger, in co-operation with R. Popien, Geographic Institute of the University of Munich (LMU) for the Federal Ministry of Economics and Labour, December 2002 to March 2004. In the course of the transformation from a planned to a market economy, the distribution sector has played an important role in many CEE countries since this sector was affected by competition at a very early stage. The extensive direct investments of large German enterprises had a strong influence since they transferred their systems of distribution to the countries investigated in the form of modern and attractive retail company models at an early stage. Small and The German distribution system is characterised by the prevalence of intense competition, which has become notice-able lately in retailing in the form of increased cost and price pressure. Caused by the advance of the cost-minimising business and company models – discounters, superstores – in retailing and from rationalisation measure to increase the efficiency of the business 47 Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 Industr y Branch Research medium-sized enterprises were only partly affected by this development since they lacked the necessary financial and personnel resources for establishing locations in these countries. Factors behind the success of the large German enterprises were both economies of scale and the economies of scope. In general, the large German retail enterprises have gained a strong market position in these CEE countries. New Economy, quo vadis? The Tokyo Club is an initiative of internationally renowned research institutes, which, with the financial support of the Nomura Research Institute, examines overarching economic-policy issues. The Ifo Institute’s contribution to the main topic in 2004 was an analysis of the integration of the Central and Eastern European countries that joined the European Union in 2004. Joining an advanced economic region is a special challenge for the countries because their production structures must be adapted to the changed general conditions. In this context, risks are addressed from the transformation in the countries addressed, especially the issue of inflation tendencies (Balassa-Samuelson Effect). A further point concerns the intensified competition from the newly industrialised countries. Here the merchandise trade between the new EU countries and China was examined in terms of the increased pressure in competition, in order to provide clues for the direction of sectoral adaptation. State and Outlook of the “New Economy” in Selected EU Member States from a German Viewpoint H.-G. Vieweg, R. Hild, T. Fuchs, A. Kuhlmann, S. Lachenmaier, M. Reinhard, U. Chr. Täger in co-operation with Cambridge Econometrics and Prof. Jan-Egbert Sturm, University of Constance, December 2002 to June 2004. This project continued a series of studies commissioned by the Federal Ministry for Economics and Labour on the “New Economy”. It built on the experience and results of a study conducted by RWI that compared the “New Economy” in Germany and the United States. Included along with Germany in the comparison were Britain, Italy, Sweden, the Netherlands and France. For these countries industry analyses were carried out for mechanical engineering, motor vehicle construction, banking and retailing.The researchers examined whether Germany has fallen behind other European countries in the introduction of new information and communication technologies and whether this presumed deficiency can explain Germany's weak economic growth since the mid-1990s. The study showed that Germany does not display any appreciable deficiencies in the diffusion of new technologies. In some industries, for example in retailing, it is even in the lead. Aggregate growth will only occur, however, if the diffusion of new technologies is accompanied by structural change. Market Data of the Building Technologies Sector in Germany and in Selected European Countries H.-D. Karl for the Vereinigung der deutschen Zentralheizungswirtschaft e.V., Vereinigung Deutsche Sanitärwirtschaft e .V. and Messe Frankfurt GmbH, June 2004 to November 2004. Continuing the project from past years, the current development of the German building equipment sector was studied. For this purpose the important market data, for example the number of enterprises, turnover, employees, investments, was collected. In 2003 the building equipment sector comprised 50,000 enterprises with 438,000 employees. The consolidated turnover amounted to around EUR 34.3 billion. At present the economic prospects of the building equipment sector are depressed. The main reason is the decreasing construction investments expected in the coming years. Positive impacts arise from the growing need for replacement of heating and sanitation systems. Additionally the turnover of the German building equipment sector was compared with the corresponding data from Belgium, France, Britain, Italy, the Netherlands, Austria, Spain and Switzerland. Publication will be by the commissioning institutions. Impact of the Market Economy Sphere on the Global Structure of Industry and the Policy Responses of Advanced Economies: Focus on China H.-G.Vieweg (with a contribution by H. Schedl) in cooperation with The Brookings Institution, Institut francais des relations internationales, Nomura Research Institute,The Royal Institute for International Affairs for the Tokyo Club Foundation for Global Studies. Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 48 Industr y Branch Research Ifo Construction Forecast for Germany 2004 – 2009/2014 E. Gluch, K. Behring for subscribers, multi-client study, January 2004 to December 2004, excerpts published in: ifo Schnelldienst no. 4/2005 and no. 5/2005. the very low starting point.The medium- and long-term development will show only a moderate upward trend. The analysis indicates that average, real growth in construction demand over the next ten years will only be about 1 % per annum. In the ten-year period 2005 to 2014, approximately 3.15 million housing units will be completed, of which only some 1.8 million will be in one- and two-family houses. In non-residential construction, public sector construction will continue to lose importance. In commercial-sector construction, however, a clear revival in demand will emerge at the middle of the ten-year period at the latest. In December 2004 the Ifo Institute published the 4th edition of its annual, multi-client-construction forecast for the whole of Germany. The focus of the mediumand long-term forecast of future construction activity is on the physical variables of residential and non-residential construction (for example, number of housing units, built space in m3, or floor space in m2) and is made on the level of six large regions and for eastern and western Germany. A forecast is made of both building completions as well as building permissions. The six large regions consist of the Länder NorthRhine Westphalia, Baden-Wuerttemberg and Bavaria, and the additional 13 smaller Länder are grouped into three larger regions, “North”, “Middle” and “East”. Commercial-sector construction to rebound Current Projects: Information System “Branchen special” G. Weitzel, inter-departmental with other Ifo researchers; publisher: Bundesverband der deutschen Volksbanken und Raiffeisenbanken (BVR) in conjunction with the DG Verlag, Wiesbaden. Construction Volume in German Construction by Sectors 1991 – 2014 The Branchen special reports provide up-dated information on business development in 100 industry sectors in agriculture, manufacturing, the trades, construction and real-estate, retailing/wholesaling, and the services.The reports are updated twice a year.The detailed information, with a special emphasis on the situation of small and mid-sized businesses, are used by the co-operative banks in their lending activity and for the advice they provide. The industry composition of the reports was changed in 2004 so that reports now appear for facility management, sanitary sales and installations, retailers of construction and DIY material, nursing care services, retailers of motorcycles, and services in the insurance industry. Source: German Institute for Economic Research (DIW); Ifo Institute. Information sources are the data of official statistics as well as primary and secondary statistical sources, especially federation statistics. Results of the Ifo surveys as well as surveys of market research institutes are also used. With this and other information and the knowhow of Ifo experts, the industry-sector-specific weaknesses can be identified and successful enterprise strategies as well as market potential can be analysed. The reports provide a quick overview of current The forecasting on the monetary level (euros, in prices of 2000) is done on the basis of the building volume, as is regularly calculated by the Deutsches Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung (DIW). According to the current forecast, the German construction industry will leave behind the lowest point of its ten-year recession in 2005. For the rest of the decade and for the ten year period to 2014, no buoyant growth is expected, despite 49 Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 Industr y Branch Research market conditions. A list of all available reports with publication dates is posted on the Website of the Ifo Institute (www.ifo.de under “Bereiche” and “Branchenforschung”). Individual reports are available from the Volksbanken und Raiffeisenbanken. ducer countries.These include the major European states and in particular the United States, Japan and Korea. The results are presented and discussed with industry experts at the VDW market research meetings in spring and autumn every year in Frankfurt. Ifo Innovation Survey H. Penzkofer, continuous since 1979, regular publications in: ifo Schnelldienst and ifo Dresden berichtet. See department of Business Surveys. MANTYS: A European Research Network for the Identification of Trends in Production Engineering and their Economic Assessment H.-G. Vieweg in co-operation with European research institutes for the European Commission, Directorate for Research, September 2001 to October 2005. Trade-fair Events in Frankfurt H. Penzkofer for Messe Frankfurt GmbH, November 2004 to October 2005. Forecasting model for the machine tool industry The project examines technical trends both with the manufacturers and with the customers who have influence on the demand for technologies and the resulting investment volumes.The focus is on the future of production engineering, in particular in metal workmanship.The economic research institutes participating in the project analyse the demand for machinery and equipment over time. Firstly, they determine the causes for the cyclical fluctuation in order activity. Secondly, they analyse the customer structures to explain the investment factors and to show long-term demand trends. In this research close co-operation exists between the Ifo Institute and the technological research institutes in order to estimate the economic importance of expected technological developments. Medium-term Forecast for the German Machine Tool Industry H.-G. Vieweg for the Association of German Machine Tool Manufacturers (VDW), March 2004 to October 2005. Since 1989 the Ifo Institute has prepared forecasts for the German machine tool industry for the Association of German Machine Tool Manufacturers (VDW e.V.). The forecasting for a five-year period is up-dated semiannually and sent to the member firms.The Association sees itself as a service provider for an industry characterised by medium-sized firms and offers them a foundation for strategic planning that is too expensive for them to do on their own.The forecast system consists of three modules: an econometrically supported short-term forecast based on the development of the most important customer industries, a medium-term forecast of trends in the most important sales areas, and a scenario that presents the most important exogenous variables for the model computation so that the domestic demand and exports in twelve different areas can be estimated.The Ifo Investment Survey serves as an important instrument for estimating the development of the sales of machines and equipment since it contains vital information on the development of investment activity – with an industry breakdown – for the recent past and the near future. The Arcade Industry Hopes for Better Business from Changes in Regulatory Conditions H.-G.Vieweg for the Association of German Coin-operated Machine Industry (VDAI), November 2004 to February 2005. The sales of the arcade industry reached a volume of EUR 3.82 billion in 2004, which was a decline of about 2 %. A major problem for the firms is that the demand of private households has not risen in years. It is particularly striking that the industry has not participated in the high growth rates of the games-of-fortune market of approximately 3 – 4% per annum, recorded between 1995 and 2004.The reason for this is seen in the regulation density; a lasting improvement of the economic situation is seen in a comprehensive structural change In 2004 the forecast was expanded to include not only future market development but also a prognosis of the production of machine tools in the most important pro- Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 50 Industr y Branch Research of gaming regulations, which have basically re-mained unchanged since they were enacted in 1953. This appraisal is also found in a report of the Federal Ministry of Economics (now: Federal Ministry of Economics and Labour) at the conference of economic ministers in 2000, which stated that urgent change of regulations was required to improve the economic situation of the industry. The results of the study for the Association were introduced at the beginning of the International Vending Machine Fair (IMA) at a press conferences in Nuremberg. Ifo Economic Activity Report for the Frankfurt Fair R. Hild, U. Chr. Täger, four reports per annum for the Frankfurt Fair GmbH. In 2004 the Ifo Institute also prepared reports on business developments in trade fairs, particularly the Frankfurt Fair, with a view to the state of the economy and the short- and medium-term outlook at different levels. The world economic situation is presented as well as the overall German economy and its most important components: manufacturing as a whole and individual industries as well as commerce, broken down in wholesaling and retailing. Furthermore, depending on current trade fair schedule, specific aspects or individual sectors are addressed.The project will be continued in 2005. Development of Mechanical Engineering H.-G Vieweg in co-operation with the German Mechanical Engineering Federation, VDMA, and the German Federation of Producers of Electronic and Electrical Products for the European Commission, January 2004 to December 2005. Ifo Industry Colloquium 2005 Planned for Autumn 2005 at the IHK in München. The goal of this project is the construction of a European database for the new EU member states, differentiated according to industry branches and countries, and the analysis of the competitive position of European manufacturers in an international comparison, in particular vis-à-vis the United States and Japan. Assessed factors are the status of transformation, the degree of privatisation and the competitiveness of the new member states. Chances and Risks of a Modified General Framework for the Service Enterprises from the EU Service Directive. G. Nerb, H. Schmalholz, M. Dischinger, W. Eggert, Th. Fester, R. Hild, Th. Kiessl, J. Lachner, C. Pohl, M. Reinhard in co-operation with the German Institute for Economic Research (DIW), Berlin, for the Federal Ministry of Economics and Labour, December 2004 to April 2005. CESifo International Spring Conference 2005 H.-G.Vieweg organised the CESifo International Spring Conference, 17 – 18 March 2005 in Berlin. In the project time-frame it is not possible to carry out a model-based analysis regarding the prospective quantitative effects of the directive concerning employment and economic growth in Germany.The focus rather lies on a close study of already existing extensive estimation models – especially the models of the CPB Netherlands Bureau for Economic Policy Analysis and the Danish Institut Copenhagen Economics – in respect of their informational value for Germany. The main task, however, is to disaggregate the existing global statements and to refer them to a wide range of service branches. In 2005 this conference examined a growth-oriented, European economic policy. On the first day, undersecretary Dr. Bernd Pfaffenbach of the Federal Ministry for Economics and Labour addressed this topic. On the second day, the EU “enterprise” General Director, Dr. Rolf Reichenbach, presented the European viewpoint. In the further course of the first day, the macroeconomic problems of the world economy were discussed. An introduction was given by John Llewllyn, Lehman Brothers, the European aspects by HansWerner Sinn and David Walton concentrated on the euro zone. On the second day, selected industry branches were analysed. 51 EU services directive examined Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 Environment, Regions and Transportation The year 2004 marked a major change in the department of Environment, Regions and Transportation. Prof. Sprenger, who directed environmental research at the Ifo Institute for many years, completed his active service at the Institute in autumn 2004. His successor, a joint appointment with the LMU, is Prof. Peter Egger, who will contribute his expertise in the areas of international trade and regional economics. In 2004 the research department of Environment, Regions and Transportation at the Ifo Institute dealt with the many facets of the concept of sustainable development and its consequences for public policy. Sustainable development – a guiding principle economic systems (e.g. with regard to irreversibilities, chronological delays, different forms of uncertainty). – The participation and integration of social groups into the process of the strategy definition, target setting, and instrumental implementation are recognised as central elements in the sustainability discussion (procedural dimension). – The co-ordination between the ecological, economic and social dimensions of sustainability should not only be carried out in a “negative” form. Rather, synergies should be sought out; in particular ecological aspects should be integrated into other policy areas from the outset. The North-South debate touched off the sustainability discussion within the framework of the so-called Brundtland Commission. Accordingly, a development is sustainable when the contemporary generation satisfies its needs without compromising the possibility of future generations to satisfy their needs. The sustainability concept was not only internationally popularised by the UN Conference on Environment and Development in Rio de Janeiro in 1992 but was also transferred into the policy-making processes of individual states, countries and municipalities. This process has recently led in Germany to the implementation of its own sustainability strategy. Despite the vagueness of the term “sustainable development” the department of Environment, Regions and Transportation sees ways of making a fruitful contribution to a more adequate, contentrelated specification of this demanding concept. It is not a question of supplying patent remedies that can be applied immediately but of initiating a meaningful discussion and a social learning process. With regard to the concept of sustainability, the goal is – to provide a concept limitation with the help of various theoretical approaches in economics, such as the neo-classical theory of external effects and public goods or institutional economics approaches (path dependencies, property rights, transaction costs, etc.); Sustainability can be primarily understood as a regulative idea. In spite of different viewpoints and individual assessments, various shifts in emphasis can be observed in recent years: – to analyse it by using the instruments that have been established at the Ifo Institute (in particular, the business surveys), microeconomic methods and the methods of evaluation research; – The attempts to operationalise sustainability in the sense of more intergenerational equity with the help of economic capital components have led to an intensive debate as to how the individual capital components relate to each other (substitutive, complementary, chronological), what they involve exactly, how they are to be measured and how far economic considerations may go. – and to develop policy proposals that can be implemented. In terms of content, current research in the department focuses on the following: – Impact analyses with respect to instruments and institutions for the promotion of a sustainable economy – The question of intergenerational allocation, which has long been an issue in neoclassical resource economics, is more strongly associated with the question of intragenerational allocation. – Sustainable development and employment – Sustainable development and distribution – A growing co-operation has arisen between the natural and social sciences to prevent an isolated perspective on the complexity of ecological and socio- Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 – Resource management in water resource management 52 E n v i r o n m e n t , R e g i o n s a n d Tr a n s p o r t a t i o n Projects Completed in 2004: ponent of DANUBIA is to model industrial activity and water use, population density and household income on a regionally disaggregated level and to derive rules for the setting of water prices. For this purpose, the regional economic model RIWU (Regional Industrial Water Use) was developed. GLOWA-DANUBE:A Regional Model of Economic Development and Industrial Water Use in the Catchment Area of the Upper Danube R.-U. Sprenger, M. Egerer, E. Langmantel, J.Wackerbauer in co-operation with the University of Munich for the GSF and the Federal Ministry of Education and Research, January 2001 to February 2004, publication in: Jahrbuch für Regionalwissenschaft no. 24, 2/2004; International Journal of River Basin Management no. 1, 2/2003. The regional economic model RIWU is suitable to analyse decisions of different actors regarding the use of water resources. RIWU is based on the assumption of a representative profit-maximising industrial firm which uses two local inputs, land and water. Industrial production and the local service sector dynamics determine the overall level of economic activity in the district, which in turn determines household income and population density. RIWU is integrated into the DANUBIA system: it provides other components with data concerning household income, population density and industrial water demand and uses data on water demand and supply from other components to set a water price. The model consists of eight model equations with which seven endogenous variables are forecast (value-added in industry, gross domestic product, price of land for construction, population, household income, industrial water demand and industry ownwater supply). The exogenous variables are foreign sales and the area of land. The model equations have been developed by drawing on current results in the field of empirical regionaleconomic research. Data have been collected and the model equations have been estimated on the district level. In the outcome industrial activity depends positively on local exports and negatively on the prices of This project is part of an interdisciplinary research project with the title: GLOWA-DANUBE – Integrative Techniques, Scenarios and Strategies Regarding Global Changes of the Water Cycle. The overall goal of this project is to develop and validate integration techniques, integrated models, and integrated monitoring procedures for the functional type of a catchment in mountain forelands of the humid latitudes and to implement them in the network-based integrated environmental decision-support system DANUBIA. DANUBIA contains the essential physical and socioeconomic processes that are required for realistic modeling of water fluxes in mountain-foreland situations. It will be regionally transferable and thus applicable for a wide range of catchments.The members of GLOWA-DANUBE cover the disciplines meteorology, hydrology, remote sensing, ground water, water resources management, glaciology, economy, agricultural economy, tourism, environmental psychology and computer science. The aim of the economic com- Economic regional model for the catchment area of the upper Danube RIWU Simulation of a 1.0% Increase of Regional Exportsa) (a) Water Price = const. (in %) (b) Industrial Water Use = const. (in %) Industrial Value Added 0.53 0.49 Gross National Product 0.34 0.31 Population 0.25 0.24 Price of Land 0.12 0.11 Total Industrial Water Use 0.40 0.00 Water Price 0.00 0.68 a) At constant productivity. Source: Calculations by the Ifo Institute. 53 Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 E n v i r o n m e n t , R e g i o n s a n d Tr a n s p o r t a t i o n land and water use. The elasticity of industrial production with regard to the price of water use is markedly lower than with regard to land use. This reflects the fact that there is no shortage of water in the Upper Danube Basin up to now.The analysis of the simulation properties of the model shows satisfactory results.The regional economic model RIWU proved to be an appropriate tool to forecast regional economic development and industrial water use. It turned out that water scarcity and raising water prices have only a small impact on the Upper Danube region’s industrial growth.The reason is that industry will substitute water extraction by increased water recycling in the case of water scarcity or increasing water prices. RIWU has been successfully integrated into the decision-support system DANUBIA and exchanges a multitude of data with the other models of social and natural sciences during the runtime of DANUBIA. In this context of interdisciplinary research and modelling, RIWU can be used as a tool for questions of water resource management and can be transferred to other river basins. Only small growth of inland waterway transportation The decline is due to structural effects in goods transportation. Inland waterway transportation is by nature predestined for the shipping of bulk commodities, but transports of bulk commodities are increasing at a below-average rate or are declining. High-growth products, such as intermediate or finished goods, are not usually transported on the waterways. In the future as well, inland waterway transportation will increase at a below-average pace so that its share in total transport volume will continue to decline. Also along the Bavarian Main River, transhipments in inland waterway transportation shrank clearly. After 10.4 million t in 1990, only 4.9 million t was handled in 2003. In addition to the general decline of bulk commodity transports, specific changes in the regional ecoTransport Output in Germany Forecasts of Port Handling of the Main Ports in Bavaria and of the Main-Danube Canal up to 2015 H. Arnold-Rothmaier, K. Behring for the Bavarian Ministry for Economy, Infrastructure, Transport and Technology, May 2003 to October 2004. up to 2015 The main task of this study was to present the outlook for inland waterway transportation up to 2015 by examining transhipments at Bavarian ports on the Main River. Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 Source: Federal Ministry of Transport, Building and Housing; Ifo Institute. nomic structure were also responsible. Furthermore, in 2003 the slack economy, low water levels and a poorer harvest worsened the situation. Inland waterway transportation is characterized by high volume capacity and low transport costs. Because of low energy and spatial requirements as well as low emission values, it is a relatively non-polluting transport method with a high safety record. Furthermore, there are still free capacities on the canals. A disadvantage is that access is limited due to limited amount of navigable canals, and inland waterway ships are relatively slow. In the ports on the Main River and Main-Danube Canal, primarily goods for and/or from the region are handled. The most important goods are non-metallic minerals with a share of between 40 % and 50 %. Products of or for agriculture (grain, fodder, fertilizers) account for a further 30 %. A share of 10 % went to the handling of petroleum products. The share of inland waterways in total transportation has diminished since the 1960s. In 2002 it accounted for only 15 % of output in long-distance traffic. The estimates of the future port transhipments on inland waterways is based on the economic development potential of the areas around the ports. In 54 E n v i r o n m e n t , R e g i o n s a n d Tr a n s p o r t a t i o n Cargo Handling in the Harbours of the Bavarian Main and Main-Danube-Channel Universität Berlin, for Tamaki Foundation, Seattle/USA, 2002 to 2004, publication in preparation. The Tamaki Foundation Project on the Global Environment speaks to the broad themes of the World Summit. The main aim of the Tamaki Foundation Project is to assess the concept of “equity” in relationship to environmental protection and sustainable development initiatives domestically in Japan, Germany/the European Union, and the United States, and as they affect China. As the largest economies, Japan, Germany/EU, and the US have particularly large impacts (footprints) on the global environment. Their impact is both direct in terms of resources consumed, emissions generated, and natural areas that are degraded, and indirect, in terms of the examples they provide other countries of the world. They also can impact directly environmental conditions in developing countries through their foreign investment and trade activities, official development assistance, and formal and informal cooperative initiatives. Source: The Bavarian State Office of Statistics and Data Processing; Ifo Institute. addition to the relative costs of inland waterway transportation and the competitiveness of the ports with regard to their infrastructure, also globalisation and EU enlargement will both increase future cargo shipments. Compensation measures for “losers” of environmental policies This project will analyse how these differences influence Japanese, German, and US environmental programmes and laws. We will do this through the lens of equity.We understand “equity” in its broadest sense to include relations among individuals and groups within a state and among states. We also understand it to have an inter-generational component and do not exclude the idea that other species have rights as well. In focusing on questions of equity we would like to consider what kind of ecological footprint these states leave with their economic activities and what kind of ameliorating affects their environmental policies may have. Similarly, we are interested in how burdens are shared. Who bears the cost of environmental degradation? Who bears the cost of environmental clean up? Who has a voice in economic and environmental decisions? Related concepts to environmental equity include sustainable development, environmental justice, burden sharing, ecological democracy, and ecological modernisation. The handling volume of inland waterway transportation at the Bavarian Main River ports will be approximately 6 million tons in 2015.The largest transport category will be non-metallic mineral products but its share will fall slightly despite come increase in volume. There will be a clear increase in the shipment of agricultural products, whose share will increase to 30 %.The shipment share of high-value goods, including container transport, will also increase, but their share at 2 % will still be relatively low in 2015. Coping with Actual and Potential Losers of Environmental Policy Reforms in the Business Sector: Germany, Japan, and the US Compared R.-U. Sprenger in co-operation with K. Yamamura, University of Washington, M. Schreurs, K. Hiromi, R. Percival, University of Maryland, K. O'Neill, University of California at Berkeley, B. Barrett, United Nations University Tokyo, H. Imura, Nagoya University, H. Ohta, Aoyama University, A. Igarashi, Rikkyo University, C. Beuermann, Wuppertal Institut, H. Weidner, Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin für Sozialforschung, E. Rehbinder, University of Frankfurt am Main, L. Mez, Freie Alleviating Traffic Congestion T. Rave in co-operation with R. Arnott, Boston College, R. Schöb, University Magdeburg, MIT Press Series, 2002 to 2004, publication in preparation. 55 Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 E n v i r o n m e n t , R e g i o n s a n d Tr a n s p o r t a t i o n Unclogging the roads Current Projects: This volume on urban traffic congestion is directed towards a broader audience. So far the issue has been dominated by model-based studies from the U.S. with a strong focus on first-best (and more recently secondbest) pricing of urban auto traffic congestion. However, the recommendations by economists have been picked up only partially and slowly. Often congestion pricing theory has been formulated at too abstract a level to provide guidance for policy on the ground and practical implementation. This book argues that transport economists should devote more of their time to developing a set of microscopic models to complement the canonical macroscopic model first developed by Vickrey. A number of complementary congestion alleviation policies (e.g. the multi-mode ticket, staggered working hours or bicycling) are explored. Design, Management and Evaluation of an Adequate and Computer-based Informal Participation Procedure for the Use of GLOWA-DANUBE by Interested Stakeholders (“Stakeholder Participation”) R.-U. Sprenger, U. Triebswetter in co-operation with W. Mauser, R. Hennicker, Ludwig Maximilian University, Munich, for the Federal Ministry of Education and Research, March 2004 to February 2007. This study highlights the characteristics and structural features of subsidies and subsidy policy in Germany from an environmental point of view. It explores the opportunities and challenges of environmental policy integration. Methodologically, the study focuses mainly on the institutional dimension and applies various concepts developed in institutional economics. The GLOWA-Stakeholder project intends to design the development and use of DANUBIA which explores scenarios of the Danube water household in the discourse with stakeholders yet to be identified. Through the participation of stakeholders there will be a decisive contribution for the validation of the decision model as well as for its actual use. Furthermore, the usability of DANUBIA by non-experts is supported by the stakeholder project. For this purpose an adaptive user surface will be created.This will not only allow an interactive and individual use of DANUBIA but also ensure transparency of results. A systematically structured procedure for stakeholder participation will be developed and carried out. Moreover, there will be a continuous evaluation of the procedure in order to improve the results. Results and experiences will be made available to the public in a suitable form. Sustainability and Economics – A Comparison by Means of Possible Measures of Privatisation and Liberalisation in the Drinking Water Supply in Germany M. Egerer, Ifo research project, PhD thesis, 2002 to 2004, publication in preparation. The Environmental Sector in the Region of Munich U.Triebswetter, J. Wackerbauer for the City of Munich, Department of Labor and Economic Development; April 2004 to December 2004, publication in preparation. One of the few industries in Germany that has not yet been completely privatised is the drinking water supply. The aim of this study is to analyse the possible effects of privatisation and liberalisation against the background of the discussion in Germany. Especially the experiences of other countries with different types of supply systems is considered. This study is about the size and structure of the environment industry in the Greater Munich region and its competitiveness on international markets. The market for environmental goods and services has a volume of about EUR 183 billion in the European Union and EUR 57 billion in Germany. Harmonisation of environmental law in the accession states generates a demand of around EUR 10 billion yearly. About 9,000 employees are working in the environmental industry in the Munich region earning a turnover of EUR 1.3 billion. Environment-oriented State Aid Policy T. Rave, Ifo research project, PhD thesis, 2002 to 2004, published in ifo Beiträge zur Wirtschaftsforschung no. 18, Ifo Institute, Munich 2005. Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 56 E n v i r o n m e n t , R e g i o n s a n d Tr a n s p o r t a t i o n Important environmental innovations have been identified in the areas of renewable energies, in particular photovoltaics, integrated technologies in the automotive industry and in the development of fuel cells. For the further promotion of the environmental industry the strengthening of marketing instruments and the development of a network of regional environmental companies has been suggested. numerous tests in the first phase of the project, DANUBIA passed the proof of concept. Accordingly two different climatic scenarios, a “wet” and a “dry” one, can be calculated to simulate the relevance and the effects of climate changes on the catchment of the Upper Danube. The economic model RIWU was adapted so that in case of water shortage industrial water demand can be reduced and adjusted to the lower supply. Comparing GDP and household income of the two different scenarios the effects for the economic development in the catchment of the Upper Danube can be calculated. The Eco-industries of Schleswig-Holstein in 2004: Structure and Prospects J. Wackerbauer, U. Triebswetter in co-operation with Deutsche Umwelt AG, Kiel, for the Ministry for Environment, Nature Protection and Agriculture of the Federal State of Schleswig-Holstein, June 2004 to March 2005. 9,000 jobs in the environmental industry in the Munich area The objectives of this study are to estimate the size and the structure of the eco-industries in SchleswigHolstein and to analyse the growth potential of ecoindustries in this region. To achieve this, a survey amongst the suppliers of environmental goods and services in the Federal State of Schleswig-Holstein and an analysis of the demand side on the European, national and regional level will be carried out.This will be accomplished by interviews with selected firms and experts from the environmental sector. Building on the results of this investigation recommendations for policy to promote eco-industries in Schleswig-Holstein will be developed. GLOWA-DANUBE II: Developing the Regional Economic Model RIWU into a “Deep” Actors Model M. Egerer, E. Langmantel, J. Wackerbauer, M. Zimmer in co-operation with the University of Munich for the GSF and the Federal Ministry of Education and Research, March 2004 to December 2006. To ensure the integration of socio-economic aspects and natural sciences for a sustainable use of water resources within the framework of the project GLOWA-DANUBE, researchers of more than ten disciplines have gathered together. The part of the Ifo Institute in this interdisciplinary project is the development of the economic component of the decisionsupport system DANUBIA. The main aim is the modeling of industrial activity and water use. After 57 Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 International Institutional Comparisons This division offers two service programmes for economic policy-makers and researchers at the national and international levels. Information on economic regulations in Europe is provided by the DICE Database and the quarterly journal, DICE Report. Advice on methodology for empirical economic research, analysis and forecasting and their use for economic policy-making is provided to institutions of transformation and developing countries. English only. The database is used for economic research, for academic teaching and for information for the general public. At present the 1,300 entries contain more than 4,800 variables. Since the beginning of 2003 the quarterly CESifo DICE Report – Journal for Institutional Comparisons has been published under the editorship of Wolfgang Ochel and Rigmar Osterkamp.The journal is dedicated to the analysis of institutions, regulations and economic policy design in a country-comparative perspective. Under the rubric “Forum” a special topic is treated by several authors and under different aspects. In addition, there are the rubrics “Research Reports”, “Reform Models”, “Database” and “News”. International Advisory Projects Ifo experts travel the world With its advisory projects the Institute offers services to governments, other public institutions and to research establishments, mainly in transformation and developing countries. The advisory services are focussed on methodologies to monitor, analyse and forecast economic development and to support policy making and improve market-oriented empirical research capacities (institution building). At present, advisory services are concentrated on China, Central Asia, the Near East and South-East Europe. Employees and Volume of Work, 1979 – 2002 DICE Database and Journal CESifo DICE Report Comparing institutions in Europe Government regulations are important criteria for investment decisions and of primary relevance for economic growth.The country-specific regulatory systems are highly complex and change rapidly. Deficiencies in comparable EU data are significant. The Ifo Database for Institutional Comparisons (DICE) seeks to reduce these deficiencies. At present about 1100 entries (tables, brief analyses, and graphs) are available through the Ifo Websites free of charge.The name of the database, DICE, stands for: Database for Institutional Comparisons in Europe. Sachverständigenratsgutachten, OECD Employment Outlook, DICE Database. Projects Completed in 2004: The aim of the project is to present the institutional set-up and legal regulations of the economic-policy framework in all European countries and in selected non-European OECD states. All information is presented systematically, thus enabling inter-country and benchmark comparisons. Ifo has made the database available via the Internet. DICE now includes the following topic areas: Labour Market, Capital Market, Public Finance, Enterprise Environment, Social Security, Pensions, Health and Education. In all topic areas, new tables are continuously added. DICE is available in Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 Determinants of Growth and Welfare in the Transformation Countries J. Albrecht, R. Osterkamp in co-operation with Ifo research professor S. Klasen, University of Goettingen, funded by the Fritz Thyssen Foundation, July 2002 to August 2004. Growth dynamics in transition countries since the demise of the centrally planned economy system has turned out quite differently from what had been widely 58 International Institutional Comparisons expected. Instead of a short, J-shaped adjustment process followed by above-average, catch-up growth rates, transition countries went through a deep, prolonged recession that for some countries did not bottom out until the late 1990s. The transformation process towards modern economies in the style of the freemarket industrialised Western countries is quite advanced in most transition countries, prompting the question of whether these countries’ growth dynamics are following the pattern typical of an industrialised country. after 1995 than over the entire period.While the Solow model explains only 10 % of growth in the period from 1991 to 2002, after 1995 it explains as much as 30 – 60 %. If the first half of the 1990s is considered in isolation, however, the regression findings differ fundamentally from those for the average over the entire period or for the period after 1995.The growth pattern prior to 1995 did not correspond at all to the neoclasssical economic growth theory. Capital accumulation was either not at all or even negatively correlated with percapita income growth in this period, and a significant divergence in the per capita levels was observed. The findings of our empirical examination can be summarised as follows: We have found clear evidence of a neoclassical growth pattern in transition countries. The most important indication for this is the consistently significantly positive – and increasing with time – influence of capital accumulation upon per capita income growth over the entire 1991–2002 period.This correlation is markedly robust against any variations in the specification. As from 1995, the regressions start to evidence again all three components of the neoclassical economic growth model: positive influence of the investment rate, negative influence of population growth and a trend to convergence. Growth in transformation countries follows “neoclassical growth model” During the contraction that followed the collapse of the old system, the growth process appears to have obeyed laws totally different from those stipulated by the neoclassical economic growth model. It were rather factors such as reforms or the initial conditions under which the Central and Eastern European countries started out that played a role. But still, over the period as a whole the neoclassical economic growth pattern does appear to dominate. In particular, the positive role of capital formation upon growth in the second half of the 1990s outweighs the negative corrrelation found at the beginning of the transition. A further noteworthy finding is the apparent dichotomy of the period under study between the portion prior to and that after 1995.The explanatory value of the neoclassical economic growth model is many times better Health-Care Efficiency in OECD Countries R. Osterkamp, publication in Applied Economics Quarterly, Supplement, 55/2004. Changes of Health-care Efficiency 1980 – 2000 Health expenditure, unadjusted measure Health employment, unadjusted measure Input efficiency Input efficiency Output efficiency Output efficiency Improvement by 20% and more Denmark, Sweden, Ireland, Hungary, Austria, Italy Hungary, Ireland, Austria Sweden, Australia, Canada, UK, USA, Netherlands, Switzerland, Italia Portugal, Italy, Belgium Deterioration by 10% and more Portugal, USA, Iceland, New Zealand, Swetzerland Finland New Zealand, Iceland, Korea, Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, USA USA Source: Ifo Institute 59 Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 International Institutional Comparisons Where is health care most efficient? Efficiency of health-care provision is measured for 22 European and 7 non-European countries in 1980, 1990 and 2000 by means of the non-parametric method of Free Disposable Hull (FDH) analysis.As output variable, potential life years lost (reciprocal value) is used; as input variables health expenditure and health employment. It appeared necessary to correct the input variables for inter-country differences of medical incomes and age structure.The result was (a) that there is a considerable difference between the efficiency measures for uncorrected and for corrected input variables, (b) that the ranking of efficiency puts Japan, Spain, Sweden, Greece and Portugal in top places, while Finland, France, Germany, Slovakia, Switzerland and USA are in lower places, and (c) that a considerable improvement of efficiency between 1980 and 2000 has occurred in several countries, for example in Italy and Sweden, while efficiency has deteriorated in USA. The question for the reasons of the efficiency rankings and for the changes of efficiency is not asked in the paper. The Bureau of Statistics in Croatia intends to transform its old statistical system into a modern one, harmonised according to EU and OECD standards. The Ifo Institute provided the required know-how in the field of economic statistics. German and international statisticians were recruited to conduct seminars, workshops and other know-how transfer activities for the Bureau of Statistics DICE: Database for Institutional Comparisons in Europe R. Osterkamp, W. Ochel, N. Hoffmann, O. Röhn. The Database DICE was further enlarged in 2004 and now comprises about 1100 entries (tables and graphs). DICE is used by economists for research and academic teaching purposes, but is also visited by economic policy-makers and journalists. Free access to DICE at www.cesifo.de/DICE. In order to get to know the users of the DICE Database and their wishes, a user survey has been conducted. Since May 2003 a questionnaire is presented to the user before he/she enters the Database. However participation is voluntary. Until the end of 2004, about 2100 questionnaires had been completed. A first evaluation shows the interest of users is on all topics so far treated by the Database, while Labour Market and Public Finance, however, rank highest. Most users are from Europe, but many use DICE also from non-European countries, with the USA on top. Most users work in academic institutions, as professors, assistant professors or students. The individual comments are all positive, some even enthusiastic. The above table illustrates the changes of health-care efficiency in the countries considered between 1980 and 2000. Training Seminar – NDRC S. Schönherr, J. Albrecht, G. Nerb, W. Nierhaus for Deutsche Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit (GTZ) GmbH, (German Technical Co-operation), Eschborn, August 2004. During a one week seminar, a group of Chinese specialists from the National Development and Reforms Commission (NDRC) was trained in the subjects of business-cycle survey analysis and iterative analytical forecasting methodologies. The seminar was conducted solely by Ifo personnel. CESifo DICE Report W. Ochel, R. Osterkamp. Ifo know-how for Chinese experts Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 Croatia – Modernizing the National Systems of Economic Statistics S. Schönherr, G. Haslinger, G. Nerb, W. Nierhaus and external specialists for Deutsche Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit (GTZ) GmbH, (German Technical Co-operation), Eschborn, May 2003 to June 2004, Extension phase July to December 2004. A quarterly journal, CESifo DICE Report, was launched in 2003. Editors are Wolfgang Ochel and Rigmar Osterkamp. The journal comes with the following rubrics: Forum, Research Reports, Reform Models, Database, and News. Under “Forum” a specific topic is discussed by several authors and under different aspects. In 2004 the “Forum” topics were: Decentralising the Public Sector, Institutions and Performance, 60 International Institutional Comparisons Dual Income Tax, Institutions for Better Education. The rubric “Research Reports” covers articles on institutional questions and economic policy in different areas. Under “Reform Models” examples of interesting reforms in selected countries are presented.The rubric “Database” highlights and interprets new entries to the DICE database. The articles of the DICE Report may also be downloaded from the CESifo homepage.This possibility is used between 1000 and 1500 times per months. of short-term macroeconomic forecasting and analysing – developed in Europe – are fine-tuned and their applicability tested. Current Projects: The study will examine the development of the standard of living in the Central Asian former Soviet republics of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan. Chiefly two questions are to be addressed: 1) How does the development of the standard of living compare with economic indication in the so-called transition countries since their independence in 1991? Life expectancy and the nutritional status of children – among others – will be used as major indicators. 2) What are the determinants for the survival and nutritional status of children? The latter is a key question that needs elucidating in order to be able to influence adequately the future economic development of a country. Development of the Standard of Living in Central Asia During the First Decade of Transition J. Albrecht, R. Osterkamp, S. Schönherr, supported by Volkswagen Foundation, Ph. D. Thesis, July 2003 to August 2005. DICE: Database for Institutional Comparisons in Europe and CESifo DICE Report – Journal for Institutional Comparisons R. Osterkamp, W. Ochel, N. Hoffmann, O. Röhn. The extension of the database is being continued. Moreover, the DICE working group also publishes the CESifo DICE Report. Institutional Determinants of Economic Growth in OECD Countries R. Osterkamp, W. Ochel, O. Röhn, N. Hoffmann, in cooperation with Ifo Research Professor Th. Eicher, University of Washington, Seattle, December 2004 to April 2007. Measuring living standards in Central Asia Serbia – Training Programme to RBD (Belgrade) in Economic Monitoring and Forecasting S. Schönherr, G. Nerb, W. Nierhaus, J. Lindlbauer for Republican Bureau for Development (Serbia)/EU, April 2004 to February 2005. The recent empirical country-comparative growth literature highlights the importance of the quality of institutions for economic growth and welfare.The aim of this research project is to analyze this relationship in OECD countries and to identify specific institutions that explain differences in economic performance. The establishment of a scientifically based economic monitoring and forecasting system is the core activity of this know-how transfer project. In the context of this project, the first business cycle survey is being introduced in Serbia. Kazakhstan – Short-term Forecasting and Macroeconomic Analysis S. Schönherr, J. Albrecht, G. Huber, G. Nerb, W. Nierhaus for Deutsche Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit (GTZ) GmbH, (German Technical Cooperation), Eschborn, May 2003 to February 2005. Extension is being planned up to July 2005. Trade and Trade Potentials of Central Asian Countries: Chances and Risks S. Schönherr, G. Huber (external), J. Albrecht for Deutsche Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit (GTZ) GmbH, (German Technical Co-operation), FAZ-Institute, DEG, October 2004 to January 2005. During this phasing-out stage of a long-lasting cooperation programme between the Ifo Institute and the Almaty Economic Research Institute, methods 61 Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 International Institutional Comparisons The foreign trade development of the five Central Asian Countries – Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan – is characterised by great variation since 1995. Kazakhstan’s trade is booming, other’s stagnating. Especially trade within the region has declined in absolute terms. This is an indication of severe problems for the strategy of a common market. Doing business in India and China Empirical Analysis of Market Entry Strategies of German Enterprises in China and India G. Haslinger in co-operation with Ifo Research Professor Th. Eicher, July 2004 to March 2005 development of research concept. This research project analyses globalization patterns of German multinational enterprises. By empirical and econometric methodologies, using a gravitation model (similar to the one developed by Buch and Lipponer), substitutions and complementarities between FDI and export strategies are explained. Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 62 Business Surveys The conducting and interpretation of business surveys is a key service function of the Ifo Institute. The regularly collected data are not only integral parts of the Institute’s economic forecasts, they are also the basis of industry and aggregate economic forecasts of business, industry associations and government units.The survey results are extensively discussed and interpreted in the media. In economic research, microdata derived from Ifo business surveys play an important role in testing economic behavioural patterns – for example investment and employment behaviour, labour market trends or pricing policy. The reputation of the Ifo Institute in the area of business surveys is also confirmed by the fact that the surveying techniques of the Ifo Institute are currently used throughout the world in more than fifty countries. sources for assessing the economic situation in Germany. In 1990, shortly after the pan-German Economic and Currency Union took effect, the Ifo Business Survey was expanded to include East Germany. Research in this department concentrates on the analysis of Ifo data, which are highly valued as early indicators for important economic sectors as well as for analyses in the areas of enterprise financing and financial services, especially for the leasing sector. Researchers also construct macroeconomic models and industryand company-specific forecasting models on the basis of the qualitative data from the Ifo surveys. Beside the ongoing development of new indicators, the assessment of the indicators with the help of modern time series methods is a central task. In addition, in close contact with universities and international research institutes that carry out similar surveys, the survey methods and analysis techniques are refined and modernised. The panels and the evaluation programmes of the Ifo surveys are subject to ongoing monitoring and adjustment to changing structures and product spectrums. The representativeness and the plausibility of the data are constantly examined. The Internet and e-mail are also employed a new ways to obtain survey responses. The objective of the Ifo Business Survey is to grasp the business-cycle component of macroeconomic developments. The long-term growth trend, seasonal fluctuations, and special effects are not depicted. The Ifo Business Survey is designed as a supplement to the official statistics. It supplies information on economic phenomena that are not included in the official statistics. The monthly servey is based on about 7,000 response of business in west and east Germany about their assessments of their business situation and other aspects of business activity.The standard questions call for an appraisal of the current situation as well as the expectations and plans for the next three to six months. The survey results, which undergo a complex evaluation procedure, provide information on some 500 markets in the manufacturing industry, construction and the wholesale and retail trades. Ifo’s time-tested leading indicators From the long time-series of the Ifo Business Survey, informative business-cycle indicators are derived. The Ifo Business Climate Index, capacity utilisation, order reserves and price expectations all give a reliable picture of the momentary business situation. A special quarterly question on competitiveness and business constraints has been conducted for the past several years. One advantage of Ifo economic indicators is that they are available before the official statistics. The production and new-order indices of the official statistics are usually not published until more than four weeks after the end of a reporting period, and are often subject to major subsequent revisions. The results of the Ifo Business Survey are released between day 25 and 27 of the survey month. The Ifo Business Survey again stood at the centre of public interest in 2004. Much attention was also attracted by the results of the Ifo Investment Survey, especially in manufacturing and leasing. Some of this survey data is also taken over by the German Federal Statistical Office. The time series of the Ifo Business Survey are available to external users from the Ifo database services. The data offered include times series from the official statistics and other sources. Ifo Business Survey The business survey introduced by the Ifo Institute in 1949 was an innovation in business-cycle and market observation. Today it is one of the most important To meet the information demand about international business cycle tendencies, Ifo conducts the World 63 Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 Business Sur veys Economic Survey (WES). In contrast to the usual Ifo enterprise surveys, WES is a poll of expert opinion. other hand the assessments of the current situation improved slightly in spring and remained stable thereafter. Hence for the business climate a falling course resulted. From August until December both components, and therefore the Business Climate, remained almost unchanged. The course of the Business Climate pointed to a cyclical weakness in autumn, which indeed was confirmed by data published by the Statistical Office. After a drop in November both components and the climate rose markedly in December. This is a signal that the weakness was only temporary. Ifo Business Climate The markets anticipate the “Ifo Index” The Ifo Business Climate Index, formed from the mean of the balances of the assessments of the business situation and the six-month business outlook from the Ifo Business Survey, has been published by the Institute since 1972. It is now widely accepted as a leading indicator of economic development in Germany. The Index has a lead time of two to three months over the production index for the producing sector in the official statistics. The “Ifo Index” has become an essential part of business-cycle reporting in Germany. Its national and international importance is seen in the reactions of the financial markets to the monthly publication of the index figures. The Ifo Institute also prepares special monthly evaluations and commentaries on the business survey data for Bavaria, BadenWürtemberg, Saxony and Thuringia. The observed decline in the business expectations is present in all four survey sectors – manufacturing, construction, wholesaling and retailing.The course was different for the assessments of the current situation, though. Only in manufacturing did the assessment surge. In construction, wholesaling and retailing the assessments were nearly stable. Quarterly Surveys in the Service Sector Ifo Business Climate To shed some light into the statistical jungle of the service sector is the goal of these surveys. Since 1995 quarterly surveys have been conducted on business trends, assessments and expectations of software and electronic data processing service providers, and on leasing companies since 1998. At the end of 1999, the insurance industry was included in the Ifo business surveys, and at the beginning of 2000 a new business survey was launched for the finance sector in Bavaria with the support of the Landeszentralbank of the Bundesbank in Bavaria. Ifo Business Survey March 2004 Index, 2000 = 100, seasonally adjusted 110 110 1) Trade and Industry Ifo business climate 105 105 100 100 95 95 90 90 85 80 85 Business expectations Assessment of business situation 75 80 75 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 Ifo Business Survey of EDP Service Providers 1) Manufacturing, construction, wholesaling and retailing. Source: Ifo Business Survey. The weakness in business activity for German software and data processing service providers was more persistent than expected. According to the assessment of the federation BITKOM (federation of the information economy, telecommunications and new media, Berlin) nominal sales in 2002 and 2003 declined by 2.4 % and 1.0 % respectively; employment decreased in the same period by 6 % and 4 % respectively. The nominal volume of turnover in 2003 was approximately EUR 41billion (BITKOM 2004). Already in 2001 sales only matched the previous-year level. The recovery that the Ifo Business Climate signalled already in 2003 materialised in reality. After a decline of real GDP of –0.1 % in 2003, the German Statistical Office announced growth of 1.6 % in 2004. The Business Climate did not continue to surge in 2004; its value at the end of the year was slightly under the value of the beginning of the year. In the course of the year the optimistic expectations weakened. On the Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 64 Business Sur veys German software and EPD service companies’ business bottomed out in recent years but recovery has been sluggish. After the business climate index of this Ifo survey marked time in the first half of 2004, the indicator began to recover in October with positive assessments of both the current business situation as well as the business prospects for the winter half-year 2004/05. However, current business only remained at a satisfactory level; already since the fourth quarter of 2003 positive and negative responses balanced out. The lively demand for software and data processing services gave the companies a sales plus in the last two to three months. Also the comparable previous-year sales were slightly surpassed, although the responses differed greatly: 41 % of the survey participants 60 % twelve months earlier. The enterprises placed great hopes on sales in the final quarter of the year, confidence having increased again strongly. Upswing for EDP services For large service providers the weak phase has apparently been overcome and the economic recovery is poised to continue. Demand and sales grew perceptibly in the first half of 2004, order books filled up, and also expectations clearly improved. On the other hand, the smaller enterprises had great efforts in starting the recovery, new orders declined and sales failed to match the previous-year results on a broad front. In spite of the improved confidence, the downtrend in employment in software and EDP services did not come to standstill: In 2002 approximately 22,000 jobs disappeared, in 2003 it was 13,000. The only positive sign is that the decline in employment is coming to an end. In the employment expectations for the coming months, positive and negative responses balanced out. The larger business reported a more favourable development, and a slight increase is likely. On the other hand, the smaller companies responded more pessimistically, on balance. EDP Service Providers: Business Development Ifo Leasing Business Survey Since the first quarter of 1998, the Ifo Institute has conducted a quarterly business survey of leasing companies in collaboration with the Federation of German Leasing Companies.The appraisals of the leasing companies of their own future business developments are well suited for forecasting investment in plant and equipment in the economy as a whole. The growth weakness in total spending on plant and equipment did not come to an end in 2004. Although the improved business expectations of the firms at the beginning of 2004 indicated a better investment propensity, there were factors that dampened investment activity. These included: the relatively low capacity utilisation that was expected to increase only moderately in the following quarters, the low capital reserves of mid-sized businesses that restricted borrowing, and finally the continuingly weak domestic demand. But despite this lack of support from increasing investments, leasing achieved positive results in 2004. The new business of the leasing companies Source: Ifo Business Survey of EDP Service Providers 2004. reported higher sales, 29 % unchanged sales and almost every third enterprise still experienced declining sales.The complaints about low order stocks became perceptibly weaker, although 31 % still considered them to be too small in October compared to 65 Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 Business Sur veys lost momentum in the summer months, and the business climate index also fell in the third quarter clearly, but recorded a positive balance for the year. This means that leasing again increased its market share, the leasing quota of movable property growing to more than 24 %. New indicator for leasing Ifo Insurance Survey In close collaboration with the Federation of the Germany Insurance Industry, the Ifo Institute initiated a quarterly business survey for the sector at the end of 1999. Included in the survey are insurance companies in the areas of life, health, property/casualty and legal protection insurance. In terms of gross premiums collected, the insurance companies in the survey cover more than 80 % of premium income. As the most volatile aggregate of the gross domestic product, investment in new plant and equipment have been notoriously difficult to forecast. The domestic incoming orders in the capital goods sector and in machine tools as well as the business expectations in manufacturing have been employed as indicators for forecasting, along with the aggregate profit share and interest-rate differences. Forecasting errors have frequently occurred with these approaches, however. Therefore, a new indicator was constructed by the Ifo Institute in the year 2000, together with the Federation of German Leasing Companies (BDL) from the regular enterprise survey in movable-property leasing for forecasting investment in plant and equipment. In 2004 this indicator again showed a very good performance. Already in the first quarter it indicated that there would be no investment growth in 2004. Up to the beginning of spring 2005, the investment indicator still moved in negative territory, and no upswing was evident. A growth phase was accordingly postponed until the second quarter. Insurance Industry Source: ifo Business Survey in Insurance. The German insurance industry reported a good business year in 2003, despite the general economic stagnation and the uncertainty on capital markets. Revenue from premiums increased by 4.9 % after a 4.4 % gain in 2002. The current indicators of the Ifo survey also reflect the positive developments of 2003, but since the beginning of 2004 the business climate index has fallen from quarter to quarter, however. The worsening is due exclusively to a more cautious appraisal of the business expectations for the next six months. On the other hand, the appraisals of the current business situation remained favourable. In terms of insurance sectors, property/casualty insurance and private health insurance contributed to the improvement. In life insurance, however, the business climate was largely stagnant for three quarters. New business slowed down, fewer companies than before reported increased revenue from premiums, and also the hopeful expectations concerning future premiums have visibly weakened. Equipment Investment: Slow Recovery only Source: Ifo Business Survey in Leasing 2004; Federal Statistical Office; calculations by the Ifo Institute. Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 66 Business Sur veys Monthly Ifo Business Survey of the Service Sector In the Investment Survey in manufacturing and mining, the Ifo Institute gathers data in the old and new Länder on investment trends. The survey covers past investment, investment plans for the current or coming year, the goal of investment activity, and the relevant influencing factors. Investment activities in the new Länder are included in a separate survey because of the differing developments and clearly different structures. According to the most recently published results, investments in manufacturing and mining increased in 2004 after declining the two years before. Whereas a slight increase was recorded in west Germany, firms in east Germany seem to have increased their investment spending considerably in 2004. Beside the quarterly surveys in the service sector, the Ifo Institute also conducts a monthly business survey in this sector. Since this survey is in the development stage, the results have not yet been published. The survey concept is similar to the survey in manufacturing, construction, retailing and wholesaling. Work on the construction of the panel for the monthly survey in the service sector began in 2001 and continued thereafter. In 2004 the panel set-up was complete. The former quarterly surveys in the sectors information and communication were additionally integrated into the business survey in the service sector. Also included in the monthly survey are firms of the business areas multimedia and internet. The existing panel of financial service providers with a focus on leasing was expanded.These survey results are used to forecast capital investment, among other things. With its investment survey in the leasing sector, the Ifo Institute fills a gap in the statistics. Unlike the other Ifo surveys, the survey for leasing companies is a comprehensive survey; there are no official statistics that enable an extrapolation of a representative-sample survey. The leasing companies report their fixed asset spending divided according to types of investment goods and according to customer sectors. These data form the basis for the Ifo Investment Calculation according to the user concept and an overall report on one of the most significant service sectors. Because of the complexity and the heterogeneity of the tertiary sector, major effort went into the panel set up in 2004, and currently more than 2000 firms participate in the service survey. Following the successful test phase, the survey results will be published in 2005. New Ifo Business Survey for Services Indicator for equipment investment forecasts Other surveys Ifo Investment Survey The Ifo Institute conducts numerous other enterprise surveys in addition to the business surveys and investment surveys. The Ifo Investment Survey was the forerunner of all the investment surveys of the Federal Statistical Office. Today it supplements the official ex-post data for the most recent periods. As a voluntary survey – like all non-official surveys, participation in the Ifo Investment survey cannot be required by law – it can, of course, not replace an exhaustive sampling. This is especially true with regard to the desired industry sub-divisions. Responses to the Ifo Investment Survey in 2004 came from manufacturing, mining, construction, wholesaling and retailing, power supply, and leasing (leasing companies and producer leasing). The forecast horizon – except for power supply – is a maximum of one year. The surveys are conduct once a year in most of the above-mentioned sectors; only firms in manufacturing are polled twice a year. Ifo Innovation Survey Innovations are among the most important determinants for micro- and macroeconomic growth. Since the growth and competition of an economy or company is influenced in the long term by high-tech innovations but since dramatic technological breakthroughs are the exceptions, technological progress coming primarily from numerous, marginal steps, it is necessary to use a broad concept for innovations. Only by including both “radical” as well as “marginal” innovations can technological progress be explained. This is the approach used since 1979 in the Ifo Innovation Survey. 67 Slight rise in innovation activities Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 Business Sur veys Using the Ifo Innovation Survey results, innovation activities of the enterprises can be represented on an industry and a product basis. The results also supply information on a macroeconomic level for industrial, structural and growth analyses. In addition, the economic and technological environment that influences innovation activities in German industry are registered. profit from the results. The results are also presented to the participating organisations and, in a suitable form, to the area experts. The project was initiated by the Ifo Institute with financial support from Landwirtschaftliche Rentenbank. Ifo World Economic Survey (WES) In its quarterly World Economic Survey, the Ifo Institute polled more than 1000 international economic experts in 2004 at institutes or multinational enterprises on the economic situation and outlook in some 90 industrial, threshold and developing economies. In contrast to the traditional quantitative statistics, the survey results are timely and allow for international comparisons. Especially in countries where the official statistics are still unreliable, the assessments and expectations of on-site experts are particularly valuable. Detailed survey results are sent to survey participants. For the broad international public, the quarterly English publication CESifo World Economic Survey was created in 2002; a condensed version appears in German in ifo Schnelldienst. Whereas the percentage of companies that have implemented product and/or process innovations in the period 1997 to 2000 remained relatively constant at nearly 60 %, innovation activities fell noticeably in 2001 and 2002: by 4 percentage points to 54 %. In 2002 it fell to 53 %. In 2003 a slight increase in innovation activity occurred. Nearly 55 % of German industrial firms reported product and/or process innovations. The exploitation of innovation potential is increasingly threatened by the intensification of international competition. In addition numerous innovative firms complained of bureaucratic barriers, the lack of equity capital and reported increasing difficulties in finding qualified staff for the R&D area. Ifo World Economic Climate Ifo Agricultural Sector Report Ifo survey in agriculture This survey-based industry report was first conducted as a pilot project in 2003 and repeated in 2004. Survey participants are pork producers who are polled as to their current business situation and expected outlook. Their assessments of both economic conditions as well as the regulatory framework in which the production takes place are informative. The survey records how pork producers react to consumer demands and political changes and to the conditions of EU-wide competition and concentration. Source: Ifo World Economic Survey (WES) Q IV/2004. Pork production is a branch of agriculture that receives little support from the EU. With its highly modernised production structures, it is exposed to strong international competition. The goal of this survey is an annual measurement of business confidence among pork producers, their capacity usage and scope for expansion. The survey also compares and analyses their positioning in the pork value-added chain in the most important EU producer countries. The survey is conducted entirely electronically, and all participants Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 Ifo Architect Survey With support from the Federal Chamber of Architects, the Ifo Institute has conducted a quarterly survey of 2,500 self-employed architects since January 1980. The survey results contain indicators for the business climate, new contracts – and the associated estimated construction volume – as well as order reserves. 68 Business Sur veys The quarterly data is supplemented by an annual survey question on the legal form of the business, the size of the office and the fees. The Länder-specific survey results are reported quarterly to the 16 Länder chambers of architects and are sent to the participants along with the next survey questionnaire use by economic institutes and universities. With the establishment of simple online access to important information for management, the co-operation with survey participants is being intensified. Ifo Know-how Transfer A central research focus in the department is the transfer expertise in enterprise surveys gained in Germany to other countries. In 2004 a project was continued on optimising the business survey and quarterly economic forecasts in Kazakhstan, funded by the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit (GTZ). Ifo Telephone Survey The telephone survey, which was introduced already in 1988 as a supplement to the other Ifo surveys, proved also in 2004 to be an important instrument for particular sensitive issues. In addition to the four polls commissioned by Wirtschaftswoche, the Ifo Institute surveyed the participants of more than 1000 manufacturing companies, construction firms, distributors and service providers on other topical issues. The results were published in Wirtschaftswoche and in ifo Schnelldienst. The surveys that met with particular interest dealt with EU enlargement, financing of medium-sized enterprises and assessment of chambers and federations. Ifo survey methods exported to the world Current Projects: Ifo Business Survey in West and East Germany M. Birnbrich, E. Gluch, J. Lachner, H. Russ, on-going, regular publication in: ifo Schnelldienst and ifo Konjunkturperspektiven. Ifo World Economic Survey (WES) G. Nerb, A. Stangl, on-going, regular publication: in CESifo World Economic Survey and ifo Schnelldienst. Department Projects: The department also conducts project-related surveys for the Institute’s contract studies, for example a survey for the Bundesbank on invoiced currencies and a survey on price formation on the production stage. High priority is also given to the analysis and forecasts of short- and medium-term investment trends in important economic sectors as well as analyses in the areas of financial services, especially in leasing and corporate financing. In connection with surveybased contract research, an ifo-KfW business cycle barometer for medium sized businesses was developed. The indicator is regularly published by the customer. For the EU, Ifo conducts the German part of the EU Labor Market survey. Classification of the Business Survey According to the NACE Systematics M. Birnbrich, A. Kunkel, S. Richter, W. Ruppert. Ifo Business Survey for EDP Service Providers J. Gürtler, on-going, regular publication in: ifo Schnelldienst. Ifo Leasing Business Survey J. Gürtler, A. Städtler, on going since1998, regular publication in: ifo Schnelldienst. Ifo Business Survey for the Insurance Sector J. Gürtler for the Association of German Insurance Companies, since 1999, information for client and participants. Further importance is given to the analysis of the micro and aggregate data that Ifo collects, the preparation and further development of econometricstatistical forecasting and survey procedures, the construction of macroeconomic, industry and company-specific forecasting models on the basis of the collected data as well as the preparation of the data for 69 Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 Business Sur veys Ifo Business Survey for Bavaria H. Russ for the Bavarian State Ministry of Economic Affairs, Infrastructure,Transport and Technology, regular publication in: Konjunktur in Bayern. Short-term Forecast of Business-cycle Trends in Various Manufacturing Sectors G. Goldrian, on-going service for participants of the Ifo Business Survey in manufacturing. Ifo Business Survey for Baden-Württemberg W. Ruppert, for Landeskreditbank Baden-Württemberg – Förderbank, regular publication in the series: L-Bank-ifo-Konjunkturtest and in the Internet. Examination of the Analytical and Prognostic Quality of the Survey Results of the Ifo Institute G. Goldrian, various articles in Handbuch der umfragebasierten Konjunkturforschung. Ifo Business Survey for Saxony J. Lachner, J. Gürtler, regular publication in: ifo Dresden berichtet. Examination of the Prognostic Quality of Survey Results on Employment Plans K. Abberger. Ifo Business Survey for Thuringia W. Ruppert, for the Ministry of Economics and Infrastructure in Thuringia, regular publication in the Internet. On-going Improvements of the Seasonal Adjustment Procedure ASA-II. Development of Analytical Time-Series Methods G. Goldrian, publication in: Jahrbücher für Nationalökonomie und Statistik Band 224/6 and Zeitreihenanalyse in der Empirischen Wirtschaftsforschung, Festschrift für Winfried Stier zum 65. Geburtstag, ed.: R. Metz, M. Lösch and K. Edel. Lucius & Lucius, Stuttgart, 2004. Ifo Investment Survey M. Birnbrich, P. Jäckel, H.-D. Karl, G. Krug, A. Städtler, A. Weichselberger, regular publication in: ifo Schnelldienst. Ifo-KfW Business Cycle Barometer for Medium Sized Businesses S. Richter, W. Ruppert, H. Russ, for the KfWBankengruppe, regularly published by the customer. Handbuch der umfragebasierten Konjunkturforschung G. Goldrian and other staff members of the Ifo Institute, published as volume 15 in the series ifo Beträge zur Wirtschaftsforschung. Invoiced Currencies P. Jäckel for Deutsche Bundesbank, on-going since 1989. A handbook of Ifo surveys and survey methodology. English edition forthcoming from Edward Elgar Publishing. Price Formation on the Production Stage H. Russ, A. Kunkel, for Deutschen Bundesbank and EZB. EU Labor Market Survey W. Ruppert, K. Wohlrabe, K. Abberger, for the EU. Ifo Architect Survey E. Gluch, on-going since 1980, regular publication in: ifo Schnelldienst. Ifo Telephone Survey H. Russ for Wirtschaftswoche, regular publication in: Wirtschaftswoche and ifo Schnelldienst. Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 70 Press, Publication, Conferences Positioned at the interface between the Institute and the public, the service department Press, Publications and Conferences assists the Institute in successfully carrying out its information tasks. Its responsibility is to transmit the products of the research and service departments to their proper addresses: political or business decision-makers, members of the scientific community or members of the media.The department establishes and maintains contacts to the interested public. It also offers services to other Ifo departments in the form of support for their publications, organises the central events and is responsible for the public image of the Ifo Institute. This includes the further development of the corporate design, address management and editorial updating and conceptual design of the website. globalisation on German business (“bazaar economy”) received wide attention. The importance of the Ifo Institute for the economic-policy reform debate in Germany is indicated by the media echo enjoyed by Hans-Werner Sinn’s book, Ist Deutschland noch zu retten? The sixth completely revised edition of the book appeared in 2004 and the second updated paperback edition in 2005 (April). The department organised press conferences, which met with great interest, in connection with the Ifo economic forecasts and central Ifo events. Ifo – greatest media presence of all economic research institutes in Germany Editing The department’s task is also the conception, production and distribution of the publications of the Institute. It is responsible for all publications of the house.This task includes conceptual and editorial work, translations (German-English and English-German), preprinting work including the preparation of graphs and tables as well as type-setting and layout, forwarding to the in-house or external printers, and address management.The department assists other Ifo departments in the execution of their work. Press Relations The task of press relations is to serve as an intermediary between journalists and the Institute, and also to provide information and material to Ifo members, firms, public authorities, or students. The press office informs the public, presenting the research results to the media and the general public in a form that is understandable to a broad circle of readers. More than 80 press releases in 2004 offered special information for media representatives. Arrangement of in-house interview partners, organisation of press conferences, replies to concrete questions – all the instruments of professional press relations are handled in-house, and not without success: The editorial staff supervises the following publications: – Ifo Schnelldienst: a bi-monthly journal continuing discussions of current policy issues and Ifo research results; – Ifo Konjunkturperspektiven: a monthly journal that contains the current results of the Ifo Business Survey in graphs, tables and descriptive analyses; According to the regular reports of institutes specialised in media analysis, the Ifo Institute has the greatest media presence of all economic research institutes in Germany: Wide attention is given to the eagerly awaited monthly release of the Ifo Business Climate index. Great interest in 2004 was also attracted by the Ifo Business Surveys of Data Processing Service Providers and Leasing Companies, by the results of the economic forecasts of the Ifo Institute, and by the newly developed KfW-Ifo SME Barometer, as reflected in publications in supra-regional and international newspapers and journals. Also the numerous contributions of the Ifo Institute on policy discussion, especially the Ifo proposal for the reform of the labour market in the low-wage sector and the analysis of the impact of – Ifo Dresden Berichtet: a journal of the Ifo Dresden branch on economic policy and structural change in east Germany, appearing six times a year; – CESIfo World Economic Survey: quarterly publication in English containing the results of an Ifo expert poll on the world economy in graphs and tables with a detailed analysis; – CESifo Forum: a quarterly, English-language journal that deals with current political topics of worldwide interest with contributions by internationally renowned authors as well as data and information from the Ifo Institute; 71 Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 Press, Publication, Conferences – CESifo DICE Report: a quarterly journal in English with articles on institutional regulations and economic-policy measures using a country-comparative analysis. representatives to gather information on the outlook for the European economy. A more detailed description of the conference is found in the section on the work of the department for Industry Branch Research. – CESifo Economic Studies (formerly Ifo Studien): a quarterly, refereed academic journal in English. Articles present the results of economic research and address policy-relevant issues. On 22 June 2004 the Ifo Institute held its 55th Annual Assembly. At the General Meeting Hans-Werner Sinn, president of the Ifo Institute, reported on the activities of the Institute in 2003. Then, the annual prize awards for Ifo researchers were announced. – CESifo Report on the European Economy: annual report in English on economic-policy issues by the European Economic Advisory Group at CESifo. The great response to the public part of the Annual Assembly necessitated a move to the auditorium of the Ludwig Maximilian University. The more than 800 attendees, including numerous representatives of member firms of the Ifo Institute and Bavarian and federal ministries, were offered an attractive programme. After the welcome words of Prof. Sinn – Ifo Beträge zur Wirtschaftsforschung: a series in which important research projects of the Ifo Institute are published; The Ifo Institute also publishes the results of its research that does not otherwise appear in book form in the Ifo Forschungsberichten. The Ifo Dresden Studien contains the research of the Ifo Dresden branch on eastern Germany and its eastern neighbours. Annual Meeting 2004 Some of the Ifo publications are distributed by international on-line service providers. A complete overview of the publications and ordering information is available at www.ifo.de. In addition the department publishes the news services of the Ifo Institute ifo im ..., ifo Newsletter (both in German). Conferences The department’s third task is the organisation of conferences and the presentation of the Institute at domestic and international meetings and conferences, for example, at the yearly conference of the organisation of German economists, the Verein für Socialpolitik. The main events in 2004 were the International Spring Conference in March, the Annual Meeting in June and the Ifo Industry Colloquium in October. On 18 – 19 March 2004 the Ifo Institute held its Spring Conference, an international event in Berlin attended by 100 specialists from industry, banks and the public administration as well as numerous press Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 Prof. Hans-Werner Sinn, President of the Ifo Institute 72 Press, Publication, Conferences and the rector of the university, Prof. Bernd Huber, the President of the Czech Republic,Václav Klaus, spoke on EU enlargement, from which he expected “large and perceptible effects” neither for the old nor the new member states. However, he saw potential conflict of goals between the number of EU members, the activities of EU and the decision-making mechanisms of the European institutions. After Václav Klaus’s address, the Bavarian State Minister for European Affairs, Eberhard Sinner, stressed that European unification helped preserve the peace. The eagerly awaited economic forecast was then presented by Prof. Sinn. He reported that world economic activity in the US, Southeast Asia, Japan and also in other European economies was on the upswing but still weak in Germany.The economic developments in the new EU member states were also presented in detail. Annual Meeting 2004 Phoenix TV broadcasts Ifo Annual Meeting The event concluded with a podium discussion on tax reform in Germany. Moderated by Dr. Nikolaus Piper, chief economic editor of the Süddeutsche Zeitung, participants included Prof. Paul Kirchhof, director of the Institute for Finance and Tax Law at the University of Heidelberg, Dr. Friedrich Merz, MdB, deputy chairperson of the CDU/CSU parliamentary group, Prof. Wolfgang Wiegard, chairperson of the German Council of Economic Exper ts and Prof. Hans-Werner Sinn. All agreed that the current system of taxation is urgently in need of reform, but proposals on future tax models differed clearly. While Prof. Kirchhof argued for a “concept of freedom” with no exclusions and in which all sources of income are treated equally, Prof.Wiegard expressed his preference for a dual income tax. He agreed with Prof Sinn that a lowering of the business tax was the most urgent necessity. Friedrich Merz pointed out that a graduated scale of taxes, which he favours, is wide-spread internationally. Merz argued that a synthetic income tax, in which all revenues are taxed equally, must be retained. Instead of the existing seven types of revenue, the future law should only have four. Prof. Sinn expressed his agreement with a dual income tax. A documentation of the Ifo Annual Meeting was published in ifo Schnelldienst 12/2004 and 13/2004. Václav Klaus, President of the Czech Republic On 26 October 2004 the Ifo Institute held its fourth Industry Colloquium, in co-operation with Chamber of Industry and Commerce for Munich and Upper Bavarians and supported by the Bavarian State Ministry for Economic Affairs, Infrastructure, Transport and Technology. The analysis of the overall economy and economic developments in industry, construction, wholesaling and retailing as well as in selected service sectors is the main purpose of this event. (A more detailed description of the conference is found in the section on the work of the department for Industry Branch Research and in ifo Schnelldienst 22/2004.) Internet The rapid development of the Internet as a communication platform offers the Institute a virtual basis for information provision.The content of the two web- 73 Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 Press, Publication, Conferences Annual Meeting 2004 Network members, accessible from the homepage. Businesses that participate in the surveys of the Ifo Institute can call up and fill in their questionnaires online; their data flow direct into an Ifo database and are available for immediate evaluation. The “research” menu contains the research output, the projects, staff and news items from the departments of the Ifo Institute. Under this menu item, users can also access information on the doctoral and visiting research programmes of the CESIfo Group. Those interested in the contributions on the economic-policy discussion can find information on the contributions of the Ifo Institute in various media under the menu item “Policy debate”. Under “Special Ifo issues”, the topics that Ifo has launched in the public discussion are available, such as the “Bazaar economy”, “Activating social welfare” or “Child-dependent pensions”, with corresponding press reports. Podium participants: Prof. Wolfgang Wiegard, Prof. Paul Kirchhof, Dr. Nikolaus Piper, Dr. Friedrich Merz, Prof. Hans-Werner Sinn sites, www.ifo.de and www.cesifo.de, have become more diverse and more extensive in recent years. In mid-2004 the redesign of the website was begun, with the inclusion of more efficient hard-ware and software. The main aim was a clearer and more userfriendly navigation. Both websites were combined into one website for this purpose – the German pages of the Ifo Institute and the English pages of the Ifo Institute, the CESIfo GmbH and the Center of for Economic Studies (CES). It is now available in a German and English version. A new area is “Economic information”, with access to numerous service fields of the Institute including indices, forecasts, Ifo time series and a pool of interesting economy data. This includes the free-access Database for Institutional Comparisons in Europe (DICE) in which the institutional regulations of the 25 EU member states and selected industrialised countries are systematically presented, with new additions and updates every month.Video excerpts of speeches and lectures presented by staff at Ifo events and also LMU seminars and lectures at the LMU are available under “Educational material”. Since April 2005 the public can access the new website. The homepage contains news windows that include the current business climate index, forecasts and new studies. Separate areas have been created for survey participants, journalists, the DICE database and CESIfo The media area presents important information for journalists: press releases, dates, experts and a photo archive as well as a topic/year search function. The new look of the Ifo Internet homepage The menu item “Publications” contains information on the series and monographs published by the Ifo Institute and CESIfo GmbH. Publications can be ordered online using Ifo DocBase and Ifo DataBase. The Ifo DocBase enables searches to be made of all German-language publications of the Ifo Institute since 1990. In the CESIfo DocBase, which contains the English-language publications of the CESIfo Group, full-text articles can be downloaded. In the Ifo New Internet design Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 74 Press, Publication, Conferences DataBase ca. 18,000 time series of the Ifo Business Survey can be accessed. Intranet The Intranet is continuously being enlarged as an instrument of knowledge management for work at the Ifo Institute and serves as a comprehensive information basis for Ifo staff and visiting researchers. To provide optimal data access for its users the Ifo Intranet contains a collection of important micro and macro data (data pool).This includes data from the Ifo Business Survey and data sets from other institutes that are important for empirical economic research. The use of the Ifo micro data is subject to strict controls to assure the anonymity of the survey data. The data pool includes: Ifo Data, External Microdata, External Macrodata, Statistical Software (with information on STATA / STATA Journal, SAS and SPSS) as well as links to research Institutes. In 2004 the data pool was expanded to include Ifo World Economic Survey (WES) micro data and data from the Ifo Innovation Survey (INNO). The data sets are provided in the popular software format STATA but can also be transferred into other common formats via translation software. By means of a simple online-form, Ifo staff can propose the acquisition of further data sets. In order to increase the attractiveness of this data pool, all data that are needed for current projects can be included in the data pool. 75 Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 Library Managing the flood of information The library of the Ifo Institute provides services to members of staff of Ifo and CESifo, to visiting researchers and to students of the Munich Universities. With more than 113,000 books, 1,500 periodicals and 750 statistical reports, the Ifo library is one of the largest libraries for economics in southern Germany. The electronic catalogue of the Institute uses various descriptors, PTS country codes, and abstracts as well as the classification system of the Journal of Economic Literature (JEL). The library of the Ifo Institute is member of the library association of the Northern German Länder, GBV. This allows the opening of the Ifo library via the Internet and is an important step in the harmonisation of the Ifo holdings with that of other large libraries in economics. The Ifo OPAC is a component of the Ifo and CESifo Websites. The library of the Ifo Institute co-operates closely with the Information Centre of the Hamburger HWWA Institute and the Central Library for Economics in Kiel. A joint project is the CD-ROM, WISO II, produced along with the Society for Information in Business Economics, GBI, with the holdings of the three partner libraries. With literature and database research as well as the procurement of data and information on selected economic and economic-political areas, the library fulfils an important service function. The Ifo library maintains connections to all important providers of economic and/or scientific and technical databases, which can be scanned in the online-procedure. In total the library services are used ca. 3.700 times in 2004. Ifo Annual Repor t 2004 76