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entrepreneurship approachbusiness start upglobal entrepreneurshipeconomic growthknowledge transfersmall firmsfirm sizetechnischer fortschrittentrepreneurship economicregional developmentknowledge spilloverspillover entrepreneurshiptechnological changespillover effektspillover effectentrepreneurship developmenteconomic developmentdevelopment indexworld bankknowledge filterentrepreneurship monitornew firmmarket entryindustrial researchentrepreneurship researchdestructive entrepreneurshipklein und mittelbetriebgem dataendogenes wachstumsmodellendogenous growth modelentrepreneurial talentimpact entrepreneurshiphuman capitalzoltan acshandbook entrepreneurshipfirm growthbank dataresearch collaborationcountry levelpenetrating knowledgeinnovation technologicalgrowth entrepreneurshipsmall mediumregional growthsmall firmincumbent firmsmultinationales unternehmentransnational corporationregionales wachstumräumliche verteilunginstitutional economicsentrepreneurship developingintellectual propertydeveloped countriesfirm performanceregional innovationentrepreneurship entrepreneurshipentrepreneurship indexglobal economyfirm formationinterdisciplinary surveymedium sizedinnovative activityhigh technologymanufacturing industriesbank groupsystems entrepreneurshipentrepreneurship innovationemployment growthjob creationnew knowledgeearly stagedata tenddavid audretschregional clustercase study
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Years of publications: 1984 - 2024

321 records from EconBiz based on author Name Information logo


1. The long-run effects of immigration : evidence across a barrier to refugee settlement

abstract

After the end of World War II in 1945, millions of refugees arrived in what in 1949 became the Federal Republic of Germany. We examine their effect on today's productivity, wages, income, rents, education, and population density at the municipality level. Our identification strategy is based on a spatial discontinuity in refugee settlement at the border between the French and US occupation zones in the South-West of post-war Germany. These occupation zones were established in 1945 and dissolved in 1949. The spatial discontinuity arose because the US zone admitted refugees during the 1945-1949 occupation period whereas the French zone restricted access. By 1950, refugee settlement had raised population density on the former US side of the 1945-1949 border significantly above density on the former French side. Before the war, there never had been significant differences in population density. The higher density on the former US side persists entirely in 2020 and coincides with higher rents as well as higher productivity, wages, and education levels. We examine whether today's economic differences across the former border are the result of the difference in refugee admission; the legacy of other policy differences between the 1945-1949 occupation zones; or the consequence of socio-economic differences predating WWII. Taken together, our results indicate that today's economic differences are the result of agglomeration effects triggered by the arrival of refugees in the former US zone. We estimate that exposure to the arrival of refugees raised income per capita by around 13% and hourly wages by around 10%.

Ciccone, Antonio; Nimczik, Jan Sebastian;
2022
Type: Graue Literatur; Non-commercial literature; Arbeitspapier; Working Paper;
Availability: The PDF logo Link Link

2. The long-run effects of immigration: evidence across a barrier to refugee settlement

abstract

After the end of World War II in 1945, millions of refugees arrived in what in 1949 became the Federal Republic of Germany. We examine their effect on today’s productivity, wages, income, rents, education, and population density at the municipality level. Our identification strategy is based on a spatial discontinuity in refugee settlement at the border between the French and US occupation zones in the South-West of post-war Germany. These occupation zones were established in 1945 and dissolved in 1949. The spatial discontinuity arose because the US zone admitted refugees during the 1945-1949 occupation period whereas the French zone restricted access. By 1950, refugee settlement had raised population density on the former US side of the 1945-1949 border significantly above density on the former French side. Before the war, there never had been significant differences in population density. The higher density on the former US side persists entirely in 2020 and coincides with higher rents as well as higher productivity, wages, and education levels. We examine whether today’s economic differences across the former border are the result of the difference in refugee admission; the legacy of other policy differences between the 1945-1949 occupation zones; or the consequence of socio-economic differences predating WWII. Taken together, our results indicate that today’s economic differences are the result of agglomeration effects triggered by the arrival of refugees in the former US zone. We estimate that exposure to the arrival of refugees raised income per capita by around 13% and hourly wages by around 10%.

Ciccone, Antonio; Nimczik, Jan Sebastian;
2022
Type: Graue Literatur; Non-commercial literature; Arbeitspapier; Working Paper;
Availability: The PDF logo Link Link

3. The long-run effects of immigration : evidence across a barrier to refugee settlement

abstract

After the end of World War II in 1945, millions of refugees arrived in what in 1949 became the Federal Republic of Germany. We examine their effect on today's productivity, wages, income, rents, education, and population density at the municipality level. Our identification strategy is based on a spatial discontinuity in refugee settlement at the border between the French and US occupation zones in the South-West of post-war Germany. These occupation zones were established in 1945 and dissolved in 1949. The spatial discontinuity arose because the US zone admitted refugees during the 1945-1949 occupation period whereas the French zone restricted access. By 1950, refugee settlement had raised population density on the former US side of the 1945-1949 border significantly above density on the former French side. Before the war, there never had been significant differences in population density. The higher density on the former US side persists entirely in 2020 and coincides with higher rents as well as higher productivity, wages, and education levels. We examine whether today's economic differences across the former border are the result of the difference in refugee admission; the legacy of other policy differences between the 1945-1949 occupation zones; or the consequence of socio-economic differences predating WWII. Taken together, our results indicate that today's economic differences are the result of agglomeration effects triggered by the arrival of refugees in the former US zone. We estimate that exposure to the arrival of refugees raised income per capita by around 13% and hourly wages by around 10%.

Ciccone, Antonio; Nimczik, Jan Sebastian;
2022
Type: Graue Literatur; Non-commercial literature;
Availability: The PDF logo Link Link Link Link

4. Rainfall, agricultural output and persistent democratization

Ciccone, Antonio; Ismailov, Adilzhan;
2022
Type: Aufsatz in Zeitschrift; Article in journal;
Availability: Link Link
Citations: 6 (based on OpenCitations)

5. Gibrat's law for cities : evidence from World War I casualties

abstract

According to Gibrat’s law for cities, population shocks have permanent effects on city size. I examine this implication by analysing the persistence of observed population shocks: German military casualties in WWI by municipality of birth. I find a strong negative effect of military casualties on the male population of municipalities just after WWI. This effect persists to 1933 and, outside of the most agricultural municipalities, beyond. The effect on female population and the number of households is similar to the effect on male population by 1950, when women in the generation that fought WWI started reaching their life expectancy.

Ciccone, Antonio;
2021
Type: Graue Literatur; Non-commercial literature; Arbeitspapier; Working Paper;
Availability: The PDF logo Link Link

6. Estimating cross-industry cross-country interaction models using benchmark industry characteristics

Ciccone, Antonio; Papaioannou, Elias;
2023
Type: Aufsatz in Zeitschrift; Article in journal;
Availability: The PDF logo Link Link
Citations: 1 (based on OpenCitations)

7. Estimating cross-industry cross-country interaction models using benchmark industry characteristics

Ciccone, Antonio; Papaioannou, Elias;
2019
Type: Graue Literatur; Non-commercial literature; Arbeitspapier; Working Paper;
Availability: Link

8. The Long-Run Effects of Immigration: Evidence across a Barrier to Refugee Settlement

Ciccone, Antonio; Nimczik, Jan Sebastian;
2022
Type: Working Paper;
Availability: The PDF logo

9. The long-run effects of immigration: Evidence across a barrier to refugee settlement

Ciccone, Antonio; Nimczik, Jan Sebastian;
2022
Type: Working Paper;
Availability: The PDF logo

10. The Long-Run Effects of Immigration : Evidence Across a Barrier to Refugee Settlement

abstract

After the end of World War II in 1945, millions of refugees arrived in what in 1949 became the Federal Republic of Germany. We examine their effect on today's productivity, wages, income, rents, education, and population density at the municipality level. Our identification strategy is based on a spatial discontinuity in refugee settlement at the border between the French and US occupation zones in the South-West of post-war Germany. These occupation zones were established in 1945 and dissolved in 1949. The spatial discontinuity arose because the US zone admitted refugees during the 1945-1949 occupation period whereas the French zone restricted access. By 1950, refugee settlement had raised population density on the former US side of the 1945-1949 border significantly above density on the former French side. Before the war, there never had been significant differences in population density. The higher density on the former US side persists entirely in 2020 and coincides with higher rents as well as higher productivity, wages, and education levels. We examine whether today's economic differences across the former border are the result of the difference in refugee admission; the legacy of other policy differences between the 1945-1949 occupation zones; or the consequence of socio-economic differences predating WWII. Taken together, our results indicate that today's economic differences are the result of agglomeration effects triggered by the arrival of refugees in the former US zone. We estimate that exposure to the arrival of refugees raised income per capita by around 13% and hourly wages by around 10%

Ciccone, Antonio; Nimczik, Jan Sebastian;
2022
Availability: Link Link
Total Citations: 5,431
h Index: 24
i10: 34
Source: CitEc

The information on the author is retrieved from: Entity Facts (by DNB = German National Library data service), DBPedia and Wikidata

Zoltán J. Acs


Prof.

Alternative spellings:
Zoltan J. Acs
Z. Acs
Z. J. Acs
Zoltan Acs

B: 1947
Biblio: Tätig am Max Plank Inst., Jena; Tätig an der Univ. Baltimore, Merrick School of Business ; US Small Business Administration, Washington, DC ; Wirtschaftswissenschaftler
Zoltan J. Acs (born 1947) is an American economist. He is Professor of Management at The London School of Economics (LSE), and a professor at George Mason University, where he teaches in the Schar School of Policy and Government and is the Director of the Center for Entrepreneurship and Public Policy. He is also a visiting professor at Imperial College Business School in London and affiliated with the University of Pecs in Hungary. He is co-editor and founder of Small Business Economics. Acs was previously Research Scholar at the Entrepreneurship Growth and Public Policy Group at the Max Planck Institute for Economics in Jena, Germany. He has also served as Chief Economist at the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA); Research Fellow at the U.S. Bureau of the Census; Associate Director of the Center for International Business Education and Research; Research Associate at the Institute on Western Europe at Columbia University; and Scholar-in-Residence at the Kauffman Foundation. Acs advocates the importance of entrepreneurship for economic development. He is the founder and President of The GEDI Institute, a global think tank based in Washington, D.C. Together with Laszlo Szerb, Acs created the Global Entrepreneurship and Development Index (GEDI). He has published more than 200 articles and 35 books. His most recent book, Why Philanthropy Matters: How the Wealthy Give, and What it Means for our Economic Well-Being (2013), was a finalist for the Academy of Management George R Baker Prize for the best book in management in 2014. (Source: DBPedia)

Profession

  • Economist
  • Affiliations

  • Schar School of Policy and Government
  • London School of Economics and Political Science. Department of Management
  • Manhattan College
  • USA. Bureau of the Census
  • Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin für Sozialforschung
  • External links

  • Gemeinsame Normdatei (GND) im Katalog der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek
  • Wikipedia (English)
  • Deutsche Digitale Bibliothek
  • NACO Authority File
  • Virtual International Authority File (VIAF)
  • Wikidata
  • International Standard Name Identifier (ISNI)

  • Google Scholar logo Google Scholar
    REPEC logo RePEc
    SSRN logo SSRN

    Publishing years

    1
      2024
    7
      2023
    7
      2022
    5
      2021
    1
      2020
    1
      2019
    5
      2018
    9
      2017
    7
      2016
    6
      2015
    7
      2014
    20
      2013
    8
      2012
    15
      2011
    28
      2010
    32
      2009
    34
      2008
    21
      2007
    10
      2006
    17
      2005
    14
      2004
    7
      2003
    16
      2002
    5
      2001
    6
      2000
    7
      1999
    2
      1998
    3
      1997
    8
      1996
    5
      1994
    9
      1993
    10
      1992
    12
      1991
    10
      1990
    9
      1989
    8
      1988
    13
      1987
    5
      1986
    1
      1985
    2
      1984

    Series

    1. Discussion papers / Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin für Sozialforschung : Forschungsschwerpunkt Markt und politische Ökonomie (29)
    2. Papers on entrepreneurship, growth and public policy (23)
    3. Jena economics research papers (21)
    4. Foundations and trends in entrepreneurship (9)
    5. Jena Economic Research Paper (8)
    6. SpringerBriefs in Economics (7)
    7. The international library of entrepreneurship (6)
    8. Discussion paper / Centre for Economic Policy Research (5)
    9. Discussion papers. Forschungsschwerpunkt Strukturpolitik (5)
    10. International handbook series on entrepreneurship (5)
    11. Small business economics : an entrepreneurship journal (5)
    12. International Handbook Series on Entrepreneurship (4)
    13. Elgar original reference (3)
    14. The international library of critical writings in economics (3)
    15. Edward Elgar E-Book Archive (3)
    16. Science, technology and the international political economy (3)
    17. Working paper / World Institute for Development Economics Research (2)
    18. Studies in industrial organization (2)
    19. International studies in entrepreneurship (2)
    20. Advances in spatial science (1)
    21. De Vries lectures in economics (1)
    22. Quaderni di ricerca / Centro Studi sull'Imprenditorialità "Furio Cicogna", Università Bocconi : working paper (1)
    23. Studies in Industrial Organization (1)
    24. Working paper / Centre for Business Research, University of Cambridge (1)
    25. Special issue on innovation and entrepreneurship in small and medium-sized enterprises (1)
    26. Joint series of competitiveness (1)
    27. Discussion papers / Forschungsschwerpunkt Strukturpolitik (IIMV) (1)
    28. Papers in regional science : the journal of the Regional Science Association International (1)
    29. Advances in Spatial Science (1)
    30. International regional science review (1)
    31. Zhang, T., Gerlowski, D. & Acs, Z. Working from home: small business performance and the COVID-19 pandemic. Small Bus Econ (2021). This is the preprint version of the paper. The published version can be accessed at (1)
    32. EBL-Schweitzer (1)
    33. Small business economics (1)
    34. International Studies in Entrepreneurship (1)
    35. International Studies In Entrepreneurship (1)
    36. Underlagsrapport ... till Globaliseringsrådet (1)
    37. Palgrave Studies in Entrepreneurship and Society (1)
    38. Journal of economic behavior & organization : JEBO (1)
    39. International Handbook Series on Entrepreneurship Ser. (1)
    40. Policy research working paper : WPS (1)
    41. HEC Paris research paper series (1)
    42. Policy Research Working Paper (1)
    43. Working paper series / United Nations University, UNU-MERIT (1)
    44. IZA Discussion Paper (1)
    45. Discussion paper series / IZA (1)
    46. World Bank Policy Research Working Paper (1)
    47. UNU-MERIT Working Papers #2012-021 (1)
    48. Praeger special studies (1)