Publications

Most of the information presented on this page have been retrieved from RePEc with the kind authorization of Christian Zimmermann
Can labour market institutions mitigate the China syndrome? Evidence from regional labour markets in EuropeJournal articleJan-Luca Hennig, The World Economy, Volume 46, Issue 1, pp. 55-84, 2023

This paper investigates how labour market regulations alter the adverse impact of rising import competition from China in European local labour markets between 1997 and 2006. The paper constructs measures of regional exposure to Chinese imports based on previous literature and on regional labour market frictions exploiting involuntary labour reallocations. Taking into account the endogeneity of import competition and its interaction with labour market regulations, the paper finds that regions more exposed to the rise of China have suffered from a reduction in manufacturing employment shares. This shock grows larger with regional labour market frictions; hence, it exacerbates the impact of trade shock on employment. Moreover, the paper finds that employment in public services, and not in construction or private services sector, absorbed the negative shock to the manufacturing sector. The unemployment rate, the labour force participation rate and wages in all sectors are unresponsive to import competition from China.

Nursing homes and mortality in Europe: Uncertain causalityJournal articleXavier Flawinne, Mathieu Lefebvre, Sergio Perelman, Pierre Pestieau and Jérôme Schoenmaeckers, Health Economics, Volume 32, Issue 1, pp. 134-154, 2023

The current health crisis has particularly affected the elderly population. Nursing homes have unfortunately experienced a relatively large number of deaths. On the basis of this observation and working with European data (from SHARE), we want to check whether nursing homes were lending themselves to excess mortality even before the pandemic. Controlling for a number of important characteristics of the elderly population in and outside nursing homes, we conjecture that the difference in mortality between those two samples is to be attributed to the way nursing homes are designed and organized. Using matching methods, we observe excess mortality in Sweden, Belgium, Germany, Switzerland, Czech Republic and Estonia but not in the Netherlands, Denmark, Austria, France, Luxembourg, Italy and Spain. This raises the question of the organization and management of these nursing homes, but also of their design and financing.

Penser les liens entre le politique, l’éthique et l’économiqueJournal articleFeriel Kandil, Diogène, Volume 281282, Issue 1, pp. 53-71, 2023
Incertitude sur la politique commerciale et cycle économiqueJournal articleCeline Poilly and Fabien Tripier, Revue française d'économie, Volume XXXVIII, Issue 1, pp. 183-218, 2023

Cet article propose une revue de la littérature concernant les liens entre l’incertitude sur la politique commerciale et le cycle économique. Cette littérature se situe à l’intersection de deux domaines de recherche qui se sont initialement développés de manière indépendante. Le premier domaine est consacré aux fluctuations de l’incertitude comme sources des cycles économiques et le second à l’incertitude sur la politique commerciale dans le cadre des accords commerciaux. Nous montrons comment le contexte de la guerre commerciale des États-Unis initiée en 2018 a favorisé le rapprochement entre ces deux domaines, tant sur le plan des mesures empiriques de l’incertitude que de ses mécanismes de transmission à l’économie. Nous soulignons également la nécessité d’approfondir l’analyse des politiques conjoncturelles adéquates pour faire face à l’incertitude sur la politique commerciale dans le contexte actuel de tensions commerciales persistantes entre les États-Unis, la Chine et l’Europe.

Technological innovations and obsolescence: Leveling the playing field for remanufacturingJournal articlePedro H. Albuquerque and Kiara S. Winans, 2023

In a linear economy, manufacturing is less costly and more profitable than remanufacturing because of reduced private costs of utilization and production. However, manufacturing also involves higher resource extraction and waste as externalized costs than remanufacturing. We use a vintage capital framework to assess technological innovations in remanufacturing and their potential benefits to society and human occupations. Our study shows that replacing manufacturing with remanufacturing technologies creates positive static and dynamic circular economy externalities. These externalities can be quantified to assess improvements in social outcomes. A smartphone remanufacturing innovation case study is presented as an illustration of the article’s main ideas. Future research should investigate additional specific cases to develop a comprehensive methodology for assessing the impact of remanufacturing innovations on social outcomes. This will provide valuable insights into the broader implications of remanufacturing practices.

Social Implications of Technological Disruptions: A Transdisciplinary Cybernetics Science and Occupational Science PerspectiveJournal articlePedro H. Albuquerque and Sophie Albuquerque, pp. 1-5, 2023

In this article we argue that the disruptive social implications of skill-replacing technological innovations are determined neither by human characteristics, such as “low skills” or “low cognition,” nor by task characteristics, such as “routine,” as it is typically assumed in the predominant economics and management science literature, but by the cybernetic characteristics of the innovations. We also propose that the negative effects of technological disruptions on human well-being cannot be fully understood without the use of a transdisciplinary approach involving cybernetics science and occupational science, and that it is urgent that policymakers look beyond their narrow effects on productivity and on the labor force, and consider instead the complexity of the interactions between cybernetic technologies and meaningful human occupations. We offer as an example the case of the fast adoption of online food delivery services and of remote work technologies during the COVID-19 pandemic. Ethical implications are derived from the arguments.