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Hagen Lesch IW-Trends No. 1 25. March 2012 Wage Policy in Times of Foreign Trade Imbalances and Volatile Growth
Wage Policy in Times of Foreign Trade Imbalances and Volatile Growth
Hagen Lesch IW-Trends No. 1 25. March 2012

Wage Policy in Times of Foreign Trade Imbalances and Volatile Growth

German Economic Institute (IW) German Economic Institute (IW)

Since the mid-nineteen-nineties employers and unions in Germany have pursued a moderate wage policy. This has improved unit labour costs and international competitiveness. At the same time, this wage policy and the labour market reforms of 2003 to 2005 have together contributed to a gradual increase in employment over the last few years. The safe-guarding of well-paid manufacturing jobs and high employment growth have both served to stimulate consumer demand. In a phase of growing volatility in the economic cycle consumption helped to sustain economic development. In the long-term, maintaining a policy of aligning wages with national productivity growth has thus paid off. Adopting an expansive wage policy to reduce foreign trade imbalances would deter domestic investment without solving the structural problems of the countries with trade deficits.

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Christian Rusche / Jeanne Mouton in European Journal of Law and Economics External Publication 15. November 2023

The anti‑steering provision of Article 5 (4) of the DMA: a law and economics assessment on the business model of gatekeepers and business users

Data is a success factor for digital platforms and the core of their business model. The rationale behind this is that data allows for improving the matching process between users which creates value for the platform.

IW

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Michael Hüther / Hubertus Bardt / Cornelius Bähr / Jürgen Matthes / Klaus-Heiner Röhl / Christian Rusche / Thilo Schaefer IW-Policy Paper No. 7 17. September 2023

Industrial policy at the turn of the times

The current debate on industrial policy vacillates between the extreme positions of an orthodoxy of rejecting state action and a naive belief in the state's ability to control structural change.

IW

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