• Keine Ergebnisse gefunden

• New economic thinking and new macroeconomic teaching

• The nexus between finance and growth from a Schumpeterian perspective

• Digitalisation of currencies

• Fiscal rules for the euro area

47 Chair of Business Management and Industrial Management

Sanderring 2, 97070 Würzburg Phone: +49 931 31 - 82937 E-mail: ibl@uni-wuerzburg.de

Web: https://www.wiwi.uni-wuerzburg.de/lehrstuhl/bwl2

Prof. Dr. Ronald Bogaschewsky

Doctorate (1988) and habilitation (1994) at the Uni-versity of Göttingen; 1994-2001 Professor of Business Studies, in particular Production Management at the Technical University of Dresden, since 2001 chair of Business Management and Industrial Management at the University of Würzburg.

Head of the working group “Purchasing and Logistics”

of the Schmalenbach Society for the Advancement of Research in Business Economics and Business Prac-tice e.V. since 2001; Member of the German Board of Management of the Federal Association Materials Man-agement, Purchasing and Logistics e.V. (BME) 1996 to 2016, and spokesperson of the Academic Advisory Board since its foundation in 2005.

Annual Supply Management Symposium, jury member for BME University Award, BME Award for Academic Ex-cellence.

Main focus of teaching and research:

• Supply management

• Batch-size planning

• Global value network optimisation

• Intercultural management

• Sustainability

• Digitalization

Selected publications:

• Bogaschewsky, R.: Digitalisierung in Ein-kauf und Supply Chain Management, in:

Obermeier, R. (Hrsg.): Handbuch Industrie 4.0 und Digitale Transformation, Springer, Berlin u.a. 2019.

• Bogaschewsky, R.; Möller, J.: Digitale Trends und ihre Auswirkungen auf die Nachhaltigkeitsperformance in der Be-schaffung, in: Wellbrock, W.; Ludin, D.

(Hrsg.): Nachhaltiges Beschaffungsma-nagement – Best Practices aus Wissen-schaft und Unternehmenspraxis, Springer, Berlin u.a. 2019.

• Bogaschewsky, R.: Strategisches Be-schaffungsmanagement, in: Corsten, H.; Gössinger, R.; Spengler, T. S. (Hrsg.):

Handbuch Produktions- und Logistikma-nagement in Wertschöpfungsnetzwerken, Berlin-Boston 2018, 469-486.

• Bogaschewsky, R.; Müller, H.: Katalogba-sierte Beschaffungssysteme, in: Kollmann, T. (Hrsg.): Handbuch Digitale Wirtschaft, Springer, Berlin u.a. 2018, 1-25.

• Bogaschewsky, R. et al. (Hrsg.): Supply Management Research. Aktuelle For-schungsergebnisse, Wiesbaden, Bände 2008 bis 2021.

• Bogaschewsky, R. (Hrsg.): Einkauf und Supply Chain Management, ZfbF-Sonder-heft 76/21, Springer/Gabler, Berlin u.a.

2021

Sanderring 2, 97070 Würzburg Phone: +49 931 31 - 82961

E-mail: L-vwl3@wiwi.uni-wuerzburg.de

Web: www.wiwi.uni-wuerzburg.de/lehrstuhl/vwl3

Selected publications:

• “Upstream Competition with Complex and Unobservable Contracts” (with Izak Atiyas and Firat Inceoglu), Review of Industrial Organization, 58(3), 399-429, 2021.

• “Buyback Contracts to Solve Upstream Opportunism” (with Firat Inceoglu), European Journal of Operational Research, 287(3), 875-884, 2020.

• “Product Bans May Benefit Consumers:

Implications from a New Model Of Vertical Product Differentiation” (with Firat Inceoglu), Journal of Industry, Competition and Trade, 2015, 15(2), 155–180.

• “Dynamic Duopoly Competition with Network Effects and Switching Costs”

(with Lukasz Grzybowski), in: Review of Network Economics, 12 (1), 1–25, 2013.

• “Switching Costs, Experience Goods and Dynamic Price Competition”, in:

Quantitative Marketing and Economics, 8(2), 2010, 167–205. Winner of Dick Wittink Prize 2011 for the best paper published in QME 2010.

• “Exclusive Dealing with Network Effects”

(with Julian Wright), in: International Journal of Industrial Organization, 28(2), 2010, 145–154.

B.S. (Electrical Engineering, METU 1991), M.S. (Electri-cal Engineering, SUNY Stony Brook 1993), M.A., Ph.D.

(Economics, SUNY Stony Brook 1998) and habilitation (Economics 2007) at the Christian Albrecht Universi-ty of Kiel; Associate Professor, UniversiUniversi-ty of Southern Denmark, Odense (2008-2012), since 2012 Professor of Economics at the chair of Industrial Economics at the University of Würzburg.

One of the scientific directors of the interdisciplinary project “Law and Economics of Competition Policy and Regulation” at the University of Würzburg.

Main focus of teaching and research:

• The economics of platform and digital markets

• Competition policy

• Theoretical and empirical industrial economics

• Microeconomics

• Marketing

49 Chair of Public Finance

Sanderring 2, 97070 Würzburg Phone: +49 931 31 - 82973

E-mail: hans.fehr@wiwi.uni-wuerzburg.de Web: www.wiwi.uni-wuerzburg.de/lehrstuhl/fiwi

Prof. Dr. Hans Fehr

Selected publications:

• H. Fehr, M. Hofmann (2020): Tenure choice, portfolio structure and long-term care - Optimal risk sharing in retirement, The Journal of the Economics of Ageing 17, Article 100240.

• H. Fehr, F. Kindermann (2018):

Introduction to Computational Economics using Fortran, Oxford University Press:

Oxford.

• H. Fehr, M. Kallweit, F. Kindermann (2017):

Families and social security, European Economic Review, 91, 30–56.

• H. Fehr, M. Kallweit and F. Kindermann (2016): Household Formation, Female Labor Supply and Savings, Scandinavian Journal of Economics, 118 (4), 868–911.

• H. Fehr, M. Kallweit, F. Kindermann (2015):

Reforming Family Taxation in Germany – Labor Supply vs. Insurance Effects, FinanzArchiv, 71 (1), 53–81.

• H. Fehr, F. Kindermann (2015): Taxing capital along the transition – Not a bad idea after all?, Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control 51, 64–77.

Doctorate (1992) at the University of Regensburg, ha-bilitation (1998) at the University of Tübingen. Profes-sor at the University of Würzburg since 1998.

Visting researcher at Boston University (1994 and 2007) and University of New South Wales, Sydney (2016).

Member of the German Research Society, Review Board “Economics” (2004-2008); research fellow Net-spar (since 2008) and CESifo (since 2011).

Research fellow Netspar (since 2008) and CESifo (since 2011). Associate investigator at CEPAR (since 2018).

Scientific Advisory Board Max-Plank Society (since 2020).

Associate Investigator at CEPAR (since 2018).

Main focus of teaching and research:

• Quantitative analysis of financial and social policies

• Computational economics

• Demographic change and its implications for the state and society

• Theory and practice of federal financial relations

PhD in Economics (2008) at the Universitat PompeuFa-bra (Barcelona), Assistant Professor at the University of St. Gallen (2008-2018), Professor of Labor Econo-mics at the University of Würzburg since 10/2018.

Visiting Researcher at London School of Economics (2007 and 2018), the University of Amsterdam (2011 and 2012) and CESifo (2018).

Research Affiliate at CEPR (since 2018), Research Fel-low at the Institute of Higher Studies in Vienna (since 2018) and at CESifo (since 2009).

Member of the “Bevölkerungssökonomischer Aus-schuss des Vereins für Socialpolitk” (since 2014) and of the “Bildungsökonomischer Ausschuss des Vereins für Socialpolitk” (since 2013).

Winner of an ERC Consolidator Grant (2021), one of the most prestigious research awards in Europe, policy-re-levant research as certified by numerous thirdy party funds (e.g. Stiftung Mercator, Volkswagen Stiftung) and excellence in teaching as documented by the tea-ching award received in 2021.

Main focus of teaching and research:

• Labor Economics

• Economics of Education

• Migration Economics

Selected publications:

• “Why Birthright Citizenship Matters for Immigrant Children: Short- and Long-Run Impacts on Education Integration”, (2020) Journal of Labor Economics 38(1) (with H.

Rainer and J. Saurer)

• “Why Birthright Citizenship Matters for Immigrant Children: Short- and Long-Run Impacts on Educational Integration”(2018), with H. Rainer and J. Saurer (forthcoming Journal of Labor Economics).

• „Does Early Child Care Help or Hinder Child Development?” (2018), Journal of Public Economics 159: 33-53 (with R.

Lalive).

• “Does preschool boost the development of minority children? The case of young Romas in Eastern and Central Europe”

(2017), Journal of the Royal Statistical Society – Series A 180 Part II: 475-502 (with M. Huber).

• “The Tempest: Natural Disasters, Early Shocks and Children‘s Short- and Long-Run Outcomes“, (2015), European Economic Review, 80: 280-294 (with E.

Deuchert).

• “When Does Time Matter? Maternal Employment, Children‘s Time with Sanderring 2, 97070 Würzburg

Phone: +49 931 31 - 82925

E-mail: Christina.Felfe@uni-wuerzburg.de

Web: www.wiwi.uni-wuerzburg.de/lehrstuhl/vwl4

51 Chair of China Business and Economics

Am Hubland, 97074 Würzburg Phone: +49 931 31 - 89101

E-mail: doris.fischer@uni-wuerzburg.de

Web: www.sinologie.uni-wuerzburg.de/institut/

Prof. Dr. Doris Fischer

Selected publications:

• Fischer, Doris/ Habich-Sobiegalla, Sabrina/ Gohli, Hannes (2021): Balancing Stability and Development: Industrial Policies under Xi Jinping, in: Issues &

Studies (in print).

• Dowling, Michael/ Fischer, Doris et al. (eds.) Deutsch-chinesische Innovationspartnerschaft:

Rahmenbedingungen, Chancen und Herausforderungen – Die Policy Briefs der deutschen DCPI Expertengruppe 2017-2019, metropolis: Marburg 2020.

• Neuartige Innovationsmuster in der chinesischen Industrie “ Entrepreneurship in China, in: Freimuth, Joachim; Schädler, Monika (eds.) Chinas Innovationsstrategie in der globalen Wissensökonomie, Springer Gabler 2017, 179-203.

• “Green growth” or “System Transition”?

Competing Discourses of China’s Past Economic Success and Future Perspectives, in: Comparativ (Special edition “Multiple Futures - Africa, China, Europe”) Vol. 26 (2), 2016, 42-55.

• Green industrial policies in China - “The example of solar energy, in: Pegels, A. (ed.), Green industrial policies in emerging countries, Routledge 2014, 69-103.

• Promoting renewable electricity generation in emerging economies, Energy Policy (2013), (with Bastian Becker), 446–455.

Studied Business Management and Chinese Studies in Hamburg and Wuhan, China. Doctorate (2000) in Economics at the University of Gießen.

Professor Fischer’s academic career took her to posts as research assistant at the universities of Gießen, Düsseldorf and Duisburg as well as guest professor at Seikkei University (Tokyo) and the Free University in Berlin. She was senior economist at the Deutsches Institut für Entwicklungspolitik (DIE) / German Devel-opment Institute from 2007 to 2012.

She headed the expert group of the German Chinese Innovation Platform (DCPI) of the BMBF (2017-2019) and was Chairwoman of the German Association of Asian Studies (2019-2021).

Professor Fischer is full professor for China Business and Economics at the University of Würzburg since 2012 and Vice-President of the University since April 2021.

Main focus of teaching and research:

• Industrial policy and regulation in China

• Sustainable development and innovation in China

• China’s changing role in the global economy

• Theoretical debates in Chinese economics

Sanderring 2, 97070 Würzburg Phone: +49 931 31 - 85128

E-mail: christoph.flath@uni-wuerzburg.de

Web: www.wiwi.uni-wuerzburg.de/lehrstuhl/bwl12

Studied Industrial Engineering and Management at the University of Karlsruhe and the University of Toron-to.

Doctorate (2013) in Information Systems from Karlsru-he Institute of Technology.

Christoph Flath has been a visiting researcher at the Kellogg School of Management and held research assistant positions with the WHU – Otto Beisheim School of Management and the FZI – Research Center for Information Technology. Prior to joining the Univer-sity of Würzburg (2014) as an assistant professor he headed a research group at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology. Professor Flath has held the Chair of Infor-mation Systems and Business Analytics at University of Würzburg since 2018.

Main focus of teaching and research:

• Industrial Internet Applications

• Digital Retail and Service Innovation

• Smart Grids and Electric Mobility

• Business Applications of AI and Optimization

Selected publications:

• Catch me if You Scan: Data-Driven Prescriptive Modeling for Smart Store Environments. European Journal of Operational Research (2021).

• On the objectivity, reliability, and validity of deep learning enabled bioimage analyses. eLife (2020).

• Disruptive Innovation, Market Entry and Production Flexibility in Heterogeneous

• Oligopoly. Production and Operations Management (2019).

• Creativity and Productivity in Product Design for Additive Manufacturing:

Mechanisms and Platform Outcomes of Remixing. Journal of Operations Management (2019).

• Leveraging Customer Flexibility for Carsharing Fleet Optimization.

Transportation Science (2019).

• Privacy in the Sharing Economy. Journal of the Association for Information Systems (2019).

53 Chair of Financial Accounting

Sanderring 2, 97070 Würzburg Phone: +49 931 31 82941

E-mail: benedikt.franke@uni-wuerzburg.de

Web: www.wiwi.uni-wuerzburg.de/lehrstuhl/bwl3/

Prof. Dr. Benedikt Franke

Benedikt Franke is a professor at the University of Würzburg and holds the Chair of Financial Accounting since 2021. He is also a research fellow at the TRR 266 Accounting for Transparency funded by the German Research Foundation.

Before joining the University of Würzburg, he was a doctoral student at the Graduate School of Economic and Social Sciences and a research assistant at the University of Mannheim. After obtaining his doctorate (2015), he continued to work in Mannheim as a postdoctoral researcher before joining Skema Business School in Paris (France) in 2019. In addition, he was a visiting scholar at Simon Fraser University (Canada) in 2013 and the University of Graz (Austria) in 2014.

His research concerns the transparency of firms, focusing on the impact of technical innovations on firms’ disclosure and firms’ incentives to provide information to capital markets. His work is regularly presented at international academic conferences and published in leading international academic journals.

Professor Franke is teaching at undergraduate, graduate, and doctoral levels. Most of his courses cover national and international accounting. He enjoys introducing his research to students, highlighting the impact of disclosure incentives and technical innovations on the information environment.

Main focus of teaching and research:

• Accounting transparency

• Blockchain

• Debt capital markets

• Disclosure incentives

• Enforcement

Selected publications:

• Franke, B. and Müller, S. „Private Debt and Timely Loss Recognition‘‘. European Accounting Review (2019), Vol. 28, Issue 3, pp. 423-450.

• Brocard, M., Franke, B., and Voeller, D.

„Enforcement Actions and Auditor Chan-ges‘‘. European Accounting Review (2018), Vol. 27, Issue 3, pp. 407-436.

• Franke, B., Müller, S., and Müller, S. „The q-Factors and Expected Bond Returns‘‘.

Journal of Banking & Finance (2017), Vol.

83, pp. 19-35.

• Franke, B., Simons, D., and Voeller, D.

„Who Benefits from the Preferential Tre-atment of Business Property under the German Inheritance Tax?‘‘. Journal of Bu-siness Economics (2016), Vol. 86, Issue 9, pp. 997-1041.

Sanderring 2, 97070 Würzburg Phone: +49 931 31 - 82963

E-mail: steuerlehre@uni-wuerzburg.de

Web: www.wiwi.uni-wuerzburg.de/lehrstuhl/bwl5

Selected publications:

• Zuordnung von Sonderausgaben in der Rentenphase als Bestimmungsfaktor für das Vorliegen einer Doppelbesteuerung beim Übergang zur nachgelagerten Besteuerung gesetzlicher Renten. In:

StuW, 03/2020, S. 249 ff. (mit M. Chirvi, R.

Maiterth, M. Menzel und D. Tschinkl)

• Betriebliche Altersversorgung über Direktzusagen – privilegiert oder diskriminiert? In: Schmalenbachs Zeitschrift für betriebswirtschaftliche Forschung 2019, Vol. 71 (3-4), S. 313-346 (mit U. Schätzlein)

• Can formula apportionment really prevent multinational enterprises from profit shifting? The role of asset valuation, intragroup debt, and leases (zusammen mit T. Steigenberger und M. Stier), in:

Journal of Business Economics, 88(9), 2018, 1029-1060.

• Optimierungsmöglichkeiten bei den bestehenden steuer- und sozialversicherungsrechtlichen Förderregelungen der betrieblichen Altersversorgung, (with M. Grom, M.

Menzel and D. Tschinkl) Würzburg 2016.

• Intrinsic and extrinsic effects on

behavioral tax biases in risky investment decisions, (with M. Fochmann and K.

Doctorate (1998) and habilitation (2004) at the Eber-hard Karls University of Tübingen; Professor at the Uni-versity of Würzburg since 2008.

Practical professional experience during several years as a management consultant.

Founding member and member of the board of the research group for quantitative taxation, Arbeitskreis Quantitative Steuerlehre, arqus e.V.

Founding member and member of the board of the Georg von Schanz Society e.V., the Association of Friends of the Faculty of Business Management and Economics at the University of Würzburg.

Main focus of teaching and research:

• Tax planning in business and industry

• Experimental tax research

• Pension Schemes

55

apl. Prof. Dr. Leonhard Knoll

Diplom (1989), doctorate (1994) and habilitation (2001) at the University of Würzburg, lecturer (PD) from 2001 and since 2007 Associate Professor with teach-ing commitment as well as Actteach-ing Professor for the chairs of Chair of Business Management and Corpo-rate Finance (formerly Business Management, Bank-ing and Finance); Business Taxation as well as Human Resource Management and Organisation.

Free-lance management consultant.

Member of the Commission for Business Taxation in the German Academic Association for Business Re-search, academic member of the “European Associa-tion of Certified Valuators and Analysts”.

Main focus of teaching and research:

• Financial economics and risk management

• Business valuation and taxation

• Corporate governance

Selected publications:

• Steady State and Separating Value Neutral Investments, in: Corporate Finance, Vol. 7, 2020, 51-52.

• Aufgaben, Kompetenzen und Rollen von Risikomanagern – Eine Studie in mittelständischen Kreditinstituten (with St. Benker and U. Vanini), in: ZRFC – Risk, Fraud & Compliance, Vol. 15, 2020, 186-192.

• De exemplis deterrentibus.

Bemerkenswerte Befunde aus der Praxis der rechtsgeprägten Unternehmensbewertung in

Aufgabenform, Würzburg University Press, 2. ed. Würzburg 2019.

• Die deutsche Marktrisikoprämie:

Darf´s ein bisschen mehr sein?, in:

Betriebswirtschaftliche Forschung und Praxis, Vol. 71, 2019, 275-294.

• Zur Schätzung von Betafaktoren bei dünnem Aktienhandel (with L. Kruschwitz und D. Lorenz), in: Zeitschrift für

Bankrecht und Bankwirtschaft, Vol. 31, 2019, 189-194.

• Basiszins: Vielfalt statt Einheit! (with L.

Kruschwitz and A. Löffler), in: Zeitschrift für Bankrecht und Bankwirtschaft, Vol. 31, 2019, 262-268.

Chair of Corporate Finance (extraordinary professorship) Sanderring 2, 97070 Würzburg Phone: +49 931 31 - 82931 E-mail: L-bwl4@uni-wuerzburg.de

Web: www.wiwi.uni-wuerzburg.de/lehrstuhl/bwl4

Sanderring 2, 97070 Würzburg Phone: +49 931 31 - 82149

E-mail: L-oekonometrie@wiwi.uni-wuerzburg.de Web: www.wiwi.uni-wuerzburg.de/lehrstuhl/qwf

Selected publications:

• Corporate Credit Default Models: A Mixed Logit Approach, in Review of Quantitative Finance and Accounting, Vol. 40, 2013, 467–483, (with M. Rönnberg).

• An Alternative Explanation of the Favorite-Longshot Bias, in: Journal of Gambling Business and Economics, Vol. 2, 2008, 79–96, (with S. Winter).

• Time Series of Count Data: Modelling, Estimation and Diagnostics, in:

Computational Statistics and Data Analysis, Vol. 51, 2006, 2350–2364, (with R. Jung and R. Liesenfeld).

• Market Structure and Innovation Races: An Empirical Assessment using Indirect Inference, in: Jahrbücher für Nationalökonomie und Statistik, Vol. 225/4, 2005, 427–440, (with M. Stadler).

• Indirect Estimation of (Latent) Linear Models with Ordinal Regressors. A Monte Carlo Study and some Empirical Illustrations, in: Statistical Papers, Vol. 43, 2002, 379–399.

• Efficient Estimation of Ordered Probit Models, in: Journal of the American Statistical Association, Vol. 91, September 1996, 1120–1129, (with G. Ronning).

Diplom-Volkswirt (1988) at the University of Konstanz.

Doctorate (1991) at the University of Konstanz.

Feodor Lynen scholarship from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation (1992) and Assistant Professor at McMaster University, Hamilton/Ontario, Canada (1992).

Habilitation (2000) at the University of Tübingen.

Professor (2002) at the University of Magdeburg.

Professor at the University of Würzburg since 2002.

Practical experience gained while working at the Centre for European Economic Research (ZEW) in Mannheim.

Main focus of teaching and research:

• Econometrics

• Microeconometric methods

• Applied economic research

• Empirical analysis of betting behaviour

• Econometric methods in risk management

57 Chair of Corporate Finance

Sanderring 2, 97070 Würzburg Phone: +49 931 - 31 88174

E-mail: daniela.lorenz@uni-wuerzburg.de

Web: www.wiwi.uni-wuerzburg.de/lehrstuhl/bwl4

Prof. Dr. Daniela Lorenz

Selected publications:

• How Will the Court Decide? – Tax Experts’

versus Laymens’s Predictions, in:

European Accounting Review, Vol. 25 (4), 2016, 771–792 (with K. Blaufus, J. Bob and M. Trinks).

• Are Costs of Capital necessarily constant over Time and across States of Nature?

Some Remarks on the Debate on ‘WACC is not quite right’, in: The Quarterly Review of Economics and Finance, Vol. 60, 2016, 81–85 (with L. Kruschwitz and A. Löffler).

• Hemmt die Zinsschranke Investitionen?

Ein weiteres Zinsschranken-Paradoxon, in: Schmalenbachs Zeitschrift für

betriebswirtschaftliche Forschung, Vol. 64 (4), 2012, 366–391 (with J. Hundsdoerfer and C. Sielaff).

• Wem droht die Zinsschranke – eine empirische Untersuchung zur Identifikation der Einflussfaktoren“, Zeitschrift für Betriebswirtschaft, Vol. 79 (4), 2009, 503–526 (with K. Blaufus).

• Investment Valuation with tax-optimized Financing Decisions and a tax-optimized Default Alternative, in: Business

Research, Vol. 1 (1), 2008, 9–24 (with J.

Hundsdoerfer and L. Kruschwitz).

Studied Business Administration at Free University Berlin and University of Lausanne (2002-2007).

Doctorate (2011) from Free University Berlin;

Junior Professor of Finance and Business Taxation at Free University Berlin (2011-2018).

Since 2018 Professor of Corporate Finance at the Uni-versity of Würzburg.

Daniela Lorenz has been a visiting researcher at the Stern School of Business of New York University and held a scholarship at Yale University. She is referee for a number of well-established journals and member of the research group for quantitative taxation (arqus e.V.) and of the German Finance Association (DGF).

Main focus of teaching and research:

• Discounted cash flow models

• Capital market theory & asset pricing

• Tax effects on investment and financing decisions

• Portfolio management

59

Professorinnen und Professoren der Fakultät der Wirtschaftswissenschaften | Professors of the Faculty of Business Management and Economics

Sanderring 2, 97070 Würzburg Phone: +49 931 31 - 82948

E-mail: eric.mayer@uni-wuerzburg.de

Web: www.wiwi.uni-wuerzburg.de/lehrstuhl/ewf

Studied Economics at the University of Trier and the University of Antwerp.

Doctorate (2006) and habilitation (2011) at the Univer-sity of Würzburg.

Visiting Researcher at the Deutsche Bundesbank.

Since 2010 Head of the Working Group Empirical Eco-nomics.

Main focus of teaching and research:

• Monetary and Fiscal Policy and the Macroeconomy

• Financial Markets, Banking and the Macroeconomy

• Behavioral Economics

• Housing Markets and the Macroeconomy

Selected publications:

• “Current Account Dynamics and the Housing Boom and Bust Cycle in Spain”, with Daniel Maas and Sebastian

Rüth,Journal of International Money and Finance, Vol. 87, October 2018, 22-43.

• „Monetary Policy Transmission in a Model with Animal Spirits and House Price Booms and Busts“, with Peter Bofinger, Sebastian Debes and Johannes Gareis, Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control, Vol. 37(12), 2013, 2862–2881.

• „Euler Equations and Money Market Interest Rates: The Role of Monetary and Risk Premium Shocks“, with Johannes Gareis, Economics Letters, Vol. 120(1), 2013, 27–31.

• „Noisy Information, Interest Rate Shocks and the Great Moderation“, with Johann Scharler, Journal of Macroeconomics, Vol.

34(6), 2011, 568–581.

• „The Prize Puzzle Revisited: Can the Cost Channel Explain a Rise in Inflation after a Monetary Policy Shock?“, with Steffen Henzel, Oliver Hülsewig and Timo Wollmershäuser, Journal of Macroeconomics, Vol. 31(2), 2009, 268–

289.

• „Bank Loan Supply and Monetary

61 Chair of Contract Theory and Information Economics

Sanderring 2, 97070 Würzburg Phone: +49 931 31 - 80709

E-mail: daniel.mueller2@uni-wuerzburg.de Web: www.wiwi.uni-wuerzburg.de/lehrstuhl/vwl7

Prof. Dr. Daniel Müller

Doctorate (2010) at the University of Bonn.

Interim Professor at the University of Würzburg in 2013 to 2014.

Professor at the University of Würzburg since 2015.

Main focus of teaching and research:

• Decision Theory

• Contract Theory

• Behavioral Economics

• Competition Policy and Industrial Organization

Selected publications:

• „A Comparison of Regret Theory and Salience Theory for Decisions under Risk“

(with Fabian Herweg), Journal of Economic Theory, Vol. 193, 2021, 105226.

• „Expectation-Based Loss Aversion and Strategic Interaction“ (with Simon Dato,

• „Expectation-Based Loss Aversion and Strategic Interaction“ (with Simon Dato,