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Experiment Unterricht
(2014)
Dieses Buch bietet eine Einführung in das Informationsmanagement in kommentierter Form. Es richtet sich in erster Linie an Studierende der Betriebswirtschaftslehre und der Wirtschaftsinformatik.
Der erste Teil des Buches gibt einen einführenden Überblick über die grundlegende Begriffe und Ansätze des Informationsmanagements. Es wird ein Modell des Informationsmanagements vorgestellt, auf dessen Basis die Aufgaben des Informationsmanagements in den folgenden Kapiteln vertieft werden. Der zweite Teil widmet sich der Informationswirtschaft und behandelt Informationsnachfrage und -angebot. Im dritten Teil des Buches werden die betrieblichen Informationssysteme mit ihren grundlegenden Bausteinen Daten und Prozesse thematisiert. Der vierte Teil gibt einen Überblick über Anwendungssysteme für die Produktion und die Aufgaben des Managements der Informations- und Kommunikationstechnik. Das abschließende Kapitel beinhaltet eine Diskussion relevanter Führungsaufgaben des
Standortmarketing
(2014)
Wann ist ein Standort für Unternehmen attraktiv? Niedrige Steuern, kluge Köpfe, gute Infrastruktur und sozialer Frieden sind wichtige Standortfaktoren. Das Lehrbuch geht auf den zunehmend international geführten Standortwettbewerb ein. Es analysiert die Parameter einer Standortentscheidung und stellt ein Marketing- und Managementkonzept für Regionen vor.
Dieses Buch bietet eine Einführung in das Produktionsmanagement in kommentierter Form. Der erste Teil des Buches gibt einen einführenden Überblick über grundlegende Begriffe der Produktionswirtschaft und systematisiert Produktionsfaktoren, Produktionssysteme und Produkte. Im zweiten Teil geht es um strategische Aspekte des Produktionsmanagements, wie Standortwahl und Produktstrategie, sowie um die Festlegung des Produktionsprogramms. Teil 3 behandelt mit der Gestaltung des Produktionssystems und menschlicher Arbeit die Potenzialfaktoren der Produktion. Gegenstand des vierten Teils ist die Versorgung der Produktion mit dem benötigten Material. Hier werden Fragen der Materialbedarfsermittlung, der Beschaffung und der Lagerhaltung beleuchtet. Im fünften Teil werden relevante Konzepte der operativen Produktionsplanung und -steuerung vorgestellt und die besonderen Planungsprobleme in der Einzel-, Auftrags- und Variantenfertigung betrachtet. Im Fokus des sechsten Teils steht die Serien- und Massenfertigung.
Since 2008, European crisis politics have thrown the importance of time in democracy into sharp relief. The need for rapid action by national authorities, the EU and international organisations conflicts with the time-consuming nature of democratic deliberation; short-term political firefighting has given little consideration to the long-term sustainability and time consistency of policies; and decentralised decisions threaten effective synchronisation within multi-level governance systems. This article suggests that democratic politics requires a balance between the temporal characteristics of responsive and responsible politics. The timeframe for responsive politics is shaped by electoral cycles that encourage speedy action; short-term lags between political choices and their effects; and temporal discretion of decision-makers. The timeframe for responsible politics is characterised by time-consuming procedures; solutions that take time to unfold and are sustainable in the longer term; and the purposive synchronisation amongst actors and across policy domains and levels of policy-making. The finely balanced temporal constitution of democracy has been challenged in two fundamental ways. First, as the ability of decision-makers to work within the time limits of their mandates and to respond to the temporal expectations of the electorate decreases, the temporal ties that ensure the responsiveness of political authority to the electorate weaken. Second, the distinct temporal qualities of majoritarian and non-majoritarian institutions that encourage responsibility are called into question. Consequently, political time in Europe runs the risk of becoming both less responsive and less responsible.
Based on a large, representative German household panel, we investigate to what extent the personality of individuals influences the entry decision into and the exit decision from self-employment. We reveal that some traits, such as openness to experience, extraversion, and risk tolerance affect entry, but different ones, such as agreeableness or different parameter values of risk tolerance, affect exit from self-employment. Only locus of control has a similar influence on the entry and exit decisions. The explanatory power of all observed traits among all observable variables amounts to 30 %, with risk tolerance, locus of control, and openness having the highest explanatory power.
We employ a neoclassical growth model to assess the impact of financial liberalization in a developing country on capital owners' and workers' consumption and welfare. We find for an average non-OECD country that capital owners suffer a 42% reduction in permanent consumption because capital inflows reduce their return to capital while workers gain 8% of permanent consumption because capital inflows increase wages. These huge gross impacts contrast with the small positive net effect found in a neoclassical representative agent model by Gourinchas and Jeanne (2006). Our findings provide an estimate of the amount of redistribution needed to overcome capitalists' opposition to capital inflows.
Along with the rise of the now popular 'open' paradigm in innovation management, networks have become a common approach to practicing innovation. Foresight could potentially greatly benefit from resources that become available when the knowledge base increases through networks. This article seeks to investigate how innovation networks and foresight are related, to what extent networked foresight activities exist and how they are practiced. For the former the Cyclic Innovation Model (CIM) is utilized as analytical framework and applied to three cases. The foresight activities are analyzed in terms of type, scope and role.
The cases are a collaboration between government agencies and a research organization and two inter-organizational networks of different size. 'Networked foresight' is clearly observable in all three cases. Indeed, a networked approach to foresight seems to strengthen the various roles of foresight. However, the rooting and openness of foresight activities in the three networks varies significantly. The advantages that 'networked foresight' entails could be exploited to a much higher degree for the networks themselves, e.g., the broad resource base and the large pool of people with diverse backgrounds that are available. Furthermore, effective instruments for the reintegration of knowledge into the networks' partner organizations are needed. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Sin embargo, todavia no se han analizado los efectos potencialmente heterogeneos de los programas para proyectos empresariales en los diferentes mercados laborales de ambito regional. Las restricciones en la demanda de empleo en areas mas desfavorecidas generalmente hacen aumentar el numero de personas que aprovechan estos programas porque las ofertas laborales son limitadas. Sin embargo, la supervivencia de empresas en estas areas es tambien mas baja, de modo que sigue sin estar claro el efecto general. Basandonos en datos alemanes, observamos que el proceso de creacion, el desarrollo de negocios y la eficacia de los programas estan influenciados por las condiciones economicas imperantes en el momento de la creacion de la empresa.
Adieu Rabenmutter-culture, fertility, female labour supply, the gender wage gap and childcare
(2014)
This paper studies the effect of cultural attitudes on childcare provision, fertility, female labour supply and the gender wage gap. Cross-country data show that fertility, female labour force participation and childcare provision are positively correlated with each other, while the gender wage gap seems to be negatively correlated with these variables. The paper presents a model with endogenous fertility, female labour supply and childcare choices driven by cultural attitudes which fits these facts. There may exist multiple equilibria: one with zero childcare provision, low fertility and female labour supply and high wage gap and one with high childcare provision, high fertility and female labour supply and low wage gap.
This article examines the use of performance information by public managers. It conceptualizes purposeful data use as a type of extra-role behaviour which requires additional effort on the part of the managers and which is not extrinsically rewarded. The article sheds light on one potential antecedent of performance information use - the motivation of the users. It argues that we can observe high levels of data use if managers driven by public service motivation (PSM) work under transformational leaders. Using a needs-supply perspective on supervisors and followers, we suggest that there is a PSM-leadership fit which fosters the performance of this extra-role behaviour. The article is based on data from German local government and its findings contribute to the literatures on PSM as well as on performance management.