D23 - Organizational Behavior; Transaction Costs; Property RightsReturn
Results 1 to 3 of 3:
Housing Affordability in Germany and its DynamicsFelix Florian BalzPrague Economic Papers 2025, 34(1):78-97 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.885 The study examines housing affordability in Germany from 2017 to 2023 in light of rising real estate prices and challenges in the housing market. It uses the Housing Affordability Index to identify trends and patterns and propose policy measures to tackle the problems. The results show regional differences, with large cities in particular facing rising prices. Overall, the housing affordability burden has worsened across the country, with the western federal states being particularly affected. Future research should focus on evaluating policy measures and analyzing future trends in order to develop appropriate strategies and make predictions for the future. |
Corruption - A Dark Side of Entrepreneurship. Corruption and InnovationsMarek TomaszewskiPrague Economic Papers 2018, 27(3):251-269 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.647 In this article, corruption is treated as an expression of human entrepreneurship, which does not fully fit in the commonly accepted moral and legal standards. Despite being negatively perceived, it is persistently present in the public, economic and political life of every country as evidenced by a number of press releases on corruption. |
Testing the Validity of the Brown-Potoski Model in the Czech and Slovak RepublicsJan Pavel, Emilia Sičáková-BeblaváPrague Economic Papers 2009, 18(4):327-341 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.357 This paper is based on the new institutional economic approach, which focuses on analysis between services features (asset specificity, outcome measurability) and their eligibility to contract out. This issue, which de facto constitutes one of the subsets of the ""make or buy decision"" issue, is also analysed by the so-called Brown-Potoski model. It analyses the relations between selected features of a demanded service and its suitability or unsuitability for outsourcing, whilst making use of information about transaction costs economy. Using data from 100 Czech municipalities and 100 Slovak municipalities, the viability of the Brown-Potoski model is tested. The results of the research show that a connection was identified between the measurability of the required service and its suitability for external provision, but the relationship between the specificity of investments and the suitability for external provision was not. The reason is probably the previous financial demands of the initial investment, which is, above all in the case of small municipalities, beyond their budgetary means. |