50,317 research outputs found
The effect of female leadership on establishment and employee outcomes: evidence from linked employer-employee data
In this paper we use a large linked employer-employee data set on German establishments between 1993 and 2012 to investigate how the gender composition of the top layer of management affects a variety of establishment and worker outcomes. We use two different measures to identify the gender composition of the top layer based on direct survey data: the fraction of women among top managers, and the fraction of women among working proprietors. We document the following facts: a) There is a strong negative association between the fraction of women in the top layer of management and several establishment outcomes, among them business volume, investment, total wage bill per worker, total employment, and turnover; b) Establishments with a high fraction of women in the top layer of management are more likely to implement female-friendly policies, such as providing childcare facilities or promoting and mentoring female junior staff; c) The fraction of women in the top layer of management is also negatively associated with employment and wages, both male and female, full-time and part-time. However, all of these associations vanish when we include establishment fixed effects and establishment-specific time trends. This reveals a substantial sorting of female managers across establishments: small and less productive establishments that invest less, pay their employees lower wages, but are more female-friendly are more likely to be led by women
Optical realization of the dissipative quantum oscillator
An optical realization of the damped quantum oscillator, based on transverse
light dynamics in an optical resonator with slowly-moving mirrors, is
theoretically suggested. The optical resonator setting provides a simple
implementation of the time-dependent Caldirola-Kanai Hamiltonian of the
dissipative quantum oscillator, and enables to visualize the effects of damped
oscillations in the classical (ray optics) limit and wave packet collapse in
the quantum (wave optics) regime.Comment: The article is dedicated to Professor Orazio Svelto on the occasion
of his 80th birthday. To appear in Optics Letter
Gender differences in cooperative environments? Evidence from the U.S. Congress
This paper uses data on bill sponsorship and cosponsorship in the U.S. House of Representatives to estimate gender differences in cooperative behavior. We employ a number of econometric methodologies to address the potential selection of female representatives into electoral districts with distinct preferences for cooperativeness, including regression discontinuity and matching. After accounting for selection, we find that among Democrats there is no significant gender gap in the number of cosponsors recruited, but women-sponsored bills tend to have fewer cosponsors from the opposite party. On the other hand, we find robust evidence that Republican women recruit more cosponsors and attract more bipartisan support on the bills that they sponsor. This is particularly true on bills that address issues more relevant for women, over which female Republicans have possibly preferences that are closer to those of Democrats. We interpret these results as evidence that cooperation is mostly driven by a commonality of interest, rather than gender per se
Empirical -distance test statistics for ergodic diffusions
The aim of this paper is to introduce a new type of test statistic for simple
null hypothesis on one-dimensional ergodic diffusion processes sampled at
discrete times. We deal with a quasi-likelihood approach for stochastic
differential equations (i.e. local gaussian approximation of the transition
functions) and define a test statistic by means of the empirical -distance
between quasi-likelihoods. We prove that the introduced test statistic is
asymptotically distribution free; namely it weakly converges to a
random variable. Furthermore, we study the power under local alternatives of
the parametric test. We show by the Monte Carlo analysis that, in the small
sample case, the introduced test seems to perform better than other tests
proposed in literature
Change point estimation for the telegraph process observed at discrete times
The telegraph process models a random motion with finite velocity and it is
usually proposed as an alternative to diffusion models. The process describes
the position of a particle moving on the real line, alternatively with constant
velocity or . The changes of direction are governed by an homogeneous
Poisson process with rate In this paper, we consider a change
point estimation problem for the rate of the underlying Poisson process by
means of least squares method. The consistency and the rate of convergence for
the change point estimator are obtained and its asymptotic distribution is
derived. Applications to real data are also presented
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