IFN in the Press
IFN researchers are regularly interviewed by the media. International press clippings are found here, whereas Swedish and Scandinavian press clippings are found on our Swedish website.
With Kamprad gone, will Ikea lose its compass?
Following the passing of the Ikea-founder Ingvar kamprad, Magnus Henrekson, IFN, is quoted by the news agency AFP saying: "Ikea has no leader,” industrial economics researcher Magnus Henrekson warned [...] suggesting the company could lose its compass without its guiding light following Kamprad’s death.
Tories are more attractive than socialists, claims study
Yahoo! UK & Ireland is publishing a piece about a "study by the Research Institute of Industrial Economics in Sweden concluded that Conservative politicians are physically more appealing than their left-wing counterparts". The IFN-reserachers responsible for the study are Niclas Berggren and Henrik Jordahl.
Time to stop fixating on Finland
Canberra News writes that Australia is "stuck with the old myth that Finland is an education utopia Australia should emulate".The article refers to a study by Gabriel Heller Sahlgren, affiliated to IFN, et al: "Policies and pedagogy in Finland in the years prior to the PISA 2000 were more traditional and involved annual testing and reporting. Finland's move to an even more progressive model of education preceded its downward slide in PISA performance".
Conservatives are more attractive than liberals
In an article in The Mail on Sunday and more media outlets a paper by Niclas Berggren, IFN, et al is quoted: "'Politicians on the right look more beautiful in Europe, the United States and Australia. 'Our explanation is that beautiful people earn more, which makes them less inclined to support redistribution.'"
Lighting up your Intrapreneur
The logistics magazine Delivered quotes Lars Persson, IFN, about intrapreneurship. "According to Persson, intrapreneurship is relatively common in Sweden, partly due to the strong trust culture there. “Employees within firms don’t worry about not being acknowledged for their ideas or that managers will claim them as their own, and this helps foster new ideas”.
Feeling a city's economic puls
Yves Zenou at Monash University and affiliated to IFN, was part of the 2017 SMU conference on urban and regional economics, held in Singapore. The Asian Scientist Magazine wrote: A city’s inherent interconnectedness means that people, businesses, buildings and transport networks can have far-reaching, sometimes unexpected impacts on one another.
Yup, Rent Control Does More Harm Than Good
Bloomberg View writes about rent control: "Over the years, rent control has acquired a special bogeyman status among economists. Assar Lindbeck, a Swedish economist who chaired the Nobel prize committee for many years, once reportedly declared that rent control is 'the best way to destroy a city, other than bombing'.”
Conservatives Really Are More Attractive, Study Reveals
In an article in The Daily Caller a paper by Niclas Berggren, IFN et al, was summarized and quoted. Thev study shows that right-leaning politicians are more attractive.
The Robot Revolution
Are you worried about robots making your job obsolete, is the question asked by WNPR in this radio interview. In this program Mårten Blix, IFN, is explaining how automation may affect employment in Sweden and around the world.
The robots are coming, and Sweden is fine
Read more at:
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In much of the world people are increasingly anxious about a coming wave of unemployment because of automation, writes The Economic Times. "There's a risk that the social contract could crack," said Mårten Blix, IFN, to The Economic Times and more outlets.
How will US and Indonesia's tax cut affect inequality?
On Dec 2, US Senate passed a tax bill changing statutory corporate tax rate (CTR) from 35 to 20 percent, The Jakarta Post writes asking if the tax cut will affect growth: " [...] there is little evidence that corporate tax cut boosts economic activity unless implemented during recession, when they lead to significant increases in employment and income, according to economists Alexander Ljungqvist (NYU and affiliated to IFN) and Michael Smolyansky in a 2016 paper."
Scrapping inheritance tax is good for all of us
Ed Conway is commenting on inheritance tax in The Times. He refers to research by Mikael Elinder who is affiliated to IFN, and more: "Having dug through years of Swedish data, they found that inheritance directly reduced the wealth gini coefficient — the most widely-followed measure of inequality — by a whopping 6 per cent, about the same as the impact of a big stock market crash."
Foreign-born people under-represented in Swedish politics
Foreign-born people in Sweden face a glass ceiling in local politics and are less likely to reach high-level positions even after decades in the country, new research by Jophanna Rickne, Stockholm University and affilated to IFN, shows. "We had expected representation of foreign-born people to be higher in communities where a higher proportion of the population was foreign-born, but that's not what we found," Rickne told The Local.
Fostering breakthrough entrepreneurship
Per Hjertstrand, Pehr-Johan Norbäck and Lars Persson, IFN, et al writes at Vox about subsidies to small businesses to encourage innovation. They argue that while subsidies to reduce entry costs may increase entrepreneurial entry, they can also lead to a reduction in the likelihood of ‘breakthrough’ inventions.
The effects of employer payroll tax cuts
At Vox David Seim, Stockholm University and affiliated to IFN, et al write about cuts to the employer portion of payroll taxes. The researchers show that such cuts reduced youth unemployment by 2-3 percentage points. "Firms used the tax windfall to expand employment and business activity, and firms with larger tax windfalls raised wages for workers – both young and old – collectively."
Here’s why Republican tax cuts won’t create those promised jobs
Washington’s Tax Cuts and Jobs Act would benefit shareholders and CEOs, not middle-class Americans, writes Howard Gold in Morningstar and more media. He quotes a study by Alexander Ljungqvist, NYU and affilaited to IFN: “We find little evidence that corporate tax cuts boost economic activity, unless implemented during recessions when they lead to significant increases in employment and income.”
Emotions interfere with investing decisions more than we thought
The Globe and Mail writes about neuroeconomics, mentioning David Cesarini, NYU and affiliated to IFN: "David Cesarini, [...] , has tried to determine whether investing habits are partially hereditary by studying the financial behaviour of identical twins versus fraternal twins."
Is A Corporate Tax Cut Really What The Economy Needs Right Now?
NPR is asking if cutting corporate taxes would improve the balance sheet for U.S. businesses, giving them more money to spend on jobs and investment. NPR is refering to research by Alexander Ljungqvist, NYU and affiliated to IFN, saying that he "recently tried to answer the question by looking at fluctuations in corporate tax rates at the state level".
How China Swallowed the WTO
Wall Street Journal writet that the trade organization WTO ha become "a battelground for intense national rivalries". In the article research, and graphs from the research, by Louise Johannesson, IFN, and Petros Mavroidis is being used, stating that a growing number of disputes have landed before the WTO.
The Magic of the Monarchy: How Can Something So Archaic Be So Popular and Influential?
In a text about monarchies research by Andreas Bergh, IFN, and Christian Bjørnskov, affiliated to IFN, is mentioned: they "found that social trust records are higher in monarchies, which contribute to a generally lower crime rate and lower corruption".
Weekly Roundup
In its weekly roundup Bullfax.com is mentioning research posted by Alexander Ljungqvist, NUY and affilietad to IFN: "The Governance Implication of a Proposed Yates 'Soft Repeal'"
What If Getting Laid Off Wasn't Something to Be Afraid Of?
"In Sweden, employers pay into private funds that retrain workers who lose their jobs. The model makes the whole economy more dynamic.," the Atlantic states. Andreas Bergh, IFN och Lund University, is being interviewed saying that “one of the better parts of the Swedish model is that we encourage adjustments by allowing people to enter into training programs, or move to other areas if that is what is needed to find a job".
Busy Directors: Strategic Interaction and Monitoring Synergies
Bullfax.com writes about the state of markets and the economy. A study by Alexander Ljungqvist et al, NYU and affiliatad to IFN, is presented. The researcher study when having a busy director on the board is harmful to shareholders and when it is beneficial. It shows that "having a busy director on the board is typically only going to be harmful when the firms on whose boards she serves have so little in common informationally that tight time constraints result in negative monitoring synergies".
Nearly one in two university staff are administrative
University World News has been reading Ekonomistas and a text by Danile Waldenström, IFN: "The number of administrative personnel at Swedish universities has risen seven times as fast as the number of academic staff since 2000, according to research by a Swedish professor, and they now fill nearly half of all university jobs."
Why Does Sweden Have So Many Start-Ups?
Stockholm produces the second-highest number of billion-dollar tech companies per capita, after Silicon Valley, wrote Atlantic Monthly. Lars Persson, IFN, is being interviewed stating that “Until 1991, the Swedish tax system disfavored new, small, and less capital-intensive firms while favoring large firms and institutional ownership.” In addition a study about intrapreneurship by Mikael Stenkula, IFN, is referred to in the article.
Tax cut’s effects not certain
Trump insists that slashing the corporate tax rate from 35 percent to as low as 15 percent would free up valuable cash, wrote AP – a text published in numerous media outlets. The author is refering to research by Alexander Ljungvist, NYU and affiliated to IFN, suggesting that "state corporate tax cuts did little to strengthen economic activity unless the cuts were made during a recession".
Spotlight: European welfare states, a glory fading away
Xinhua News Agency, the official press agency of the People's Republic of China, posts on its website a text about the European welfare systems facing problems amid economic downturns. Mårten Blix, IFN, is quoted commenting on the highest salaries and the influx of refugees with low education to the Swedish labor market. "It's a very bad combination and the statistics speak its clear language."
'The Bull Market In U.S. Treasuries Is Over'
Seeking Alpha, a crowd-sourced content service for financial markets, is arguing that academic research has proven the negative relationship between GDP growth rates and debt. Research by Andreas Bergh and Magnus Henrekson, IFN, is mentioned: Government Size and Growth: A Survey and Interpretation of the Evidence found that as government size increases, GDP growth declines.
There's little evidence that corporate tax cuts create jobs
CNBC and further outlets publish a text about the argument that giving businesses a tax break will create more jobs. The author refers to research by Alexander Ljungqvist, NYU and affiliated to IFN. Analyzing the differences in state corporate tax rates the researchers found that they had little impact on job creation.
Productivity Dynamics and the Role of ‘Big‐Box’ Entrants in Retailing
D. Daniel Sokol, University of Florida, Levin College of Law, refers at his blog to research by Matilda Orth, IFN, and Florin Maican, affiliated to IFN. Their findings highlight that large entrants – in the food retail market – drive productivity.