Philipp Harms

Do Civil and Political Repression Really Boost Foreign Direct Investments? (2002)

Harms, Philipp, Ursprung, Heinrich W.

Multinational enterprises are often accused of having a preference for investing in countries in which the working populations' civil and political rights are largely disregarded. This article...

The persistence of government expenditure shocks and the effect of monopolistic competition on the fiscal multiplier (2002)

Harms, Philipp

In this paper, we demonstrate that the influence of monopolistic competition in the product market on an economy's impact response to fiscal shocks depends on the persistence of these shocks. While...

Foreign aid and developing countries' creditworthiness

Philipp Harms, Michael Rauber

We explore whether foreign aid affects developing countries' creditworthiness, as proxied by the Institutional Investor's measure of country credit risk. Based on a simple model of international...

Words, deeds, and outcomes: A survey on the growth effects of exchange rate regimes

Philipp Harms, Marco Kretschmann

Recent studies on the growth effects of exchange rate regimes offer a wide range of different, sometimes contradictory results. In this paper, we systematically compare three prominent contributions...

How does private foreign borrowing affect the risk of sovereign default in developing countries?

Oya Celasun, Philipp Harms

We argue that increased foreign borrowing by the private sector reduces the risk that a developing country's government defaults on its foreign debt. We present a simple model in which private...

Explaining liberalization commitments in financial services trade

Harms, Philipp, Mattoo, Aaditya, Schuknecht, Ludger

The authors examine the determinants of market access commitments in international financial services trade in the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS). Based on a theoretical model, they...

Aid, Governance and Private Foreign Investment: Some Puzzling Findings for the 1990s

Philipp Harms, Matthias Lutz

Does official aid pave the road for private foreign investment or does it suffocate private initiative by diverting resources towards unproductive activities? We explore this question using panel...

Eating the Rich vs. Feeding the Poor: Borrowing Constraints and the Reluctance to Redistribute.

Harms, Philipp, Zink, Stefan

This paper offers an explanation why most democracies are characterized by moderate taxation of wealth although the wealth distribution is persistently skewed to the right. We model an economy in...

Old folks and spoiled brats : Why the baby boomers' saving crisis need not be that bad

Monika BÜTLER, Philipp HARMS

We study the impact of an anticipated "baby boom" in an overlapping generations economy. The rise of the working population lowers the wage, and the high demand for assets causes a rise in the price...

Growing Into and Out of Social Conflict

Philipp Harms, Stefan Zink

We develop a model of growth and distributional conflict which demonstrates that social tensions may peak at an intermediate development stage. In fact, unless the economy is caught in an...

Do Civil and Political Repression Really Boost Foreign Direct Investments?

Philipp Harms, Heinrich Ursprung

Multinational enterprises are often accused to have a preference for investing in countries in which the working populations' civil and political rights are largely disregarded. This paper presents...

Poverty and Political Risk.

Harms, Philipp

The paper explains the negative correlation between developing countries' per capita incomes and measures of political risk by relating a government's decision to tax foreign investors to...

The Macroeconomic Effects of Foreign Aid: A Survey

Philipp Harms, Matthias Lutz

Research on the macroeconomic effects of aid has expanded rapidly in recent years. In this paper, we provide a survey of this literature. We start by reviewing some theoretical models that suggest a...

Growing into and out of Social Conflict

Philipp Harms, Stefan Zink

We present a model of growth and distributional conflict that implies a non-monotonic relationship between average wealth and the likelihood of radical redistribution; while the net benefits of...

Deregulation and the Current Account

Philipp Harms

In this paper we use a dynamic general-equilibrium model to study how removing barriers to competition in the nontraded goods sector affects the current account, the real exchange rate, and the...

Aid, Governance, and Private Foreign Investment: Some Puzzling Findings and a Possible Explanation

Philipp Harms, Matthias Lutz

Does offcial aid pave the road for private foreign investment or does it suffocate private initiative by diverting resources towards unproductive activities? In this paper we explore this question...

Political Risk and Equity Investment in Developing Countries.

Harms, Philipp

This paper estimates the effect of a measure of political risk on equity investment flows to developing countries. Using a panel data set that includes a larger number of low-income countries than...

The persistence of government expenditure shocks and the effect of monopolistic competition on the fiscal multiplier

Philipp Harms

In this paper, we demonstrate that the influence of monopolistic competition in the product market on an economy's impact response to fiscal shocks depends on the persistence of these shocks. While...

Explaining liberalization commitments in financial services trade

Philipp Harms, Aaditya Mattoo, Ludger Schuknecht

Financial services, financial sector liberalization, GATS, endogenous protection, trade in services,

Do Civil and Political Repression Really Boost Foreign Direct Investments?

Philipp Harms, Heinrich W. Ursprung

Multinational enterprises are often accused of having a preference for investing in countries in which the working populations' civil and political rights are largely disregarded. This article...

International investment in a model of stochastic growth and development traps

Philipp Harms

international investment, economic growth, development traps, F21, O16, O41,

Aid, Governance, and Private Foreign Investment: Some Puzzling Findings and a Possible Explanation

Harms, Philipp, Lutz, Matthias

Does official aid pave the road for private foreign investment or does it suffocate private initiative by diverting resources towards unproductive activities? In this paper we explore this question...

WORDS, DEEDS AND OUTCOMES: A SURVEY ON THE GROWTH EFFECTS OF EXCHANGE RATE REGIMES

Philipp Harms, Marco Kretschmann

Recent studies on the growth effects of exchange rate regimes offer a wide range of different, sometimes contradictory results. In this paper, we systematically compare three prominent contributions...

Offshoring along the Production Chain

Philipp Harms, Oliver Lorz, Dieter M. Urban

Recent contributions on offshoring often assume that firms can freely split their production process into separate steps which can be ranked according to the cost savings from producing abroad. We...

The Demographics of Expropriation Risk

Philipp Harms

It is often argued that capital should flow from aging industrialized economies to countries with fast-growing populations. However, institutional failures and the risk of expropriation substantially...

Offshoring Along the Production Chain

Philipp Harms, Oliver Lorz, Dieter Urban

Recent contributions on offshoring often assume that firms can freely split their production process into separate steps which can be ranked according to the cost savings from producing abroad. We...