Thomas Gall
University of Bonn
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Thomas Gall.
PLOS Biology | 2017
Thomas Gall; John P. A. Ioannidis; Zacharias Maniadis
The issue of nonreplicable evidence has attracted considerable attention across biomedical and other sciences. This concern is accompanied by an increasing interest in reforming research incentives and practices. How to optimally perform these reforms is a scientific problem in itself, and economics has several scientific methods that can help evaluate research reforms. Here, we review these methods and show their potential. Prominent among them are mathematical modeling and laboratory experiments that constitute affordable ways to approximate the effects of policies with wide-ranging implications.
Archive | 2006
Thomas Gall; Roland A. Amann
This paper analyzes social group formation when agents are subject to peer effects within groups increasing human capital and instantaneous utility. When agents are heterogeneous on two dimensions, ability and social skills, and monetary payments are not feasible the model predicts segregation at the top and at the bottom of the attribute space and bunching for heterogeneous intermediate types. Groups may be heterogeneous in taste types and more heterogeneous types are more likely to participate. The equilibrium allocation does not induce cost-efficient human capital accumulation. Introducing ability tracking may produce beneficial results despite decreasing differences in human capital production.
International Economic Review | 2010
Thomas Gall
This article analyzes the effects of intrafirm bargaining on the formation of firms in an economy with imperfect capital markets and contracting constraints. In equilibrium, wealth inequality induces a heterogeneous distribution of firm sizes, allowing for firms both too small and too large in terms of technical efficiency. The findings connect well to empirical facts such as the missing middle of firm-size distributions in developing countries. The model can encompass a nonmonotonic relationship between aggregate output and inequality. It turns out that an inflow of capital may indeed decrease output in absolute terms.
Journal of the European Economic Association | 2006
Thomas Gall; Patrick Legros; Andrew F. Newman
Archive | 2012
Thomas Gall; Patrick Legros; Andrew F. Newman
Archive | 2009
Thomas Gall; Patrick Legros; Andrew F. Newman
Economic Theory | 2007
Thomas Gall
Journal of Economic Growth | 2012
Thomas Gall; Paolo Masella
Archive | 2017
Fernanda Estevan; Thomas Gall; Patrick Legros; Andrew F. Newman
Research Policy | 2018
Thomas Gall; Zacharias Maniadis