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Martin Schneider untersucht, welche Vorgehensweise bei der Einführung einer Crossmedia-Strategie empfehlenswert ist und welche Chancen sie für Fernsehsender bietet. Er zeigt, welche Organisationsstruktur sich für TV-Sendern mit crossmedialer Ausrichtung anbietet und wie ein Controllingsystem gestaltet werden kann, um den Erfolg der strategischen Neuausrichtung zu messen und zu steuern.
An important gift to Syracuse University's permanent art collection came in 2017 from Rona and Martin Schneider of Brooklyn, New York. Rona, a well-known print dealer and member of the International Print Dealers Association for many years, specialized in late 19th- and 20th-century American and European prints especially those made as part of the 'Etching Revival.' During her career, Rona wrote several books and exhibition catalogs that are important for scholarly research in the field today.
Several recent twin' currency and banking crises were preceded by lending booms during which the banking system financed rapid growth of the nontradable (N) sector by borrowing in foreign currency. They were followed by recessions during which a sharp decline in credit especially hurt the N-sector. This paper presents a model that accounts for these stylized facts. A crucial element is that we model a banking system that is simultaneously subject to two distortions typical of international credit markets: bailout guarantees and the imperfect enforceability of contracts. The interaction of these distortions produces unusually fast N-sector growth, together with a real appreciation, during the boom. However, it is also responsible for self-fulfilling twin crises, which have persistent adverse effects on N-sector output.
Episodes of unanticipated inflation reduce the real value of nominal claims and thus redistribute wealth from lenders to borrowers. In this study, we consider redistribution as a channel for aggregate and welfare effects of inflation. We model an inflation episode as an unanticipated shock to the wealth distribution in a quantitative overlapping-generations model of the U.S. economy. While the redistribution shock is zero sum, households react asymmetrically, mostly because borrowers are younger on average than lenders. As a result, inflation generates a decrease in labor supply as well as an increase in savings. Even though inflation-induced redistribution has a persistent negative effect on output, it improves the weighted welfare of domestic households.