Publications
Year
Author
- Peter Zwaneveld (5)
- Kan Ji (4)
- Andrei Dubovik (3)
- Gerard Verweij (3)
- Natasha Kalara (3)
- Paul Verstraten (3)
- Rudy Douven (3)
- Beau Soederhuizen (2)
- Benedikt Vogt (2)
- Gerdien Meijerink (2)
- Hugo Rojas-Romagosa (2)
- Johannes Bollen (2)
- Lu Zhang (2)
- Mark Kattenberg (2)
- Rutger Teulings (2)
- Adam Elbourne (1)
- Anja Deelen (1)
- Arjan Lejour (1)
- Bart Voogt (1)
- Bert Smid (1)
- Douwe Kingma (1)
- Egbert Jongen (1)
- Ernest Berkhout (1)
- Frits Bos (1)
- Gerbert Romijn (1)
- Harro van Heuvelen (1)
- Henk-Wim de Boer (1)
- Joep Tijm (1)
- Jos Ebregt (1)
- Karen van der Wiel (1)
- Katharina Ziegler (1)
- Leon Bettendorf (1)
- Machiel van Dijk (1)
- Marielle Non (1)
- Maurits van Kempen (1)
- Minke Remmerswaal (1)
- Nicole Bosch (1)
- Patrick Koot (1)
- Raoul van Maarseveen (1)
- Remco van Eijkel (1)
- Rob Euwals (1)
- Sem Duijndam (1)
- Sonny Kuijpers (1)
- Thomas Michielsen (1)
- Thomas van der Pol (1)
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Forecast March 2018 (CEP 2018)
First Communication National Productivity Board
Productivity growth is on the decline, in the OECD countries. In the Netherlands, structural growth is also slowing down. On the basis of this fact, the European Commission proposed that each EU Member State would install a national productivity board (NPB). The Council of the European Union has since adopted this proposal. →
Forecasting long-term interest rates
The long-term interest rate in the Euro area is an important exogenous input in CPB macro-econometric models to project the world economy and the Dutch economy, so it is important to have a reliable projection for it. However, there were concerns about the CPB practice of forecasting the long-term interest rate, especially over the inconsistency of long-term interest rate projections in the short and medium term. Therefore, this document compares the old CPB practice with several alternative forecasting methods for long-term interest rates, and evaluates these methods. →
Forecast Central Economic Plan 2018
The Dutch economy is gathering steam. The economic boom is the result of a favourable international economy, low interest rates, expansive budgetary policy and a persistently strong housing market. These last two factors distinguish the Netherlands from other countries. Positive domestic dynamics between increasing employment, higher disposable income levels, higher consumption and more investments will lead to a 3.2% economic growth in 2018 and 2.7% in 2019. Over the 2017–2019 period, the Dutch economy is projected to outperform that of the eurozone by 0.6 percentage points, in each of those years. →
Preliminary Forecast March 2018 (cCEP 2018)
Complexities in the spatial scope of agglomeration economies
The CPB World Trade Monitor: technical description (update)
Optimal Taxation of Secondary Earners in the Netherlands: Has Equity Lost Ground?
The Netherlands witnessed major reforms in the taxation of (potential) secondary earners over the past decade. Using the inverse-optimal method of optimal taxation we recover the implicit social welfare weights of single- and dual-earner couples over time. The social welfare weights are grosso modo well-behaved before the reforms. →
Do paid teacher trainee programs lead to additional teachers in secondary education? A Regression Discontinuity Analysis
This paper evaluates the quantitative effects of two teacher traineeships that were implemented in the Netherlands to address shortages of fully qualified teachers in secondary education. Applying a fuzzy regression discontinuity design, we estimate the effects of being selected to participate in one of the traineeships. We find no significant local average treatment effects of being selected on the probabilities of enrolling into academic teacher training, obtaining a full teaching qualification, and on working in education, although the point estimates are positive for the first two outcome variables. →