Joachim Merz Explained

Joachim Merz (born October 26, 1948, in Bad Homburg vor der Höhe) is a German economist. His research involves welfare economics, income and income distribution, wealth, time utilization (time-budgeting research), time and income need, taxes, the job market, consumption and socioeconomics, with emphasis on freelancing, self-employment and salaried employment

Life

Merz studied Business Administration and Business Education at the Goethe University of Frankfurt, where he received his doctorate in 1979. His dissertation topic was "The expenditure of private households - A microeconometric model for the Federal Republic of Germany".

In 1989 he qualified as a professor at the same university in Economics and Econometrics with the topic "Market and non-market activities of private households - Theoretical approach, representative microdata, microeconometric analysis and microsimulation economic- and socio-political provisions for the Federal Republic of Germany".

Since 1991 he serves as the director of the Research Institute on Freelance Professions (FFB) of the Leuphana University Lüneburg. He is the editor of several scientific journals and book series, consultant on scientific boards and referee for many international journals including the ’electronic International Journal of Time Use Research’ (eIJTUR), the CREPS book series ’Center for Research in Entrepreneurship, Professions and Small Business Economics’ (LIT Verlag), the FFB book series ‘Forschungsinstitut Freie Berufe (FFB)’ (Nomos Verlag) and ’The Review of Income and Wealth’.In 1998 he founded the 'Research Network on Time Use' (RNTU); on this website this subject can be researched via a front-end with an information system.

The International Association for Research in Income and Wealth awarded the 2014 Kendrick Prize for the best article published in the Review of Income and Wealth to his article with Tim Rathjen "Time and Income Poverty: An Interdependent Multidimensional Poverty Approach with German Time Use Diary Data".[1]

His current areas of teaching at the Leuphana University Lüneburg are statistics, regression analysis, microeconometrics, panel analysis, policy evaluation, job market, income distribution and empirical economic research.

Selected publications

Journal

Books

Articles

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: http://www.iariw.org/kendrickprize.php. IARIW. International Association for Research in Income and Wealth. 6 August 2017.