Aktuellt (på finska)
Aktuellt (på finska)
Publikationer
Publikationer
Rapporter
Böcker
Promemoria
Working Papers
Akademiska publikationer
Andra publikationer
Prognoser
Forskning
Personal
All personal
Forskare
Direktion
Kommunikation och andra services
Etla
Om Etla
Målsättning
Organisationen
Historik
Kontaktuppgifter
Fi
Eng
Sv
Sök på sidan
30.12.2014
Andra publikationer
Publikationer
A Study on R&D Tax Incentives
Straathof Bas (project leader)
Gaillard-Ladinska Elina
Kox Henk
Mocking Remco
Goldberg Itzhak
Jensen Camilla
Lindholm Peter
Sobolewski Maciej
Berg-Andersson Birgitta
kaseva Hannu
Rouvinen Petri
Valkonen Tarmo
Sellner Richard
Schönpflug Karin
Paterson Iain
European Commission Taxation Paper. Working Paper No 52
Information om publikationen
Datum
30.12.2014
Sidor
130
Tillgänglighet av tryckt version
Tillgänglig
Språk
Engelska
Ladda ner publikationen
ec.europa.eu
Föregående
Nästa
Aktuellt
28.05.2026
Publikationer
Akademiska publikationer
Childhood Shocks and Fertility – Evidence from Parental Job Loss
Riukula Krista
This paper examines whether adverse childhood economic shocks affect fertility in adulthood. Using Finnish administrative data and plant
closures
26.05.2026
Publikationer
Promemoria
180
Innovations, International Trade and the Green Transition as Drivers of Finnish Economic Growth
Kaitila Ville
Kuosmanen Natalia
Maczulskij Terhi
This brief examines the links between research and development (R&D), innovation, international trade, and the green transition in
Finland.
19.05.2026
Publikationer
Rapporter
177
Corporate Restructuring and Creative Destruction
Kuosmanen Natalia
Kuosmanen Timo
Maczulskij Terhi
A substantial share of firm entries and exits observed in administrative data occur through mergers, acquisitions, and other
forms
19.05.2026
Publikationer
Promemoria
179
Persistence of Market Power: The Limits of Firm Dynamics and Competition in Finland
Markkanen Jaakko
Average markups of Finnish firms remain stable, but this stability conceals a substantial structural shift: low-markup firms have
lost