Marius Angstmann

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Publications (chronological)

YearTitle / CitationDocument typeLinks / Downloads
2025

2025:  

Exploring the Potential of Urban Manufacturer's Waste Heat for the Residential Heating Transition in Germany. A Spatial Analysis Acros Four Federal States

Citation:  

Angstmann, M., Meyer, K. & Gärtner, S. (2025): Exploring the Potential of Urban Manufacturer's Waste Heat for the Residential Heating Transition in Germany. A Spatial Analysis Acros Four Federal States. IAT discussion paper, 2025 (03). Gelsenkirchen: Institute for Work and Technology, Westphalian University of Applied Sciences. https://doi.org/10.53190/dp/202503

Document type:  

Internet document

Links / Downloads:  


2025

2025:  

From Waste to Value? Valuation and Materiality in Geographies of Industrial By-product Use

Citation:  

Angstmann, M. (2025): From Waste to Value? Valuation and Materiality in Geographies of Industrial By-product Use. Progress in Economic Geography, 3 (1), 100034. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.peg.2024.100034

Document type:  

Journal article

Links / Downloads:  


2025

2025:  

Harnessing Societal Innovativeness for Transformative Regional Development

Citation:  

Terstriep, A. & Angstmann, M. (2025): Harnessing Societal Innovativeness for Transformative Regional Development. IAT discussion paper, 2025 (02). Gelsenkirchen: Institute for Work and Technology, Westphalian University of Applied Sciences. https://doi.org/10.53190/dp/202502

Document type:  

Internet document

Links / Downloads:  


2025

2025:  

Reviewing Environmental Benefits of Urban Manufacturing: Arguments and Evidence fro Carbon, Resource, and Space Efficiency

Citation:  

Angstmann, M., Meyer, K., Gärtner, S. & Stratmann, L. (2025): Reviewing Environmental Benefits of Urban Manufacturing: Arguments and Evidence fro Carbon, Resource, and Space Efficiency. Urban Planning, 10, 1-31. https://doi.org/10.17645/up.10039

Document type:  

Journal article

Links / Downloads:  


2021

2021:  

Triggering local innovation processes for the implementation of sector coupling projects: An integrated approach

Citation:  

Kanngießer, A., Venjakob, J., Hicking, J., Kockel, C., Drewing, E., Beckamp, M. & Jaeger, S. (2021): Triggering local innovation processes for the implementation of sector coupling projects: An integrated approach. Energies, 14 (5), 1358. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14051358

Document type:  

Journal article

Links / Downloads:  


2020

2020:  

Digitalisation and (de)centralisation in Germany - a comparative study of retail banking and the energy sector

Citation:  

Beckamp, M. & Flögel, F. (2020): Digitalisation and (de)centralisation in Germany - a comparative study of retail banking and the energy sector. IAT discussion paper, 2020 (04). Gelsenkirchen: Institut Arbeit und Technik.

Document type:  

Internet document

Links / Downloads:  


2019

2019:  

Will FinTech make regional banks superfluous for small firm finance? Observations from soft information-based lending in Germany

Citation:  

Beckamp, M. & Flögel, F. (2019): Will FinTech make regional banks superfluous for small firm finance? Observations from soft information-based lending in Germany. Economic notes: review of banking, finance and monetary economics, 48 (3), 1-20. https://doi.org/10.1111/ecno.12159

Abstract

Regional banks have a competitive advantage in that short distances to clients enable the use of soft information for superior lending decisions. If the ambition of FinTech start-ups to create superior screening and monitoring technologies materialises, this advantage would be diminished and regional banks would become superfluous for small firm finance. To explore this claim, the paper in hand analyses qualitative empirical data about the lending processes and rating system use of regional German savings banks. In essence, the results from participant observation and interviews clarify the importance of “real” soft information for critical lending decisions. The context specificity and limited verifiability of “real” soft information hamper it from being hardened through the use of rating systems and other bank-ICT. Though FinTech's scoring technologies may overcome the first limitation, it appears likely that in the course of scoring development “real” soft information will be systematically crowded out due to the manipulation problem. The paper expects improved access to finance for SMEs if FinTech solutions overcome both limitations of “real” soft information use, or if peer-to-peer lending and regional banks coexist. Deteriorated access to finance is expected if FinTech companies displace the relationship banking of regional banks due to enhanced competition, without preserving the advantages of “real” soft information with superior screening and monitoring technologies. The paper concludes with recommendations on how to prevent deteriorated access to finance for small firms by promoting fair competition and FinTech innovations.

Document type:  

Journal article

Links / Downloads: