Are immigrants on welfare because they are more likely to be eligible or because they are more likely to claim benefits for which they are eligible? The answer is politically important, but because most current research on immigration and welfare is based on data from the United States, the answer is difficult due to the complexities of the transfer system which make eligibility determinations difficult. ...
In:
International Migration Review
35 (2001), 135, S. 726-748
| Edward Castronova, Hilke Kayser, Joachim R. Frick, Gert G. Wagner
In:
Edda Currle, Tanja Wunderlich (Hrsg.) ,
Deutschland - ein Einwanderungsland?
Stuttgart : Lucius und Lucius
S. 299-325
| Joachim R. Frick, Gert G. Wagner
In Germany the foreign born population is made up of foreigners and so called ”ethnic Germans” who migrated from eastern European countries to Germany. While the first group is confronted with problems arising from the typical German concept of ethnicity and citizenship, the latter are entitled to a German passport immediately after crossing the border. About one half of the immigrants who entered ...
Bonn:
IZA,
1999,
21 Bl. : Anh.
(Discussion Paper Series / Forschungsinstitut zur Zukunft der Arbeit ; 66)
| Edward J. Bird, Hilke Kayser, Joachim R. Frick, Gert G. Wagner
The German economy is not only affected by unification of Germany but by a significant influx of immigrants from abroad and huge migration from East to West Germany around the date of unification. Data from the German Socio-Economic Panel Study (GSOEP) allows one to disentangle those effects by decomposition of the Theil I(0)-Index of inequality. In addition, the paper offers insights into the transition ...
In:
European Economic Review
43 (1999), 4-6, S. 867-878
| Markus M. Grabka, Johannes Schwarze, Gert G. Wagner
The European social-welfare model differs from the North American individualistic model in the patterns, more than the overall extent, of ethnic inclusion and exclusion. Focussing on foreigners in Germany and immigrants in Canada as illustrative cases, conventional earnings decomposition analysis is extended cross-nationally to highlight institutional effects, using the German Socio-Economic Panel ...
1998| Jeffrey G. Reitz, Joachim R. Frick, Tony Calabrese, Gert G. Wagner