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48778 Ergebnisse, ab 7541
  • Cluster-Seminar Öffentliche Finanzen und Lebenslagen

    Intergenerational Effects of Grandparental Care on Children and Parents

    Grandparents act as the third biggest care giver besides day care and parental care for children below the age of 6 in most OECD countries. Despite its relevance, the effects of child care provided by grandparents on child and parental outcomes have received little attention in the literature. We investigate the potential impact of grandparental care on children's...

    12.05.2021| Elena Ziege
  • Video

    2nd DIW Women’s Finance Summit: The Future of Financial Services – Digitization, Sustainability and Post-Pandemic Growth Models

    After failing to fully recover from the last financial crisis, the pandemic poses major new challenges for banks. However, this time, banks are not the problem, but part of the solution. By providing credit to the economy, banks play a crucial role in fighting the pandemic by ensuring the transmission of fiscal and monetary stimulus to the economy. Nevertheless, banks are not among the winners of...

    06.05.2021| Veranstaltungsrückblick
  • Nicht-referierte Aufsätze

    Die Familie ist systemrelevant!

    In: Wirtschaftsdienst 101 (2021), 4, S. 244 | C. Katharina Spieß
  • Zeitungs- und Blogbeiträge

    FDP-Chef Lindner macht beim CO2-Preis einen Denkfehler

    In: Handelsblatt (05.05.2021), [Online-Artikel] | Claudia Kemfert
  • Externe Working Papers

    Tuition Fees and Educational Attainment

    Following a landmark ruling by the Constitutional Court in 2005, more than half of Germany's universities started charging tuition fees, which also applied to incumbent students. We exploit this unusual lack of grandfathering together with register data covering the universe of students to show that tuition fees increased degree completion among incumbent students. Investigating mechanisms, we do not ...

    Bonn: IZA, 2020, 56 S.
    (Discussion Paper Series / Forschungsinstitut zur Zukunft der Arbeit ; 13709)
    | Jan Bietenbeck, Jan Marcus, Felix Weinhardt
  • SOEPpapers 1132 / 2021

    Time Spent on School-Related Activities at Home during the Pandemic: A Longitudinal Analysis of Social Group Inequality among Secondary School Students

    Substantial educational inequalities have been documented in Germany for decades. In this article, we examine whether educational inequalities among children have increased or remained the same since the school closures of spring 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Our perspective is longitudinal: We compare the amount of time children in secondary schools spent on school-related activities at home ...

    2021| Sabine Zinn, Michael Bayer
  • SOEPpapers 1130 / 2021

    Hate Is Too Great a Burden to Bear: Hate Crimes and the Mental Health of Refugees

    Against a background of increasing violence against non-natives, we estimate the effect of hate crime on refugees’ mental health in Germany. For this purpose, we combine two datasets: administrative records on xenophobic crime against refugee shelters by the Federal Criminal Office and the IAB-BAMF-SOEP Survey of Refugees. We apply a regression discontinuity design in time to estimate the effect of ...

    2021| Daniel Graeber, Felicitas Schikora
  • SOEPpapers 1127 / 2021

    Do You Really Want to Share Everything? The Wellbeing of Work-Linked Couples

    Work as well as family life are crucial sources of human wellbeing, which however often interfere. This is especially so if partners work in the same occupation or industry. At the same time, being work-linked may benefit their career success. Still, surprisingly little is known about the wellbeing of work-linked couples. Our study fills this gap by examining the satisfaction differences between work-linked ...

    2021| Juliane Hennecke, Clemens Hetschko
  • Externe Working Papers

    Fertility as a Driver of Maternal Employment

    Based on findings from high-income countries, typically economists hypothesize that having more children unambiguously decreases the time mothers spend in the labor mar- ket. Few studies on lower-income countries, in which low household wealth, informal child care, and informal employment opportunities prevail, find mixed results. Using Mexican census data, I find a positive effect of an instrument-induced ...

    Berlin: DIW Berlin, 2020, 33 S. : Anh.
    (Discussion Paper Series / Forschungsinstitut zur Zukunft der Arbeit ; 13496)
    | Julia Schmieder
  • Externe Working Papers

    Health of Elderly Parents, Their Children’s Labor Supply, and the Role of Migrant Care Workers

    We estimate the impact of parental health on adult children's labor market outcomes. We focus on health shocks which increase care dependency abruptly. Our estimation strategy exploits the variation in the timing of shocks across treated families. Empirical results based on Austrian administrative data show a significant negative impact on labor market activities of children. This effect is more pronounced ...

    Berlin: DIW Berlin, 2020, 33 S. : Anh.
    (Discussion Paper Series / Forschungsinstitut zur Zukunft der Arbeit ; 13774)
    | Wolfgang Frimmel, Martin Halla, Jörg Paetzold, Julia Schmieder
48778 Ergebnisse, ab 7541
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