Direkt zum Inhalt

Publikationssuche

clear
0 Filter gewählt
close
Gehe zur Seite
remove add
57 Ergebnisse, ab 41
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    Short- and Long-Term Participation Tax Rates and Their Impact on Labor Supply

    Generous income support programs as provided by European welfare states have often been blamed to hamper employment. This paper investigates the importance of incentives inherent in the tax-benefit system for the individual decision to take up work. Using German microdata over the period 1993–2010, we find that recent reforms in Germany increased work incentives at the extensive margin measured by ...

    In: International Tax and Public Finance 23 (2016), 6, S. 1126-1159 | Charlotte Bartels, Nico Pestel
  • Weitere referierte Aufsätze

    Die Bedeutung von Mieteinkommen und Immobilien für die Ungleichheit in Deutschland

    Immobilien haben an Bedeutung für die Einkommensungleichheit in Deutschland gewonnen. Der Anteil von Haushalten mit Einkommen aus Vermietung und Verpachtung hat zwischen 2002 und 2017 zugenommen. Mieteinkommen erklären einen wachsenden Anteil der Einkommensungleichheit in Deutschland. Veränderungen der Vermögensungleichheit werden hauptsächlich durch Kapitalgewinne aus Wohnungs- und Aktienkursen sowie ...

    In: Wirtschaftsdienst 100 (2020), 10, S. 741-746 | Charlotte Bartels, Carsten Schröder
  • Nicht-referierte Aufsätze

    Steigende Polarisierung der Markteinkommen

    In: Ifo-Schnelldienst 73 (2020), 2, S. 9-12 | Charlotte Bartels
  • Weitere externe Aufsätze

    Inequality and Its Drivers in Germany, 1840-1914

    In: Ulrich Pfister, Nikolaus Wolf (Eds.) , An Economic History of the First German Unification : State Formation and Economic Development in a European Perspective
    Abingdon : Routledge
    S. 236-254
    Routledge Explorations in Economic History
    | Thilo N.H. Albers, Charlotte Bartels
  • Weitere externe Aufsätze

    Distributional National Accounts: A Macro- Micro Approach to Inequality in Germany

    In: Ed. by Raj Chetty.... [Hrsg.] , Measuring Distribution and Mobility of Income and Wealth
    Chicago: NBER
    S. 625-640
    | Stefan Bach, Charlotte Bartels, Theresa Neef
  • Weitere externe Aufsätze

    Income Inequality in Germany

    In: World Inequality Report 2018
    World Inequality Lab
    S. 101-105
    | Charlotte Bartels
  • Externe Monographien

    Wealth Creators or Inheritors? Unpacking the Gender Wealth Gap From Bottom to Top and Young to Old

    This paper investigates the gender wealth gap using wealth recorded in the Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP). Ranking women and men by their individual wealth reveals that the average gender wealth gap is driven by the large gap in the top tail. We find that the gender wealth gap widens during working age and closes during retirement. This is associated with men receiving higher inheritances and inter-vivos ...

    Rochester : SSRN, 2023, 29 S. | Charlotte Bartels, Eva Sierminska, Carsten Schroeder
  • Externe Monographien

    Long-Term Effects of Equal Sharing: Evidence from Inheritance Rules for Land

    What are the long-term economic effects of a more equal distribution of wealth? We exploit variation in historical inheritance rules for land traversing political, linguistic, geological, and religious borders in Germany. In some German areas, inherited land was to be shared or divided equally among children, while in others land was ruled to be indivisible. Using a geographic regression discontinuity ...

    Cambridge, Mass.: National Bureau of Economic Research, 2020, 55 S.
    (NBER Working Paper Series ; 28230)
    | Charlotte Bartels, Simon Jäger, Natalie Obergruber
  • Externe Monographien

    The Distribution of Wealth in Germany 1895-2018

    This paper presents the first comprehensive study of the long-run evolution of wealth inequality in Germany. We combine tax data, surveys, national accounts and rich lists to study the distribution of wealth in Germany from 1895 to 2018. We show that the concentration of wealth in the hands of the top 1% has fallen by half, from close to 50% in 1895 to less than 25% today. The interwar period as well ...

    Bonn: EconTribute, 2020, 68 S.
    (EconTribute Policy Brief ; 001)
    | Thilo N. H. Albers, Charlotte Bartels, Moritz Schularick
  • Externe Monographien

    Income, Consumption and Wealth Inequality in Germany: Three Concepts, Three Stories?

    Given how controversially inequality is still being discussed by both academics and policy makers in Germany, we discuss methodological issues related to the measurement of inequalities and review the literature and empirical estimates of different forms of inequality. One important issue is the choice of the measure of well-being: the central measures discussed are household equivalent disposable ...

    Berlin: Forum for a New Economy, 2020, 25 S.
    (Forum New Economy Basic Papers ; 2)
    | Charlotte Bartels, Carsten Schroeder
57 Ergebnisse, ab 41
keyboard_arrow_up