Thema Familie

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1848 Ergebnisse, ab 1491
  • Externe Working Papers

    Geduld von Vorschulkindern: Ergebnisse einer Experimentalstudie im Haushaltskontext von Kindern

    Mannheim: ZEW, 2009, 27 S.
    (Discussion Paper / Zentrum für Europäische Wirtschaftsforschung ; 09-069)
    | Björn Bartling, Ernst Fehr, Barbara Fischer, Fabian Kosse, Michel Maréchal, Friedhelm Pfeiffer, Daniel Schunk, Jürgen Schupp, C. Katharina Spieß, Gert G. Wagner
  • SOEPpapers 242 / 2009

    Maternal Life Satisfaction and Child Outcomes: Are They Related?

    This paper investigates the association between maternal life satisfaction and the developmental functioning of two- to three-year-old children as well as the socio-emotional behaviorof five- to six-year-old children. We use data from the German Socio-Economic Panel Study (SOEP), which allows us to control for a rich set of child and parental characteristics and to use the mother's life satisfaction ...

    2009| Eva M. Berger, C. Katharina Spieß
  • SOEPpapers 235 / 2009

    Modelling State Dependence and Feedback Effects between Poverty, Employment and Parental Home Emancipation among European Youth

    Youth is one of the phases in the life-cycle when some of the most decisive life transitions take place. Entering the labour market or leaving parental home are events with important consequences for the economic well-being of young adults. In this paper, the interrelationship between employment, residential emancipation and poverty dynamics is studied for eight European countries by means of an econometric ...

    2009| Sara Ayllón
  • SOEPpapers 247 / 2009

    The Willingness to Pay for Job Amenities: Evidence from Mothers' Return to Work

    This study is the first to estimate mothers' marginal willingness to pay (MWP) for job amenities directly. Its identification strategy relies on German maternity leave length. The key aspect of the maternal leave framework is that mothers can decide whether and when to return to their guaranteed job. Thus, in contrast to previous studies that analyze the job search of employed workers, this framework ...

    2009| Christina Felfe
  • DIW Discussion Papers 923 / 2009

    Meet the Parents? The Causal Effect of Family Size on the Geographic Distance between Adult Children and Older Parents

    An emerging question in demographic economics is whether there is a link between family size and the geographic distance between adult children and elderly parents. Given current population trends, understanding how different configurations of family size and sibship influence patterns of child-parent proximity is vitally important, as it impacts on issues such as intergenerational care and everyday ...

    2009| Helena Holmlund, Helmut Rainer, Thomas Siedler
  • SOEPpapers 230 / 2009

    Children, Happiness and Taxation

    Empirical analyses on the determinants of life satisfaction often include the impact of the number of children variable among controls without fully discriminating between its two (socio-relational and pecuniary) components. In our empirical analysis on the German Socioeconomic Panel we show that, when introducing household income without correction for the number of members, the pecuniary effect prevails ...

    2009| Leonardo Becchetti, Elena Giachin Ricca, Alessandra Pelloni
  • SOEPpapers 232 / 2009

    Kinder - ein Quell der Freude?!

    It is well known, that the presences of children lower parental happiness. That is based on psychological and economical reasons. The effect holds on for micro data of the GSOEP. The number of children affects an inverse u-shaped curve on happiness. Even an enlargement of the dataset with macroeconomic variables offers the same results. The effect disappears only after generating terms of interaction ...

    2009| Stephan Humpert
  • SOEPpapers 234 / 2009

    Schenkungen und Erbschaften im Lebenslauf: vergleichende Längsschnittanalysen zu intergenerationalen Transfers

    The research on private financial transfers between generations lacks a longitudinal perspective. Gifts as intergenerational transfers inter vivos allow us to study the importance of life course events for the chances of receiving transfers. In Germany, gifts are highly private and leave more scope for decision-making than the regulated bequests. Thus, gifts are better suited to test theories on family ...

    2009| Thomas Leopold, Thorsten Schneider
  • DIW Discussion Papers 935 / 2009

    Can Child Care Policy Encourage Employment and Fertility? Evidence from a Structural Model

    In this paper we develop a structural model of female employment and fertility which accounts for intertemporal feedback effects between the two outcomes. We identify the effect of financial incentives on the employment and fertility decision by exploiting variation in the tax and transfer system which differs by employment state and number of children. To this end we simulate in detail the effects ...

    2009| Peter Haan, Katharina Wrohlich
  • SOEPpapers 226 / 2009

    Marital Risk, Family Insurance, and Public Policy

    The present paper aims to quantify the growth and welfare consequences of changing family structures in western societies. For this reason we develop a dynamic general equilibrium model with both genders which takes into account changes of the marital status as a stochastic process. Individuals respond to these shocks by adjusting savings and labor supply. Our quantitative results indicate that the ...

    2009| Hans Fehr, Manuel Kallweit, Fabian Kindermann
1848 Ergebnisse, ab 1491
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