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Wealth inequality results from stratified access to accumulation opportunities, relating to differences in income, financial behavior, and transfers. Yet, it remains unclear whether these wealth accumulation channels differ in their perceived relevance for women and men along the wealth distribution. A deeper understanding of such perceptions is crucial for explaining attitudes toward inequality, shaping ...
2025,
(OSF Preprints)
| Theresa Nutz, Daria Tisch
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This study investigates the life satisfaction of basketball coaches, addressing a gap in research on sports professionals. Using data from the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP), it examines life satisfaction scores among basketball coaches, categorized by license level, and compares them to teachers and managers. While previous research leads to the assumption of above-average life satisfaction of ...
In:
Journal of Applied Sports Sciences
9 (2025),
| Johannes Wunder, Maximilian Priem, Gert G. Wagner, Oliver Stoll
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Although Standard German is the official language and the language of the majority in Germany, regional varieties of German are prominent in the country. German dialects show a regional distribution that does not coincide with administrative borders. In this article, we present an instrument that we created for analyzing linguistic survey data regionally. This instrument can also be used for analyzing ...
In:
Review of Regional Research
(online first) (2025),
| Astrid Adler, Karolina Hansen, Maria Ribeiro Silveira
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Institut für Klimasozialpolitik,
2025,
(KlimaSozial kompakt)
| Felicitas Kaiser, Marie-Louise Zeller
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This study examines over-time trends in intergenerational class mobility based on cohorts of labour market entrants in Germany and the UK since the 1950s. We calculate absolute and relative mobility rates, separately for men and women, using the German Socio-Economic Panel (1984–2016), the UK Household Longitudinal Study (2009–2016), and the UK Labour Force Survey (2014–2017). Regarding absolute mobility, ...
In:
European Sociological Review
38 (2021), 1, 37-53
| Nhat An Trinh, Erzsébet Bukodi
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Bonn:
Bundesinstitut für Bau-, Stadt- und Raumforschung (BBSR),
2025,
(BBSR-Analysen KOMPAKT 04/2025)
| Carlotta Giustozzi, Elisabeth Stürmer, Stefanie Vedder
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We propose a novel method to detect and disentangle moderate and severe health shocks in a general population survey based on a data-driven classification of sickness absences and hospitalizations. Both types of shocks are widespread with an annual incidence of about 1.7%, which rises steeply with age. We estimate the effects of both shocks on labor market outcomes and find that severe shocks have ...
In:
Labour Economics
96 (2025), 102747
| Mattis Beckmannshagen, Johannes Koenig
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Using a DNA-based polygenic index, we explored geographical and historical differences in polygenic associations with educational attainment in East and West Germany around the time of reunification. This index was derived from a prior genome-wide association study on educational attainment in democratic countries. In 1,930 individuals aged 25 to 85 years from the SOEP-G[ene] cohort, the magnitude ...
In:
Psychological Science
36 (2025), 7, 559–573
| Deniz Fraemke, Yayouk E. Willems, Aysu Okbay, Ulman Lindenberger, Sabine Zinn, Gert Wagner, David Richter, Kathryn P. Harden, Elliot M. Tucker-Drob, Ralph Hertwig, Philipp Koellinger, Laurel Raffington
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FAIRness of research data largely depends on the availability of rich and standardized metadata. While such metadata is commonly available at the study level, fine-grained metadata, especially for tabular scientific data, is often lacking (Wenzig/Han 2024). In a project funded by KonsortSWD-NFDI4Society, three research data centers (SOEP, LIfBi, and DZHW) investigate what is required to convert existing ...
2025,
(KonsortSWD Working paper)
| Knut Wenzig, Andreas Daniel, Dominique Hansen, Tobias Koberg, Mihaela Tudose
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This article explores the nexus between risk tolerance and altruism. Using information from the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP), we find a statistically and economically significant positive correlation between risk tolerance and proxies for altruism conditional on a long covariate vector.
In:
Applied Economics Letters
(online first) (2025), 1–5
| Tim Friehe, Christian Pfeifer