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This contribution examines the role of religion as source of social trust. Going beyond the scope of the existing literature, we jointly evaluate the effect of individual religiosity and regional religious context by means of multilevel analysis of 97 small-scale German regions. The results based on the German Socio-Economic Panel suggest that there is a double positive effect of Protestantism: Not ...
In:
European Sociological Review
27 (2011), 3, 346-363
| Richard Traunmüller
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Köln:
Universität zu Köln, Seminar für Wirtschafts- und Sozialstatistik,
1994,
| Mark Trede
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In:
Statistisches Bundesamt ,
Einkommen und Vermögen in Deutschland - Messung und Analyse (Band 32 der Schriftenreihe: Forum der Bundesstatistik)
Stuttgart: Metzler Poeschel
89-109
| Mark Trede
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In:
Economics Letters
59 (1998), 1, 77-82
| Mark Trede
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This paper reviews various mobility measures and establishes their asymptotic sampling distribution. The focus is on both transition matrix mobility measures and mobility measures which are based on the reduction in inequality occurring when the accounting period is extended. Statistical techniques are used to show the asymptotic normality of these measures and their variances. The empirical illustration ...
In:
Jahrbücher für Nationalökonomie und Statistik
218 (1999), 3-4, 473-490
| Mark Trede
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Köln:
Universität zu Köln, Seminar für Wirtschafts- und Sozialstatistik,
1995,
(Discussion Paper No. 1)
| Mark M. Trede
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This paper develops a technique for estimating age-profiles of earnings mobility using conditional kernel density estimation and establishes their statistical properties. Both pointwise and simultaneous confidence intervals are derived. The paper then examines the age-profile of short-run earnings mobility in Germany between 1983 and 1993 using the Socio-Economic Panel data. It turns out that earnings ...
In:
Journal of Applied Econometrics
13 (1998), 4, 397-409
| Mark M. Trede
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In:
Aus Politik und Zeitgeschichte (APuZ)
27-28 (2012), 32-38
| Till van Treek
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This study investigates the determinants of women’s labor supply in the household context. The main focus is on the effect of a change in male partner’s wages on women’s work hours. This is linked to the broader question of whether married and cohabiting women make different economic decisions and respond differently to changes in their partners’ wages. In addition, this study seeks to connect the ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2013,
(SOEPpapers 614)
| Doreen Triebe
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This paper examines the added worker effect (AWE), which refers to the increase of labor supply of individuals in response to a sudden financial shock in family income, that is, unemployment of their partner. While previous empirical studies focus on married women's response to those shocks, I explicitly analyze the spillover effects of unemployment on both women and men and I also differentiate ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2015,
(SOEPpapers 740)
| Doreen Triebe