Publikationen mit SOEP-Daten: SOEPlit

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14002 Ergebnisse, ab 5321
  • Wage Rigidities in Western Germany? Microeconometric Evidence from the 1990s

    This paper investigates whether and in what sense the west German wage structure has been 'rigid' in the 1990s. To test the hypothesis that a rigid wage structure has been responsible for rising low-skilled unemployment, I propose a methodology which makes less restrictive identifying assumptions than some previous related work. I find that the relative stability of educational wage premia ...

    Mannheim: Centre for European Economic Research (ZEW), 2001,
    (ZEW Discussion Paper No. 01-36)
    | Patrick A. Puhani
  • A Test of the 'Krugman Hypothesis' for the United States, Britain, and Western Germany

    Bonn: Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA), 2003,
    (IZA DP No. 763)
    | Patrick A. Puhani
  • Differences in Labour Markets Across the Atlantic

    In: CESifo Forum 1/2004 (2004), 1, 12-18 | Patrick A. Puhani
  • Relative Demand and Supply of Skills and Wage Rigidity in the United States, Britain and Western Germany

    I extend a two-skill group model by Katz andMurphy (1992) to estimate relative demand and supply for skills as well as wage rigidity in Germany. Using three data sets for Germany, two for Britain and one for the United States, I simulate the change in relative wage rigidity (wage compression) in all three countries during the early and mid 1990s, this being the period when unemployment increased in ...

    In: Jahrbücher für Nationalökonomie und Statistik 228 (2008), 5+6, 573-585 | Patrick A. Puhani
  • Transatlantic Differences in Labour Markets: Changes in Wage and Non-Employment Structures in the 1980s and the 1990s

    Rising wage inequality in the United States and Britain and rising continental European unemployment have led to a popular view in the economics profession that these two phenomena are related to negative relative demand shocks against the unskilled, combined with flexible wages in the Anglo-Saxon countries, but wage rigidities in continental Europe (‘Krugman hypothesis’). This paper tests this hypothesis ...

    In: German Economic Review 9 (2008), 3, 312-338 | Patrick A. Puhani
  • Switch-On and Switch-Off Effects of Sick Pay Reform on Absence from Work and on Health-Related Outcomes

    We evaluate the switch-on and switch-off effects of a natural experiment that reduced sick pay in Germany from 100 to 80% of the wage rate but that effectively only applied to workers without a collective bargaining agreement. Two years following implementation of the reform, a newly elected federal government repealed it. We estimate the reform’s impact on annual days of absence by applying a difference-in-differences ...

    Barcelona: 2009, | Patrick A. Puhani, Katja Sonderhof
  • The Effects of a Sick Pay Reform on Absence and on Health-Related Outcomes

    We evaluate the effects of a reduction in sick pay from 100 to 80% of the wage. Unlike previous literature, apart from absence from work, we also consider effects on doctor/hospital visits and subjective health indicators. We also add to the literature by estimating both switch-on and switch-off effects, because the reform was repealed two years later. We find a two-day reduction in the number of days ...

    In: Journal of Health Economics 29 (2010), 2, 285-302 | Patrick A. Puhani, Katja Sonderhof
  • The effects of parental leave extension on training for young women

    Using three datasets for West Germany, we estimate the effect of the extension of parental leave from between 10 and 18 to 36 months on young women’s participation in job-related training. Specifically, we employ difference-in-differences identification strategies using control groups of older women and young and older men. We find that parental leave extension negatively affects job-related training ...

    In: Journal of Population Economics 24 (2011), 2, 731–760 | Patrick A. Puhani, Katja Sonderhof
  • Evaluation sozialpolitischer Reformen

    Dieser Beitrag illustriert die Evaluation sozialpolitischer Regeländerungen anhand von zwei Reformen, die Eingriffe in die Rechte der Arbeitgeber und Arbeitnehmer vornahmen. Kausale Effekte der Reformen werden anhand von Kontrollgruppen-Ansätzen ermittelt (hier Differenz-von-Differenzen-Schätzungen). Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass Eingriffe des Staates in den Arbeitsmarkt neben den gewollten positiven ...

    In: Zeitschrift für ArbeitsmarktForschung (ZAF) 44 (2011), 1-2, 205-213 | Patrick A. Puhani, Katja Sonderhof
  • The effects of pension changes on age of first benefit receipt: Regression discontinuity evidence from repatriated ethnic Germans

    To estimate the effects of large cuts in pensions on the age of first benefit receipt, we exploit two natural experiments in which such cuts affect a group of repatriated ethnic German workers. The pensions were cut by about 12%, yet, according to our regression discontinuity estimates using administrative pension data, there was no significant delay in the age of first pension receipt. Based on additional ...

    In: Labour Economics 38 (2016), January 2016, 12-23 | Patrick A. Puhani, Falko Tabbert
14002 Ergebnisse, ab 5321
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