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We estimate human capital depreciation rates during career interruptions due to family reasons (parental leave and household time) in male- and female-dominated occupations. If human capital depreciation due to family related career breaks is lower in female than in male occupations, this can explain occupational sex segregation because women will take the costs of future breaks into account when optimizing ...
In:
Oxford Economic Papers
61 (2009), Supplement 1, i98-i121
| Dennis Görlich, Andries de Grip
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Der Anteil von Kindern, die eine Privatschule besuchen, hat sich seit Beginn der 1990er Jahre fast verdoppelt: Mittlerweile gehen gut neun Prozent aller SchülerInnen in Deutschland auf eine Privatschule. In Ostdeutschland liegt ihr Anteil mit etwas mehr als zehn Prozent inzwischen über dem Anteil in Westdeutschland (knapp neun Prozent). Wie dieser Bericht auf Basis von Daten des Sozio-oekonomischen ...
In:
DIW Wochenbericht
85 (2018), 51/52 51/52, 1103-1111
| Katja Görlitz, C. Katharina Spieß, Elena Ziege
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This study analyzes how risk attitudes change when individuals become parents using longitudinal data for a large and representative sample of individuals. The results show that men and women experience a considerable increase in risk aversion which already starts as early as two years before becoming a parent, is largest shortly after giving birth and disappears when the child becomes older. These ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2015,
(SOEPpapers 756)
| Katja Görlitz, Marcus Tamm
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This paper addresses the question to what extent the strong positive correlation between education and training can be attributed to differences in individual-, job- and firm-specific characteristics. The novelty of this paper is to analyze previously unconsidered characteristics, in particular, job tasks and firm-fixed effects. The results show that once job tasks are controlled for, the difference ...
In:
Education Economics
24 (2016), 3, 261-279
| Katja Görlitz, Marcus Tamm
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In:
Brian Kleiner, Isabelle Renschler, Boris Wernli, Peter Farago, Dominique Joye ,
Understanding Research Infrastructures in the Social Sciences
Zurich: Seismo Press
89-99
| Janet C. Gornick
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Luxembourg:
Luxembourg Income Study (LIS),
2009,
(Luxembourg Income Study Working Paper No. 509)
| Janet C. Gornick, Markus Jäntti
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This paper assesses women’s poverty in 26 diverse LIS countries – five Anglophone countries, six Continental European countries, four Nordic countries, two Eastern European countries, three Southern European countries, and six Latin American countries. Our analyses are organized around four questions: (1) What is the probability that prime-age women, compared to their male counterparts, live in poor ...
Luxembourg:
Luxembourg Income Study (LIS),
2010,
(Luxembourg Income Study Working Paper No. 534)
| Janet C. Gornick, Markus Jäntti
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In:
Janet C. Gornick, Markus Jäntti ,
Income Inequality: Economic Disparities and the Middle Class in Affluent Countries
Stanford: Stanford University Press
1-47
| Janet C. Gornick, Markus Jäntti
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Objectives. We assess the income and wealth packages of older women’s (age 65+ years) households and the extent to which low income is paired with low wealth, across a group of six high-income countries. Methods. We use data on income and net worth from the Luxembourg Wealth Study, a new cross-national microdatabase. We define income poverty as having household income less than 50% of the national ...
In:
Journals of Gerontology, Series B - Social Sciences
64B (2009), 3, 402-414
| Janet C. Gornick, Eva M. Sierminska, Timothy M. Smeeding
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The tertiarisation, or perhaps more accurately, the deindustrialisation of the economy has left deep scars on cities. It is evident not only in the industrial wastelands and empty factory buildings, but also in the income and social structures of cities. Industrialisation, collective wage setting, and the welfare state led to a stark reduction in income differences over the course of the 20th century. ...
In:
Urban Studies
55 (2018), 4, 790-806
| Martin Gornig, Jan Goebel