Publikationen mit SOEP-Daten: SOEPlit

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14002 Ergebnisse, ab 9161
  • Dealing with negative marginal utilities in the discrete choice modelling of labour supply

    In discrete choice labor supply analysis, it is often reasonably expected that utility will increase with income. Yet, analyses based on discrete choice models sometimes mention that, when no restriction is imposed a priori in the optimization program, the monotonicity condition is not fully satisfied ex post. In order to overcome this limitation, some authors impose restrictions that may appear to ...

    In: Economics Letters 118 (2013), 1, 16-18 | Philippe Liégeois, Nizamul Islam
  • Lessons from Building and Using Euromod

    Colchester: University of Essex, 2006,
    (EUROMOD Working Paper No. EM5/06)
    | Christine Lietz, Daniela Mantovani
  • Social Indicators and other Income Statistics using EUROMOD: an assessment of the 2001 baseline and changes 1998-2001

    Cambridge: University of Cambridge, Microsimulation Unit, 2005,
    (EUROMOD Working Paper No. EM6/05)
    | Christine Lietz, Holly Sutherland
  • Marginal employment for welfare recipients: stepping stone or obstacle?

    Marginal employment (ME) is one of the largest forms of atypical employment in Germany. We analyse whether ME has a ‘stepping stone’ function for unemployed individuals, i.e., whether ME increases the subsequent probability of regular employment. We find differing treatment effects by unemployment duration. According to our results, ME increases the likelihood of regular employment within a 3-year ...

    In: Labour 31 (2017), 4, 394-414 | Torsten Lietzmann, Paul Schmelzer, Jürgen Wiemers
  • Income Inequality and Education from ECHP Data

    Ancona: Università Politecnica delle Marche, Dipartimento di Economia, 2008,
    (Quaderni di ricerca n. 311)
    | Marco Lilla
  • Cross-National Estimates of the Intergenerational Mobility in Earnings

    This paper examines the similarity in the association between earnings of sons and fathers in Germany and the United States. It relaxes the log-linear functional form imposed in most studies of the intergenerational earnings association. Theory implies the relationship between earnings of fathers and sons could be nonlinear, especially at the tails of the distribution of earnings of fathers. When a ...

    In: Proceedings of the Fourth International Conference of German Socio-Economic Panel Study Users. Vierteljahrshefte zur Wirtschaftsforschung 70 (2001), 1, 51-58 | Dean R. Lillard
  • The promise of cross-national research

    In: In Praise of Panel Surveys. The achievements of the British Household Panel Survey. Plans for Understanding Society - the UK's new household longitudinal study | Dean R. Lillard
  • Keeping it in the Family? If Parents Smoke Do Children Follow?

    I use retrospective data on smokers from the German Socio-Economic Panel to investigate whether children are more likely to smoke if their parents smoke(d). Despite intense policy interest, researchers have not established whether the well-established (positive) association is causal. I exploit panel data observations on smoking behavior of parents and children to develop instrumental variables that ...

    In: Schmollers Jahrbuch - Proceedings of the 9th International Socio-Economic Panel User Conference 131 (2011), 2, 277-286 | Dean R. Lillard
  • Cross-national harmonization of longitudinal data: The example of national household panels

    In: Brian Kleiner, Isabelle Renschler, Boris Wernli, Peter Farago, Dominique Joye , Understanding Research Infrastructures in the Social Sciences
    Zurich: Seismo Press
    80-88
    | Dean R. Lillard
  • Cross-National Comparative Research: Promises Made, Promises Kept, Promises to Keep

    Syracuse: 2004, | Dean R. Lillard, Richard V. Burkhauser
14002 Ergebnisse, ab 9161
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