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In:
Wirtschaftswissenschaftliche Beiträge 64
Heidelberg: Physica-Verlag
| Gerhard Untiedt
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The proportion of women who withdraw from paid employment when they have children differs considerably among the countries of the European Union (EU), and the variation has mostly been attributed to institutional factors. In this study, we reassess the institutional explanation, because earlier supportive evidence is threatened by two alternative macro-level explanations: the influence of the economic ...
In:
Acta Sociologica
48 (2005), 1, 41-62
| Wilfred Uunk, Matthijs Kalmijn, Ruud Muffels
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This paper focuses on the role of noncognitive skills on the success of unemployed workers finding a job. We argue that a worker's job search intensity not only relies on the conventional determinants discussed in the job search literature but is decisively driven by her noncognitive skills which rejected in her propensity to motivate and control herself while searching for a job. Moreover, personality ...
Istanbul:
2009,
| Selver Derya Uysal, Winfried Pohlmeier
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This paper focuses on the role personality traits play in determining individual unemployment duration. We argue that a worker’s job search intensity is decisively driven by her personality traits, reflected in her propensity to motivate and control herself while searching for a job. Moreover, personality traits, in as far as they can be signaled to a potential employer, may also enhance the probability ...
In:
Journal of Economic Psychology
32 (2011), 6, 980-992
| Selver Derya Uysal, Winfried Pohlmeier
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This article provides a structural explanation for the paradox of the contented female worker. Although they are generally aware that they earn less than men, women usually perceive their wages as more just. This article argues that men and women do not differ in how they perceive their wages, yet the gendered segregation of the labor market will constrain the availability of preferred same-gender ...
In:
Work and Occupations
45 (2018), 2, 168-193
| Peter Valet
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In:
Review of Income and Wealth
52 (2006), 2, 261-284
| Robert G. Valletta
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We evaluate social progress on the basis of panel data on individual incomes by comparing the value of social welfare in the observed panel data to its value in a situation where individuals receive their first period income in each period. We derive necessary conditions for the welfare gain to be positive, and show how it can be decomposed in an effect of economic growth, a mobility effect and a cost ...
In:
Journal of Comparative Economics
49 (2021), 1, 164-182
| Dirk Van de gaer, Flaviana Palmisano
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At the crossroads of economics and human biology, this paper examines the extent to which pre-puberty nutritional conditions in one generation affect productivity-related outcomes in later generations. Recent studies have found a negative association between conditions at ages 8-12 and the grandchild’s overall and cardiovascular and diabetes mortality in a single historical dataset. It has been argued ...
Bonn:
Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA),
2014,
(IZA DP No. 7999)
| Gerard J. Van den Berg, Pia R. Pinger
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This paper examines the extent to which pre-puberty nutritional conditions in one generation affect productivity-related outcomes in later generations. Recent findings from the biological literature suggest that age 8-12 is a critical period for male germ cell development. We build on this evidence and investigate whether undernutrition at that age biologically transmits to children and grandchildren. ...
In:
Economics & Human Biology
23 (2016), December 2016, 103-120
| Gerard J. Van den Berg, Pia R. Pinger
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We estimate average causal effects of early-life hunger on late-life health by applying instrumental variable estimation, using data with self-reported periods of hunger earlier in life, with famines as instruments. The data contain samples from European countries and include birth cohorts exposed to various famines in the twentieth century. We use two-sample IV estimation to deal with imperfect recollection ...
In:
Economic Journal
126 (2016), 591, 465-506
| Gerard J. Van den Berg, Pia R. Pinger, Johannes Schoch