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In:
Marcel Erlinghagen, Karsten Hank, Michaela Kreyenfeld ,
Innovation und Wissenstransfer in der empirischen Sozial- und Verhaltensforschung (Festschrift für Gert G. Wagner)
Frankfurt/New York: Campus Verlag
11-37
| Stephen P. Jenkins, Timothy M. Smeeding
-
In:
Oxford Economic Papers
58 (2003), 3,
| Stephen P. Jenkins, Philippe Van Kerm
-
In:
Evidenced-based Complementary and Alternative Medicine
1 (2004), 2, 157-165
| Christiane Jennen, Gerhard Uhlenbruck
-
Frankfurt /M. et al.:
Peter Lang,
2001,
| Uwe Jensen
-
In:
Ingo Klein, Stefan Mitnik ,
Contributions to Modern Econometrics. From Data Analysis to Economic Policy
Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers
1-15
| Uwe Jensen
-
This paper proposes a method to decompose changes in income inequality into the contributions of policy changes, wage rate changes, and population changes while considering labor supply reactions. Using data from the Socio‐Economic Panel (SOEP), this method is applied to decompose the increase in income inequality in Germany from 2002 to 2011, a period that saw tax reductions and a controversial overhaul ...
In:
Review of Income and Wealth
65 (2019), 3, 540-560
| Robin Jessen
-
A common assumption in the optimal taxation literature is that the social planner maximizes a welfarist social welfare function with weights decreasing with income. However, high transfer withdrawal rates in many countries imply very low weights for the working poor in practice. We reconcile this puzzle by generalizing the optimal taxation framework by Saez (2002) to allow for alternatives to welfarism. ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2017,
(SOEPpapers 953)
| Robin Jessen, Maria Metzing, Davud Rostam-Afschar
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Analogous to the widely studied concept of precautionary savings, our study contributes to the burgeoning literature on precautionary labor supply behavior when wages are subject to uninsurable wage risk. We estimate the parameters of a dynamic structural model of labor supply of men. We test whether workers are risk averse and prudent in the sense that they increase labor supply in anticipation of ...
Berlin:
2015,
| Robin Jessen, Davud Rostam-Afschar
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We quantify the importance of precautionary labour supply defined as the difference between hours supplied in the presence of risk and hours under perfect foresight. Using the German Socio-Economic Panel from 2001 to 2012, we estimate the effect of wage risk on labour supply and test for constrained adjustment of labour supply. We find that married men choose on average about 2.8% of their hours of ...
In:
Oxford Economic Papers
70 (2018), 3, 868–891
| Robin Jessen, Davud Rostam-Afschar, Sebastian Schmitz
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We study three budget-neutral reforms of the German tax and transfer system designed to improve work incentives for people with low incomes: a feasible flat tax reform that provides a basic income which is equal to the current level of the means tested unemployment benefit, and two alternative reforms that involve employment subsidies to stimulate participation and full-time work, respectively. We ...
In:
FinanzArchiv
73 (2017), 1, 1-41
| Robin Jessen, Davud Rostam-Afschar, Viktor Steiner