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The gender wage gap in East Germany has narrowed by 10 percentage points in transition, but women have experienced much more severe employment difficulties than men. Using the German Socio-Economic Panel for 1990–94, I show that on balance women have lost relative to men. Almost half the relative wage gain is due to exits from employment of the low skilled, who are disproportionately women. The female ...
In:
Journal of Labor Economics
20 (2002), 1, 148-169
| Jennifer Hunt
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In:
Canadian Journal of Economics
37 (2004), 4, 830-849
| Jennifer Hunt
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In:
Journal of Population Economics
17 (2004), 2, 249-266
| Jennifer Hunt
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In:
Journal of the European Economic Association
4 (2006), 5, 1014-1037
| Jennifer Hunt
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After describing qualitatively the increasingly flexible organization of work hours in Germany, I turn to the German Socio-Economic Panel to quantify practices and trends, and assess their effects on workers and employers. Measuring flexibility as the extent to which overtime is compensated with time off, and hence receives no overtime premium, I show that hourly-paid workers have undergone a regime ...
In:
Perspektiven der Wirtschaftspolitik
14 (2013), 1-2, 67–98
| Jennifer Hunt
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In:
Brookings Papers on Economic Activity
(2001), 2, 1-72
| Jennifer Hunt, Michael C. Burda
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Berlin:
Freie Universität Berlin,
2005,
| Denis Huschka, Jürgen Gerhards, Gert G. Wagner
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This article analyzes differences in naming between East and West Germany. After World War II, Germany was split by the allied forces. Two Germanies emerged: the Federal Republic of Germany (FRG) and the German Democratic Republic (GDR). The country’s division lasted about forty years (1949–1989), a time span in which vastly different geo-political frameworks — Eastern bloc versus Western bloc — shaped ...
In:
Names: A Journal of Onomastics
57 (2009), 4, 208-228
| Denis Huschka, Jürgen Gerhards, Gert G. Wagner
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We show that the choice of the welfare measure has a substantial impact on the degree of welfare-related health inequality. Combining various income and wealth measures with different health measures, we calculate 80 health concentration indices. The influence of the welfare measure is more pronounced when using subjective health measures than when using objective health measures.
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2010,
(SOEPpapers 275)
| Denis Huschka, Gert G. Wagner
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The German Socio Economic Panel Study (SOEP) offers the rare opportunity to look at patterns of given names amongst a representative sample of more than 50,000 people born since 1900. This article develops an exemplary picture of typical frequency distributions for given names and their developments over time. In this paper, we first discuss the advantages and limitations of various data bases which ...
2012,
329-365
| Denis Huschka, Gert G. Wagner