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16372 Ergebnisse, ab 1481
  • The Early Bird Catches the Worm! Setting a Deadline for Online Panel Recruitment Incentives

    The literature on the effects of incentives in survey research is vast and covers a diversity of survey modes. The mode of probability-based online panels, however, is still young and so is research into how to best recruit sample units into the panel. This paper sheds light on the effectiveness of a specific type of incentive in this context: a monetary incentive that is paid conditionally upon panel ...

    In: Social Science Computer Review 41 (2023), 2, 370-389 | Sabine Friedel, Barbara Felderer, Ulrich Krieger, Carina Cornesse, Annelies G. Blom
  • Cultural Determinants of Household Saving Behavior

    Relying on the epidemiological approach, we show that culture is a significant driver of household saving behavior. Second-generation immigrants from countries that put strong emphasis on thrift or wealth accumulation tend to save more in Germany. We confirm these results in data from the United Kingdom. By linking parents to their children, we show that these two cultural components affect the saving ...

    In: Journal of Money, Credit and Banking 52 (2020), 5, 1035-1070 | Nicola Fuchs-Schündeln, Paolo Massella, Hannah Paule-Paludkiewicz
  • On the correlation of self-reported and behavioral risk attitude measures: The case of the General Risk Question and the Investment Game following Gneezy and Potters (1997)

    Risk attitudes play a pivotal role to understand economic decision-making, and several measures are used to elicit them in the lab and survey them in the field. We provide a literature review on the most commonly used risk elicitation methods by Holt and Laury (HL) and the Investment Game (IG) by Gneezy and Potters and the General Risk Question (GRQ) utilized in the German Socioeconomic Panel. Based ...

    In: Risk Management and Insurance Review 26 (2023), 3, 367-392 | Christine Gaertner, Petra Steinorth
  • The 2015 refugee inflow and concerns over immigration

    How did the large asylum-seeker inflow to Germany in 2015 affect concerns about immigration? Using individual-level panel data for the years 2012–2018 and a policy that allocates asylum-seekers to districts, I identify the effect of exposure to asylum-seekers. In line with the contact hypothesis, living in a high refugee migration district reduced concerns about immigration by 3 pp. Alternatively, ...

    In: European Journal of Political Economy 78 (2023), 102323 | Katia Gallegos Torres
  • Income-dependent equivalence scales: A fresh look at German micro-data

    Income inequality and poverty risks receive a lot of attention in public debates and current research. To make income comparable across different types of households, applying the “(modified) OECD scale” – an equivalence scale with fixed weights for each household type – has become a quasi-standard in research. Instead, we derive a base-dependent equivalence scale allowing for scale weights that vary ...

    In: The Journal of Economic Inequality 19 (2021), 4, 855-873 | Jan Marvin Garbuszus, Notburga Ott, Sebastian Pehle, Martin Werding
  • Minimum Wage Effects on Job Attachment: A Gender Perspective

    We examine whether the effects of the introduction of a minimum wage on low-pay employment duration in Germany in 2015 are heterogeneous by gender. In order to disentangle the effects on women and men, we estimate a duration model with unobserved heterogeneity in which we allow gender differences and differences before and after the introduction of the minimum wage. We find that the reform does affect ...

    In: Jahrbücher für Nationalökonomie und Statistik 244 (2024), 1-2, 83-112 | Eva García-Morán, Ming-Jin Jiang, Heiko Rachinger
  • The effects of capital and gender on German adolescents’ favourite sports

    This study investigates the effects of different types of capital and gender on the choice of German adolescents' favourite sports. According to Bourdieu's theoretical framework, cultural, social, and economic capital as well as gender are expected to influence this choice because of individuals' habitus. Data from several waves (2000-2018) of the youth questionnaire of the German Socio-Economic ...

    In: European Journal for Sport and Society 21 (2023), 1, 86–103 | Sebastian Gehrmann, Uta Czyrnick-Leber, Pamela Wicker
  • Jobben in der Jugend. Eine Frage des Elternhauses

    Ein zu ihren sonstigen Lebensumständen passender Nebenjob kann Jugendlichen helfen, am Arbeitsmarkt relevante Kompetenzen und Fertigkeiten zu erlernen und einzuüben. Erfahrungen mit solchen Jobs hatten einer eigenen Auswertung des Sozio-oekonomischen Panels (SOEP) zufolge 41,7 Prozent der 17-Jährigen in den Jahren 2018 bis 2020. Allerdings trifft das vorwiegend auf Jugendliche aus den höheren sozialen ...

    In: IW-Trends 50 (2023), 3, 47-66 | Wido Geis-Thöne
  • Zur Diskussion gestellt: Umverteilung - wie viel sind Deutschland die Familien wert?Familienpolitik ist weit mehr als reine Umverteilungspolitik

    Ein großer Teil der familienpolitischen Maßnahmen in Deutschland unterstützt nicht die Familien im Allgemeinen, sondern verfolgt sehr konkrete Ziele. Beispielsweise gilt das für das Elterngeld, das einen »Schonraum« für die Eltern während des ersten Lebensjahres des Kindes schaffen sollte (BMFSFJ 2008). In dieser Zeit sollten die Familien die Möglichkeit erhalten, dass sich jeweils ein Elternteil ohne ...

    In: ifo Schnelldienst 76 (2023), 9, 6-9 | Wido Geis-Thöne
  • Wir fühlen uns immer länger jung

    Die meisten Menschen fühlen sich jünger, als sie nach Lebensjahren sind. Dieser Effekt der »subjektiven Verjüngung« steigt sowohl mit dem Alter als auch von Generation zu Generation.

    In: Spektrum online, 2023-05-13 (2023), | Christiane Gelitz
16372 Ergebnisse, ab 1481
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