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Risk aversion is an important factor in explaining many everyday decisions. Thus, one asks which determinants can explain different attitudes towards risk. Several studies show different risk attitudes with respect to gender, age, income, and wealth (e.g. [19]). While these findings are hardly controversial, there is still some uncertainty about the effect of culture on risk tolerance. Thus, the main ...
In:
International Journal of Economics, Finance and Management Sciences
2 (2014), 2, 143-152
| Christoph S. Weber
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In:
Wirtschaftsdienst
98 (2018), 4, 296-298
| Enzo Weber, Franziska Zimmert
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2013,
(Volkswirtschaft special. Meinungen, Analysen, Fakten (Nr.4))
| Jan P. Weber
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Motivations for migrants to return clearly change with integration, but the time-changing aspect of return migration has received little attention in the literature. This paper studies how migrants’ preferences for the home country change with intermarriage, i.e., marriage to a spouse from the host country. Specifically, I analyse the association between intermarriage and three outcomes related to ...
In:
IZA Journal of Migration
4 (2015), 7, 1-21
| Rosa Weber
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In vielen Städten fehlt bezahlbarer Wohnraum, gerade für Familien. Gleichzeitig leben viele Senioren in Wohnungen, die eigentlich viel zu groß für sie sind. Experten fordern daher eine bessere Nutzung des Wohnbestandes. Helfen könnten beispielsweise Tauschprojekte, die in manchen Städten bereits angeboten werden.
In:
Süddeutsche Zeitung online, 2017-11-29
(2017),
| Stefan Weber
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In:
WSI Mitteilungen
64 (2011), 12, 667-676
| Sonja Weber-Menges, Michael Vester
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In:
Bundesbaublatt
(2004), 6, 20-25
| Rotraut Weeber, Simone Bosch
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In:
Peter Krause, Ilona Ostner ,
Leben in Ost- und Westdeutschland: Eine sozialwissenschaftliche Bilanz der deutschen Einheit 1990-2010
Frankfurt/Main - New York: Campus
83-101
| Bernd Wegener, Stefan Liebig
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Informed decision making in medicine, defined as basing one’s decision on the best current medical evidence, requires both informed physicians and informed patients. In cancer screening, however, studies document that these prerequisites are not yet met. Many physicians do not know or understand the medical evidence behind screening tests, do not adequately counsel (asymptomatic) people on screening, ...
In:
PLOS ONE
12 (2017), 8,
| Odette Wegwarth, Gert G. Wagner, Gerd Gigerenzer
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In:
Stuttgarter Nachrichten vom 29.03.2008
(2008), 15
| Reiner Wehaus