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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
This paper provides evidence that low private contributions to highly subsidised day care constrain mothers from working longer hours. We study the effects of reforms that abolished day care fees in Germany on parental labour supply. The reforms removed private contributions to highly subsidised day care in the year before children enter primary school. We exploit the staggered reform across states ...
In:
Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization
180 (2020), S. 510-543
| Mathias Huebener, Astrid Pape, C. Katharina Spiess
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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
In addition to biological sex, gender, defined as the sociocultural dimension of being a woman or a man, plays acentral role in health. However, there are so far few approaches to quantify gender in a retrospective manner inexisting study datasets. We therefore aimed to develop a methodology that can be retrospectively applied to assessgender in existing cohorts. We used baseline data from the Berlin ...
In:
Biology of Sex Differences
12 (2021), 15, 10 S.
| Ahmad Tauseef Nauman, Hassan Behlouli, Nicholas Alexander, Friederike Kendel, Johanna Drewelies, Konstantinos Mantantzis, Nora Berger, Gert G. Wagner, Denis Gerstorf, Ilja Demuth, Louise Pilote, Vera Regitz-Zagrosek
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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
We consider the problem of regression with selectively observed covariates in a nonparametric framework. Our approach relies on instrumental variables that explain variation in the latent covariates but have no direct effect on selection. The regression function of interest is shown to be a weighted version of observed conditional expectation where the weighting function is a fraction of selection ...
In:
Journal of Econometrics
223 (2021), 1, S. 28-52
| Christoph Breunig, Peter Haan
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In:
Intereconomics
56 (2021), 1, S. 20-22
| Claudia Kemfert
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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
The Paris Agreement calls on countries to pursue efforts to limit global average temperature rise to 1.5°C. We derive a 2016–2050 emission budget for the EU Emissions Trading System (EU ETS) based on cost-effectiveness criteria aimed at achieving the 1.5°C target with a 50%–66% probability, and translate it into a cap reduction path. We show that, under current ETS parameters, the vast majority of ...
In:
Climate Policy
21 (2021), 6, S. 778–791
| Aleksandar Zaklan, Jakob Wachsmuth, Vicki Duscha
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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
Understanding the distributional impacts of market-based climate policies is crucial to design economically efficient climate change mitigation policies that are socially acceptable and avoid adverse impacts on the poor. Empirical studies that examine the distributional impacts of carbon pricing and fossil fuel subsidy reforms in different countries arrive at ambiguous results. To systematically determine ...
In:
Environmental & Resource Economics
78 (2021), 1, S. 1-42
| Nils Ohlendorff, Michael Jakob, Jan Christoph Minx, Carsten Schröder, Jan Christoph Steckel
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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
We study the impact of different regulatory designs on the cost efficiency of operators providing a public service, exploiting data from the French transport industry. The distinctive feature of the study is that it considers regulatory regimes as endogenously determined choices, explained by economic, political, and institutional variables. Our approach leans on a positive analysis to study the determinants ...
In:
Journal of Regulatory Economics
59 (2021), S. 25-46
| Joanna Piechucka
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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
Research on the consequences of starting in overeducation often focuses on either secondary or tertiary graduates. We focus on both within one country, Germany. While matching and search models imply the improvement of initial overeducation, human capital theory and stigma associated with overeducation predict entrapment. The strongly skill- and occupation-based labour market for the vocationally trained ...
In:
European Sociological Review
36 (2020), 3, S. 413–428
| Paul Schmelzer, Thorsten Schneider
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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
This paper examines the role of sovereign default beliefs for macroeconomic fluctuations and stabilization policy in a small open economy where fiscal solvency is a critical problem. We set up and estimate a DSGE model on Turkish data and show that accounting for sovereign risk significantly improves the fit of the model through an endogenous amplification between default beliefs, exchange rate and ...
In:
IMF Economic Review
69 (2021), 2, S. 391–426
| Markus Kirchner, Malte Rieth
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Weitere referierte Aufsätze
This study introduces and investigates the validity of a brief scale measuring a challenged sense of belonging. The sense of belonging as well as challenges to this sense are important, albeit neglected aspects of social integration and of significance to migration and refugee studies as well as to virtually all other social science contexts. Assessing a challenged or eroded sense of belonging provides ...
In:
Measurement Instruments for the Social Sciences
3 (2021), 3, 16 S.
| Lukas M. Fuchs, Jannes Jacobsen, Lena Walther, Eric Hahn, Thi Minh Tam Ta, Malek Bajbouj, Christian von Scheve
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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
Panel attrition poses major threats to the survey quality of panel studies. Many features have been introduced to keep panel attrition as low as possible. Based on a random sample of refugees, a highly mobile population, we investigate whether using a mobile phone application improves address quality and response behavior. Various features, including geo-tracking, collecting email addresses and adress ...
In:
Social Science Computer Review
39 (2021), 4, S. 721-743
| Jannes Jacobsen, Simon Kühne
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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
We study a game in which two firms compete in quality to serve a market consisting of consumers with different initial consideration sets. If both firms invest below a certain threshold, they only compete for those consumers already aware of their existence. Above this threshold, a firm is visible to all and the highest investment attracts all consumers. On the one hand, the existence of initially ...
In:
International Journal of Industrial Organization
75 (2021), 102709, 19 S.
| Renaud Foucart, Jana Friedrichsen
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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
In:
Journal of Modern European History
19 (2021), 1, S. 33-39
| Charlotte Bartels, Salvatore Morelli
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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
Industrial demand response can play an important part in balancing the intermittent production from a growing share of renewable energies in electricity markets. This paper analyses the role of aggregators – intermediaries between participants and power markets – in facilitating industrial demand response. Based on the results from semi-structured interviews with German demand response aggregators, ...
In:
Energy Policy
147 (2020), 111893, 11 S.
| Jan Stede, Karin Arnold, Christa Dufter, Georg Holtz, Serafin von Roon, Jörn C. Richstein
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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
We employ a psychometrically validated performance test to study economic competence among representative sample of 1,687 early secondary school students in Southwest Germany. The rich dataset allows us to study variation in economic competence across school types and observable student characteristics. Our results show that economic competence is significantly lower among female students, migrants, ...
In:
International Review of Economics Education
35 (2020), 100172, 16 S.
| Luis Oberrauch, Tim Kaiser
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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
This study examines the association between parental separations during childhood and economic wealth of adult children. We provide a new test of this relationship and address two unresolved debates in the literature concerning (1) the pathways linking parental separation and adult children’s wealth and (2) the relevance of the timing of exposure. We use data from the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics ...
In:
Social Forces
99 (2021), 3, S. 1176–1208
| Philipp M. Lersch, Janeen Baxter
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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
This survey study assesses attitudes of the German public regarding COVID-19 health communications with varying degrees of scientific uncertainty.
In:
JAMA Network Open
3 (2020), 12, e2032335, 5 S.
| Odette Wegwarth, Gert G. Wagner, Claudia Spies, Ralph Hertwig
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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
We exploit the natural experiment of German reunification in 1990 to investigate if the institutional regimes of the formerly socialist (rather gender-equal) East Germany and the capitalist (rather gender-traditional) West Germany resulted in differing gender norms regarding who should be the family breadwinner. We use data for three periods between 1983 and 2016 from the German Socio-Economic Panel. ...
In:
Socio-Economic Review
20 (2022), 1, S. 257-279
| Maximilian Sprengholz, Anna Wieber, Elke Holst
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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
Coal consumption and production have sharply declined in recent years in the U.S., despite political support. Reasons are mostly unfavorable economic conditions for coal, including competition from natural gas and renewables in the power sector, as well as an aging coal-fired power plant fleet. Nevertheless, coal remains a major energy source in the North American energy markets. Supplementing EMF34 ...
In:
Energy Policy
149 (2021), 112097, 13 S.
| Christian Hauenstein, Franziska Holz
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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
This paper is the first causal study using quasi-experimental methods to identify the effect of minimum wages on the reservation wages of non-workers. We exploit variation in regional exposure to the introduction of a high-impact minimum wage in Germany in 2015, combined with survey responses about wage acceptance thresholds of job seekers. Results show a 16% increase in reservation wages among non-employed ...
In:
Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization
183 (2021), S. 397–419
| Alexandra Fedorets, Cortney Shupe