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625 results, from 591
  • Diskussionspapiere 290 / 2002

    A Multilevel Analysis of Child Care and the Transition to Motherhood in Western Germany

    In this paper, we take a multilevel perspective to investigate the role of child care in the transition to motherhood in Germany. We argue that in the European institutional context the availability of public day care and informal child care arrangements should be a central element of the local opportunity structure regarding the compatibility of childrearing and women's employment. Using data from ...

    2002| Karsten Hank, Michaela Kreyenfeld
  • Nicht-referierte Aufsätze

    Insider Privatisation, Manager Incentives and Restructuring

    In: Ekonomski anali 44 (2002), 153-4, S. 19-37 | Philipp J. H. Schröder
  • Diskussionspapiere 305 / 2002

    European Mothers' Time with Children: Differences and Similarities across Nine Countries

    We use data from the 1996 wave of the European Community Household Panel to present and compare the weekly number of hours mothers of children less than 16 years of age reported looking after children in nine European countries in 1996. In addition, we explore to what extent cross-country differences in socio-demographic characteristics and parents' employment status contribute to differences in maternal ...

    2002| Jutta M. Joesch, C. Katharina Spiess
  • Diskussionspapiere 311 / 2002

    Accounting for Poverty Differences between the United States, Great Britain, and Germany

    We propose a framework for comparing the relationship between poverty and personal characteristics across countries (or across years), and use it to compare levels and patterns of relative poverty in the USA, Great Britain and Germany during the 1990s. The higher aggregate poverty rates in the USA and in Britain relative to Germany were mostly accounted for by higher poverty rates conditional on characteristics, ...

    2002| Martin Biewen, Stephen P. Jenkins
  • Vierteljahrshefte zur Wirtschaftsforschung 1 / 2001

    The Duration of Marginal Employment in West Germany: A Survival Analysis Based on Spell Data

    We use data from the German Socio-Economic Panel from 1984 to 1995 to analyze longitudinal aspects of marginal employment (geringfügige Beschäftigung) in West Germany. After discussing problems of identifying marginal employment spells, we document that marginal employment spell vary considerably in the German labor market. Spell duration in our data ranges from one month to 12 years or more. Marginal ...

    2001| Jürgen Kolb, Axel Werwatz
  • Vierteljahrshefte zur Wirtschaftsforschung 1 / 2001

    Does Part-Time and Intermittent Work during Early Motherhood Lead to Regular Work Later? A comparison of Labor Behavior of Mothers with Young Children in Germany, Britain, The Netherlands and Sweden

    We use data from Great Britain, Germany, the Netherlands and Sweden to examine whether part-time and intermittent work during early motherhood leads to regular full-time work later. We find that in Sweden, by the time the first child is four years old 80 percent of mothers are working full-time if 25 hours is counted as full-time work, but only 30 percent if a 35-hour threshold is used. This finding ...

    2001| Siv S. Gustafsson, Eiko Kenjoh, Cécile Wetzels
  • Vierteljahrshefte zur Wirtschaftsforschung 1 / 2001

    Pathways into Self-Employment in the United States and Germany

    Using longitudinal data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics and the German Socio-Economic Panel, this research compares pathways into self-employment among men and women in the United States and Western Germany. Academic and vocational credentials are more important for stabilizing self-employment in the United States than in Germany, where the lack of credentials is a significant deterrent to ...

    2001| Patricia A. McManus
  • Vierteljahrshefte zur Wirtschaftsforschung 1 / 2001

    Timing of First Births in East Germany after Reunification

    When German reunification was accompanied by a rapid decline in aggregate fertility rates, researchers particularly assigned high unemployment rates a dominant role for changes in fertility behavior. The aim of this paper is twofold. First, we investigate changes in the timing of first birth in East Germany after reunification. Using data from the GSOEP, we show that even after reunification East Germans ...

    2001| Michaela Kreyenfeld
  • Vierteljahrshefte zur Wirtschaftsforschung 1 / 2001

    Success at Work, Life Patterns, and Overall Life Satisfaction: Changes in the Lives of Men and Women since the 1980s in West Germany

    This paper focuses on the structural relationship between family building and upward mobility. Typically this relationship is analyzed for women only, while we include men as well. With new patterns of intimate partnerships and non-traditional families, on the one hand, and a changing labor market, on the other hand, new assertions about their connection have emerged. Using SOEP-data, the possible ...

    2001| Angelika Tölke
  • Vierteljahrshefte zur Wirtschaftsforschung 1 / 2001

    Gender Effects As Macro-Level Effects: Germany and the United States 1991-1997

    My research examines within-nation differences as well as cross-national differences in socially stratified outcomes, specifically the distribution of household incomes. I build on the considerable empirical evidence suggesting that group memberships are important factors in shaping one' s life course and in determining the level of social inequality. I examine seven years of longitudinal data from ...

    2001| Lisa M. Amoroso
625 results, from 591
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