Topic Labor and Employment

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127 results, from 101
  • DIW Economic Bulletin 37 / 2016

    Better Career Opportunities for Women Will Help Lower the Gender Pay Gap: Nine Questions to Elke Holst

    2016
  • Externe Monographien

    Peer Effects in Parental Leave Decisions

    This paper analyzes to what extent parental leave decisions of mothers with young children depend on the decisions made by their coworkers. The identification of peer effects, which are defined as indirect effects of the behavior of a social reference group on individual outcomes, bears various challenges due to correlated characteristics within social groups and endogenous group membership. We overcome ...

    Bonn: IZA, 2016, 39 S.
    (Discussion Paper Series / Forschungsinstitut zur Zukunft der Arbeit ; 10173)
    | Clara Welteke, Katharina Wrohlich
  • Diskussionspapiere 1600 / 2016

    Peer Effects in Parental Leave Decisions

    This paper analyzes to what extent parental leave decisions of mothers with young children depend on the decisions made by their coworkers. The identification of peer effects, which are defined as indirect effects of the behavior of a social reference group on individual outcomes, bears various challenges due to correlated characteristics within social groups and endogenous group membership. We overcome ...

    2016| Clara Welteke, Katharina Wrohlich
  • Diskussionspapiere 1593 / 2016

    Couple's Labor Supply, Taxes, and the Division of Housework in a Gender-Neutral Lab

    We use a lab-in-the-field experiment to investigate intra-couple labor supply decisions and the division of housework under individual and joint income taxation systems. In order to eliminate problems of endogenous intra-couple time use decisions, we exogenously varied not only the taxation system but also the intra-couple roles of primary and secondary earners. Using work effort as a proxy for labor ...

    2016| Melanie Schröder, Norma Burow
  • DIW Economic Bulletin 3 / 2016

    Corporate Boards of Large Companies: More Momentum Needed for Gender Parity

    Germany’s large corporations still have a long way to go before achieving balanced representation of men and women on their boards. At the end of 2015, the share of women on the executive boards of the top 200 companies in Germany was a good six percent, an increase of less than one percentage point over 2014. The share of women on the supervisory boards of these top 200 companies was almost 20 percent ...

    2016| Elke Holst, Anja Kirsch
  • DIW Economic Bulletin 3 / 2016

    Higher Shares of Women on Corporate Boards Still a Long Way Off: Eight Questions to Elke Holst

    2016
  • DIW Economic Bulletin 3 / 2016

    Financial Sector: Share of Women on Corporate Boards Increases Slightly but Men Still Call the Shots

    In 2015, the share of women in the top decision-making bodies of the financial sector increased once again but men remain in the overwhelming majority and thus continue to call the shots. At the end of 2015, women made up just under eight percent of executive board members of the 100 largest banks in Germany. The corresponding figure for the 59 largest insurance companies was a good nine percent. In ...

    2016| Elke Holst, Anja Kirsch
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Two Steps Forward - One Step Back? Evaluating Contradicting Child Care Policies in Germany

    We apply a structural model of mothers’ labor supply and child care choices to evaluate the effects of two child care reforms in Germany that were introduced simultaneously. A legal claim to subsidized child care became effective for children aged 1 year or older. Moreover, a new child care allowance (‘Betreuungsgeld’) came into effect. It is granted to families who do not use publicly subsidized child ...

    In: CESifo Economic Studies 62 (2016), 4, S. 672-698 | Kai-Uwe Müller, Katharina Wrohlich
  • DIW Economic Bulletin 49 / 2016

    The Parental Leave Benefit: A Key Family Policy Measure, One Decade Later

    On January 1, 2017, the parental leave benefit will be celebrating its tenth anniversary. Although its implementation was fervidly debated, it has become a widely accepted family policy measure. Its impact on parental labor supply, the division oflabor between parents, fertility, and indicators that reflect the well-being of parents and children have been examined from a variety of perspectives. A ...

    2016| Mathias Huebener, Kai-Uwe Müller, C. Katharina Spieß, Katharina Wrohlich
  • DIW Economic Bulletin 49 / 2016

    The Parental Leave Benefit Has Increased Average Household Income for Young Families in the First Year: Six Questions for Katharina Wrohlich

    2016
127 results, from 101
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