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117 results, from 111
  • DIW Economic Bulletin 11 / 2014

    Eastern Germany Ahead in Employment of Women

    Almost a quarter of a century after the fall of the Wall, there are still more women in employment in eastern Germany than in the west. Although the disparity is marginal now, the two regions started from dramatically different levels. In 1991, immediately after reunification, the employment rate for women in western Germany was 54.6 percent, but since then it has increased year on year, reaching 67.5 ...

    2014| Elke Holst, Anna Wieber
  • DIW Economic Bulletin 3 / 2014

    Women Still the Exception on Executive Boards of Germany's Large Firms: Gradually Increasing Representation on Supervisory Boards

    The trend toward more women on the corporate boards of German companies continued in 2013, albeit on a small scale. The share of women on the supervisory boards of the 200 largest companies increased by more than two percentage points, and thus at a somewhat higher rate than in recent years, to just over 15 percent. The corresponding share of women on executive boards virtually stagnated at a low level ...

    2014| Elke Holst, Anja Kirsch
  • DIW Economic Bulletin 3 / 2014

    Public Companies Could Play a Pioneering Role: Six Questions to Elke Holst

    2014
  • DIW Economic Bulletin 3 / 2014

    Financial Sector: Upward Trend in Share of Women on Corporate Boards Progressing Only in Small Steps

    Last year, more women were appointed to the executive boards of major financial institutions. The share of women on the executive boards of banks and savings banks at the end of 2013 was a good six percent, which represents an increase of almost two percentage points over the previous year. This increase is primarily attributable to changes at private financial institutions and cooperative banks. At ...

    2014| Elke Holst, Anja Kirsch
  • Diskussionspapiere 1396 / 2014

    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 childcare reforms in Germany that were introduced simultaneously in August 2013. First, a legal claim to subsidized child care became effective for all children aged one year or older. Second, a new benefit called ‘Betreuungsgeld’ came into effect that is granted to families who do not use public ...

    2014| Kai-Uwe Müller, Katharina Wrohlich
  • Diskussionspapiere 1366 / 2014

    The Effects of Family Policy on Mothers' Labor Supply: Combining Evidence from a Structural Model and a Natural Experiment

    Parental leave and subsidized child care are prominent examples of family policies supporting the reconciliation of family life and labor market careers for mothers. In this paper, we combine different empirical strategies to evaluate the employment effects of these policies for mothers in Germany. In particular we estimate a structural labor supply model and exploit a natural experiment, i.e. the ...

    2014| Johannes Geyer, Peter Haan, Katharina Wrohlich
  • Research Project

    Work Incentives, Earnings-Related Subsidies, and Employment in Low-Wage Labor Markets - Empirical Analysis and Policy Simulations for Germany 

    The goal of this project is to empirically analyze the work incentive and employment effects of earnings-related subsidies in the presence of high structural unemployment when labor market flexibility is hindered by wage rigidity related to institutional factors, in particular minimum wages and means-tested income support for unemployed people. We specify and estimate a structural microeconometric...

    Recurring Project| Public Economics, Gender Economics
117 results, from 111
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