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By exploiting the unique social and economic differences between East and West Germany, the authors investigated how macro-level opportunities interact with couple-level decision making to explain gender differences in the determinants and economic outcomes of household migration. By incorporating regional socioeconomic conditions into household bargaining theory, 4 hypotheses for each region were ...
In:
Journal of Marriage and Family
78 (2016), 4, 1063-1082
| Natascha Nisic, Silvia Maja Melzer
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In:
Wiemer Salverda, Brian Nolan, Timothy M. Smeeding ,
The Oxford Handbook of Economic Inequality
Oxford: Oxford University Press
315-341
| Brian Nolan, Ive Marx
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In:
Review of Income and Wealth
51 (2005), 4, 537-560
| Brian Nolan, Timothy M. Smeeding
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In:
Stephen P. Jenkins, John Micklewright ,
Inequality and Poverty Re-examined
Oxford: Oxford University Press
146-165
| Brian Nolan, Christopher T. Whelan
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In:
Bent Greve ,
Happiness and Social Policy in Europe
Cheltenham: Edward Elgar
xx
| Heinz-Herbert Noll, Stefan Weick
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The standard of living of persons and households is not only a matter of income, but ultimately depends on the level and quality of their consumption in terms of goods and services purchased. Consumption expenditures can be regarded as the result of decisions based on the demand, preferences and limited economic resources, and are thus manifestations not only of different lifestyles, but also of inequality, ...
In:
International Review of Economics
62 (2015), 2, 101-119
| Heinz-Herbert Noll, Stefan Weick
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University of Iowa:
Department of Global Studies,
1994,
(University of Iowa - Discussion Paper)
| Holly Nollen
-
In:
Social Science & Medicine
58 (2004), 1, 119-136
| Ellen Nolte, Martin McKnee
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Using long-running data from the German Socio-Economic Panel (1984–2012), we investigate the impact of paternal unemployment on child labour market and education outcomes. We first describe correlation patterns and then use sibling fixed effects and the Gottschalk (1996) method to identify the causal effects of paternal unemployment. We find different patterns for sons and daughters. Paternal unemployment ...
In:
Oxford Economic Papers
69 (2017), 1, 213-238
| Steffen Müller, Regina T. Riphahn, Caroline Schwientek
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Florence:
European University Institute,
1995,
| Walter Müller, Susanne Steinmann, Renate Ell