Publications Based on SOEP Data: SOEPlit

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  • Market Share and Market Segment of Public Employment Services

    Berlin: Social Science Research Centre Berlin (WZB), 1997,
    (WZB Discussion Paper No. FS I 97-208)
    | Share Mosley, Stefan Speckesser
  • Low-wage employment versus unemployment: Which one provides better prospects for women?

    Using German SOEP data, 1999 – 2009, this study analyzes state dependence in low-wage employment of western German women, where we distinguish between full-time and part-time working. We estimate a dynamic multinomial logit model with random effects and find that having a low-wage job – compared to having a high-wage job – ceteris paribus decreases the probability of being high-paid in the future. ...

    In: IZA Journal of European Labor Studies 3 (2014), 21, (online) | Alexander Mosthaf, Thorsten Schank, Claus Schnabel
  • Does Retirement Change Lifestyle Habits?

    This study examines the effects of retirement on lifestyle habits to determine the relationship between retirement and health. Looking at panel data from the Japanese Study of Aging and Retirement, fixed effects with time effects methods are used to account for the endogeneity of retirement. We then apply the fixed effects with time effects instrumental variable methods, after checking that the endogeneity ...

    In: Japanese Economic Review 67 (2016), 2, 169-191 | Hiroyuki Motegi, Yoshinori Nishimura, Kazuyuki Terada
  • Capturing Affective Well-Being in Daily Life with the Day Reconstruction Method: A Refined View on Positive and Negative Affect

    In the last years, there has been a shift from traditional measurements of affective well-being to approaches such as the day reconstruction method (DRM). While the traditional approaches often assess trait level differences in well-being, the DRM allows examining affective dynamics in everyday contexts. The latter may ultimately explain why some people feel more happy than others (e.g., because they ...

    In: Journal of Happiness Studies 20 (2019), 2, 641-663 | Dave Möwisch, Florian Schmiedek, David Richter, Annette Brose
  • The Returns to Continuous Training in Germany: New Evidence from Propensity Score Matching Estimators

    In: Review of Managerial Science 1 (2008), 3, 209-235 | Grit Muehler, Michael Beckmann, Bernd Schauenberg
  • Entrepreneurship in the Region: Breeding Ground for Nascent Entrepreneurs?

    In: Small Business Economics 27 (2006), 1, 41-58 | Pamela Mueller
  • Personality Development In Old Age Relates to Physical Health and Cognitive Performance: Evidence from the Berlin Aging Study II

    We examine how late-life personality development relates to overall morbidity as well as specific performance-based indicators of physical and cognitive functioning in 1,232 older adults in the Berlin Aging Study II (aged 65-88 years). Latent growth models indicated that, on average, neuroticism and conscientiousness decline over time, whereas extraversion and openness increase and agreeableness remains ...

    In: Journal of Research in Personality 65 (2016), December 2016, 94-108 | Swantje Mueller, Jenny Wagner, Johanna Drewelies, Sandra Duezel, Peter Eibich, Jule Specht, Ilja Demuth, Elisabeth Steinhagen-Thiessen, Gert G. Wagner, Denis Gerstorf
  • How far reaches the power of personality? Personality predictors of terminal decline in well-being

    Personality is a powerful predictor of central life outcomes, including subjective well-being. Yet, we still know little about how personality manifests in the very last years of life when well-being typically falls rapidly. Here, we investigate whether the Big Five personality traits buffer (or magnify) terminal decline in well-being beyond and in interaction with functioning in key physical and social ...

    In: Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 116 (2019), 4, 634-650 | Swantje Mueller, Jenny Wagner, Gert G. Wagner, Nilam Ram, Denis Gerstorf
  • Replication Studies in Economics — How Many and Which Papers Are Chosen for Replication, and Why?

    We investigate how often replication studies are published in empirical economics and what types of journal articles are replicated. We find that between 1974 and 2014 0.1% of publications in the top 50 economics journals were replication studies. We consider the results of published formal replication studies (whether they are negating or reinforcing) and their extent: Narrow replication studies are ...

    In: Research Policy 48 (2019), 1, 62-83 | Frank Mueller-Langer, Benedikt Fecher, Dietmar Harhoff, Gert G. Wagner
  • Long-term income and deprivation-based poverty among the elderly

    In: Hans-Jürgen Andreß , Empirical Poverty Research in a Comparative Perspective
    Aldershot et al.: Ashgate
    229-256
    | Ruud J. A. Muffels, Henk-Jan Dirven
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