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London:
Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR),
1994,
(CEPR Discussion Paper No. 1034)
| Rainer Winkelmann
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In:
Ulrich Rendtel, Manfred Ehling, et al. ,
Harmonisation of Panel Surveys and Data Quality (Chintex)
Wiesbaden: Statistisches Bundesamt
317-330
| Uwe Warner
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Social scientists usually assume that the attitudes, behaviors, and statuses of respondents to longitudinal surveys are not altered by the act of measuring them. If this assumption is false—or even if the quality of survey participants’ responses change because of measurement—then social scientists risk mischaracterizing the existence, magnitude, and correlates of changes across survey waves in respondents’ ...
In:
Sociological Methods & Research
41 (2012), 4, 491-534
| John Robert Warren, Andrew Halpern-Manners
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In:
European Sociological Review
19 (2003), 4, 361-378
| Dorothy Watson
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Dublin:
2004,
| Dorothy Watson
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The Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) Survey is one of only a small number of well-established, large, nationally-representative household panel studies conducted in the world. With annual data collection commencing in 2001 there are now over 10 years of unit record data available to researchers, with the promise of many more to come. While the design of the HILDA Survey owes ...
In:
Longitudinal and Life Course Studies
3 (2012), 3, 369-381
| Nicole Watson, Mark Wooden
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Previous research into the correlates and determinants of non-response in longitudinal surveys has focused exclusively on why it is that respondents at one survey wave choose not to participate at future waves. This is very understandable if non-response is always an absorbing state, but in many longitudinal surveys, and certainly most household panels, this is not so. Indeed, in these surveys it is ...
In:
Journal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series A (Statistics in Society)
177 (2014), 2, 499-522
| Nicole Watson, Mark Wooden
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Risk aversion is of great importance on a microeconomic and a macroeconomic level. First of all, risk aversion is an important factor in explaining many everyday decisions. Among these are decisions to invest money in different types of assets, the decision to enter the labour market and others like the decision to move (Guiso and Paiella, 2004). As risk tolerance is so important in life, one asks ...
Erlangen:
Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg,
2013,
(IWE Working Paper No. 01-2013)
| Christoph S. Weber
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Risk aversion is an important factor in explaining many everyday decisions. Thus, one asks which determinants can explain different attitudes towards risk. Several studies show different risk attitudes with respect to gender, age, income, and wealth (e.g. [19]). While these findings are hardly controversial, there is still some uncertainty about the effect of culture on risk tolerance. Thus, the main ...
In:
International Journal of Economics, Finance and Management Sciences
2 (2014), 2, 143-152
| Christoph S. Weber
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Motivations for migrants to return clearly change with integration, but the time-changing aspect of return migration has received little attention in the literature. This paper studies how migrants’ preferences for the home country change with intermarriage, i.e., marriage to a spouse from the host country. Specifically, I analyse the association between intermarriage and three outcomes related to ...
In:
IZA Journal of Migration
4 (2015), 7, 1-21
| Rosa Weber