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Dublin:
Eurofound,
2005,
(Report for the European Foundation for the Improvement of Living and Working Conditions)
| Anni Weiler
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Dublin:
Eurofound,
2006,
(Report for the European Foundation for the Improvement of Living and Working Conditions)
| Anni Weiler
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Dublin:
European Foundation for the Improvement of Living and Working Conditions,
2006,
| Anni Weiler
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Cambridge, MA and London:
The MIT Press,
2015,
| Joachim Weimann, Andreas Knabe, Ronnie Schöb
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In 2012/13, a survey of German employers was conducted using face-to-face and paper-and-pencil interviews (N = 1,708; response rate = 30.1%). Establishments were sampled based on address information provided by employed participants in the Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP) study. The information obtained from both surveys can be linked in order to create a linked employer–employee data set concerning organizational ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2016,
(SOEPpapers 829)
| Michael Weinhardt, Alexia Meyermann, Stefan Liebig, Jürgen Schupp
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In:
Jahrbücher für Nationalökonomie und Statistik - Journal of Economics and Statistics
237 (2017), 5, 457-467
| Michael Weinhardt, Alexia Meyermann, Stefan Liebig, Jürgen Schupp
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This thesis researches the difference of job satisfaction between men and women after promotion. According to literature, promotion leads to an increase in job satisfaction. However, it might affect women and men differently. Although women are just as likely to receive a promotion as men, they still perceive lower chances to be promoted. This suggests that if they do get promoted, women ́s job satisfaction ...
2019,
| Marie Juliane Weinke
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Zurich:
University of Zurich,
2003,
(Socioeconomic Institute Working Paper No. 0314)
| Rainer Winkelmann
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Zurich:
University of Zurich,
2003,
(Socioeconomic Institute Working Paper No. 0311)
| Rainer Winkelmann
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The German health care reform of 1997 provides a natural experiment for evaluating the price sensitivity of demand for physicians' services. As a part of the reform, co-payments for prescription drugs were increased step up to 200%. However, certain groups of people were exempted from the increase, providing a natural control group against which the changed demand for physicians' services ...
In:
Health Economics
13 (2004), 11, 1081-1089
| Rainer Winkelmann