Publications Based on SOEP Data: SOEPlit

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  • Does education reduce wage inequality? Quantile regression evidence from 16 countries

    In: Labour Economics 11 (2004), 3, 355-371 | Pedro S. Martins, Pedro T. Pereira
  • The Welfare State and Anti-Poverty Policy in Rich Countries

    This paper is prepared as a chapter for the Handbook of Income Distribution, Volume 2 (edited by A. B. Atkinson and F. Bourguignon, Elsevier-North Holland, forthcoming). Like the other chapters in the volume (and its predecessor), the aim is to provide a comprehensive review of a particular area of research. The aim of this chapter is to highlight some key aspects of recent economic research on the ...

    Bonn: Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA), 2014,
    (IZA DP No. 8154)
    | Ive Marx, Brian Nolan, Javier Olivera
  • The paradox of redistribution revisited: and that it may rest in peace?

    There is a long-standing controversy over the question of whether targeting social transfers towards the bottom part of the income distribution actually enhances or weakens their redistributive impact. Korpi and Palme have influentially claimed that “the more we target benefits at the poor, the less likely we are to reduce poverty and inequality”. The basic empirical underpinning of this claim is a ...

    Luxembourg: Luxembourg Income Study (LIS), 2013,
    (LIS Working Paper Series No. 593)
    | Ive Marx, Lina Salanauskaite, Gerlinde Verbist
  • The Unequal Incidence of Non-Standard Employment across Occupational Groups: An Empirical Analysis of Post-Industrial Labour Markets in Germany and Europe

    The paper addresses an often neglected question in labour market research: to which extent do outcomes aggregated on the national level disguise occupational diversity in employment conditions? In particular, how and why do occupational groups differ with regard to the incidence of non-standard employment? To explore these questions, the paper derives a detailed occupational scheme from the literature, ...

    Bonn: Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA), 2011,
    (IZA DP No. 5521)
    | Paul Marx
  • Immigrants between labour market and poverty

    In: Peter Krause, Gerhard Bäcker, Walter Hanesch , Combating Poverty in Europe: The German Welfare Regime in Practice
    Aldershot: Ashgate
    223-245
    | Michael Maschke
  • Public pensions in Italy and Germany: a comparison based on panel data

    Rome: 2000, | Giovanni Mastrobuoni
  • How cohabitation, marriage, separation, and divorce influence BMI: A prospective panel study

    Objective: This study examines how changes in cohabitation or marital status affect Body Mass Index (BMI) over time in a large representative sample. Method: Participants were 20,950 individuals (50% female; 19 to 100 years), representative of the German population, who provided 81,926 observations over 16 years. Face-to-face interviews were used to obtain demographic data, including cohabitation and ...

    In: Health Psychology 37 (2018), 10, 948-958 | Jutta Mata, David Richter, Thorsten Schneider, Ralph Hertwig
  • Risk Preference: A View from Psychology

    Psychology offers conceptual and analytic tools that can advance the discussion on the nature of risk preference and its measurement in the behavioral sciences. We discuss the revealed and stated preference measurement traditions, which have coexisted in both psychology and economics in the study of risk preferences, and explore issues of temporal stability, convergent validity, and predictive validity ...

    In: Journal of Economic Perspectives 32 (2018), 2, 155-172 | Rui Mata, Renato Frey, David Richter, Jürgen Schupp, Ralph Hertwig
  • The Impact of Pension Reforms on Older People's Income: a Comparative View

    In: G. Hughes, J. Stewart , Reforming Pensions in Europe: Evolution of Pensions Financing and Sources of Retirement Income
    Cheltenham: Edward Elgar
    107-140
    | Antoine Math
  • Modifying the Rebound: It depends! Explaining Mobility Behaviour on the Basis of the German Socio-Economic Panel

    We address the empirical question to which extent higher fuel efficiency of cars affects additional travel and how this behavioural aspect is modified by additional variables. The data set used to estimate a theoretical model of the rebound effect covers two panel waves, 1998 and 2003, taken from the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP). To take full advantage of the information in the data available, ...

    In: Energy Policy 41 (2012), 1, 29-35 | Wenzel Matiaske, Roland Menges, Martin Spiess
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