Publications Based on SOEP Data: SOEPlit

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  • Language Barriers during the Fieldwork of the IAB-BAMF-SOEP Survey of Refugees in Germany

    The IAB-BAMF-SOEP Survey of Refugees is one of the first large-scale quantitative surveys in Germany focusing on refugees exclusively. It is able to provide valuable insights on the recent cohort of refugees who arrived in Germany as of the year 2013. However, due to the fact that most respondents of the target population are not proficient in German, the research partners who conducted the survey ...

    In: Dorothée Behr , Surveying the Migrant Population: Consideration of Linguistic and Cultural Issues (Gesis Schriftenreihe Band 19)
    Köln: Gesis - Leibniz-Institut für Sozialwissenschaften
    75-84
    | Jannes Jacobsen
  • In 2016, around One-Third of People in Germany Donated for Refugees and Ten Percent Helped out on Site—yet Concerns Are Mounting

    The presence of refugees in Germany and the challenges their integration poses have preoccupied the public for the past two years. According to the latest data of the Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP), many more people in Germany were concerned about migration and xenophobia last year than in 2013. The additional representative results of the Barometer of Public Opinion on Refugees in Germany in 2016 and ...

    In: DIW Economic Bulletin 7 (2017), 16/17, 165-176 | Jannes Jacobsen, Philipp Eisnecker, Jürgen Schupp
  • Direct Evidence on Risk Attitudes and Migration

    It has long been hypothesized that individuals' migration propensities depend on their risk attitudes, but the empirical evidence has been limited and indirect. We use newly available data from the German Socio-Economic Panel to measure directly the relationship between migration and risk attitudes. We find that individuals who are more willing to take risks are more likely to migrate. Our estimates ...

    In: Review of Economics and Statistics 92 (2010), 3, 684–689 | David A. Jaeger, Holger Bonin, Thomas Dohmen, Armin Falk, David Huffman, Uwe Sunde
  • Gender Differences in Life Satisfaction and Social Participation

    This paper deals with the effects of social participation activities on life satisfaction. Using the German General Social Survey (ALLBUS) for 2010, I present gender specific differences for several social activities, such as club memberships of political, welfare, health or more leisure time orientated groups. These activities have different impacts on male or female satisfaction. While sports and ...

    Munich: University Library of Munich, 2013,
    (MPRA Paper 46775)
    | Stephan Humpert
  • The kids are alright? A note on parental satisfaction in Germany

    In social sciences, research of satisfaction presents mixed or negative effects of parental satisfaction (e.g. Powdthavee 2009, Hansen 2012), while recent findings show that socio-economic differences matter (e.g. Myrskylä/Margolis 2014, Pollmann-Schult, 2014). Here, we use long run German panel data with fixed effects regressions and interaction terms to analyze the effects of birth on parental satisfaction. ...

    In: Theoretical and Applied Economics 22 (2015), 2, 285-292 | Stephan Humpert
  • Explaining Age and Gender Differences in Employment Rates: A Labor Supply-Side Perspective

    This paper takes a labor supply perspective (neoclassical labor supply, job search) to explain the lower employment rates of older workers and women. The basic rationale is that workers choose non-employment if their reservation wages are larger than the offered wages. Whereas the latter depend on workers’ productivity and firms’ decisions, reservation wages are largely determined by workers’ endowments ...

    In: Journal for Labour Market Research 46 (2013), 1, 1-17 | Stephan Humpert, Christian Pfeifer
  • On the interpretation of non-cognitive skills - What is being measured and why it matters

    Across academic sub-fields such as labor, education, and behavioral economics, the measurement and interpretation of non-cognitive skills varies widely. As a result, it is difficult to compare results on the importance of non-cognitive skills across literatures. Drawing from these literatures, this paper systematically relates various prototypical non-cognitive measures within one data set. Specifically, ...

    In: Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization 136 (2017), April 2017, 174-185 | John Eric Humphries, Fabian Kosse
  • The Economic Consequences of Widowhood on Elderly Women in the United States and Germany

    In: The Gerontologist 41 (2001), 1, 103-110 | Thomas L. Hungerford
  • Is There an American Way of Aging?: Income Dynamics of Elderly in the U.S. and Germany

    In: Reseach on Aging 25 (2003), 5, 435-455 | Thomas L. Hungerford
  • Firing Costs, Employment Fluctuations and Average Employment: An Examination of Germany

    1994, | Jennifer Hunt
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