Publications Based on SOEP Data: SOEPlit

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  • Trajectories of Multiple Subjective Well-Being Facets Across Old Age: The Role of Health and Personality

    Subjective well-being is often characterized by average stability across old age, but individual differences are substantial and not yet fully understood. This study targets physical and cognitive health and personality as individual difference characteristics and examines their unique and interactive roles forlevel and change in a number of different facets of subjective well-being. We make use of ...

    In: Psychology and Aging 35 (2020), 6, 894-909 | Sophie Potter, Johanna Drewelies, Jenny Wagner, Sandra Düzel, Annette Brose, Ilja Demuth, Elisabeth Steinhagen-Thiessen, Ulman Lindenberger, Gert G. Wagner, Denis Gerstorf
  • Refugees’ High Employment Expectations: Partially Met

    This report compares employment expectations among refugees in Germany in 2016 with their actual employment situation in 2018, using the IAB-BAMF-SOEP Survey of Refugees in Germany. In 2016, the majority of refugees reported that the probability they would find employment within two years was high. Employment expectations were met by 54 percent of all refugees; yet 35 percent of refugees who articulated ...

    In: DIW Weekly Report 34/2020 (2020), 337-343 | Daniel Graeber, Felicitas Schikora
  • Development of perceived job insecurity among young workers: a latent class growth analysis

    Purpose: Individual differences in the development of perceived job insecurity among young workers may be influenced by characteristics of the first job (contract type and sector) and individual background (education and previous unemployment), and can have implications for subsequent health and well-being. The aim of this study was to investigate the development of perceived job insecurity during ...

    In: International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health 92 (2019), 6, 901-918 | Katharina Klug, Claudia Bernhard-Oettel, Anne Mäkikangas, Ulla Kinnunen, Magnus Sverke
  • Vocational Education and Employment: Explaining Cohort Variations in Life Course Patterns

    A stylized finding on returns to vocational education is that vocational compared to general education generates a differential life course pattern of employability: while vocational education guarantees smooth transitions into the labour market and thus generates initial advantages, these erode with increasing age, leading to late-life reversals in employment chances. We contribute to this research ...

    In: Social Inclusion 7 (2019), 3, 224-253 | Fabian Kratz, Alexander Patzina, Corinna Kleinert, Hans Dietrich
  • German income taxation and the timing of marriage

    I investigate how the German income tax code affects the timing of marriages. The German income tax code allows married couples to benefit from full income splitting relative to unmarried couples. If their individual incomes differ, legally married couples may benefit from jointly filing their income taxes and thus fully splitting their incomes because of increasing marginal tax rates. The gain from ...

    In: Applied Economics 52 (2020), 5, 475-489 | Alexander Fink
  • 2D:4D and Self-Employment: A Preregistered Replication Study in a Large General Population Sample

    The 2D: 4D digit ratio, the ratio of the length of the second finger to the length of the fourth finger, is often considered a proxy for testosterone exposure in utero. A recent study reported, among other things, an association between the left-hand 2D:4D and self-employment in a sample of 974 adults. In this preregistered study, we replicate the 2D:4D results on a sample of more than 2100 adults ...

    In: Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice 46 (2022), 1, 21-43 | Frank M. Fossen, Levent Neyse, Magnus Johannesson, Anna Dreber
  • Selection into Employment and the Gender Wage Gap across the Distribution and over Time

    Using quantile regression methods, this paper analyses the gender wage gap across the wage distribution and over time (1990-2014), while controlling for changing sample selection into full-time employment. Our findings show that the selection-corrected gender wage gap is much larger than the one observed in the data, which is mainly due to large positive selection of women into full-time employment. ...

    Berlin: DIW Berlin, 2020,
    (SOEPpapers 1070)
    | Patricia Gallego Granados, Katharina Wrohlich
  • School entry, afternoon care, and mothers’ labour supply

    The availability of childcare is a crucial factor for mothers’ labour force participation. While most of the literature examines childcare for preschool children, we specifically focus on primary school-aged children, estimating the effect of formal afternoon care on maternal labour supply. To do so, we use a novel matching technique, entropy balancing, and draw on the rich and longitudinal data of ...

    In: Empirical Economics 57 (2019), 3, 769-803 | Ludovica Gambaro, Jan Marcus, Frauke Peter
  • The More Concentrated, the Better Represented? The Geographical Concentration of Immigrants and Their Descriptive Representation in the German Mixed-Member System

    Does the geographical concentration of ethnic minorities influence their descriptive representation in closed-list systems? Counterintuitive to the idea that single-member district electoral rules are necessary for minorities’ geographical representation, we argue that, in closed-list systems, parties are incentivised to allocate promising list positions to those minority candidates who are based in ...

    In: International Political Science Review 40 (2019), 5, 643-658 | Lucas Geese, Diana Schacht
  • Cohort Differences in Adult-Life Trajectories of Internal and External Control Beliefs: A Tale of More and Better Maintained Internal Control and Fewer External Constraints

    Lifespan theory posits that socio-historical contexts shape individual development. Inline with this proposition, cohort differences favoring later-born cohorts have beenwidely documented for cognition and health. However, little is known about historicalchange in how key resources of psychosocial functioning such as control beliefsdevelop in old age. We pooled data from three independent samples: ...

    In: Psychology and Aging 34 (2019), 8, 1090-1108 | Denis Gerstorf, Johanna Drewelies, Sandra Düzel, Jacqui Smith, Hans-Werner Wahl, Oliver Schilling, Ute Kunzmann, Jelena S. Siebert, Martin Katzorrek, Peter Eibich, Ilja Demuth, Elisabeth Steinhagen-Thiessen, Gert G. Wagner, Ulman Lindenberger, Jutta Heckhausen, Nilam Ram
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