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How can we evaluate the redistributive effect of welfare states? Do tax and transfer systems reduce the level of inequality generated in the market? In order to answer these questions, we need to be equipped with adequate measures of redistribution. Current measures employed in the sociology and politics of redistribution are seriously flawed. This paper elaborates the reasons why we cannot rely on ...
Luxembourg:
Luxembourg Income Study (LIS),
2009,
(Luxembourg Income Study Working Paper No. 513)
| Juan Rafael Morillas
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In:
Craig A. Parsons, Timothy M. Smeeding ,
Immigration and the Transformation of Europe
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
172-199
| Ann Morrisens
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Brussels:
European Network of Economic Policy Research Institutes (ENEPRI),
2004,
(ENEPRI Occasional Paper No. 6)
| Joergen Mortensen, C. Katharina Spieß, Costa-Font Thorsten Schneider, Concepcio Patxot
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Berlin:
Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin (WZB),
1997,
| Hugh Mosley, Stefan Speckesser
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Berlin:
Social Science Research Centre Berlin (WZB),
1997,
(WZB Discussion Paper No. FS I 97-208)
| Share Mosley, Stefan Speckesser
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Using German SOEP data, 1999 – 2009, this study analyzes state dependence in low-wage employment of western German women, where we distinguish between full-time and part-time working. We estimate a dynamic multinomial logit model with random effects and find that having a low-wage job – compared to having a high-wage job – ceteris paribus decreases the probability of being high-paid in the future. ...
In:
IZA Journal of European Labor Studies
3 (2014), 21, (online)
| Alexander Mosthaf, Thorsten Schank, Claus Schnabel
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This study examines the effects of retirement on lifestyle habits to determine the relationship between retirement and health. Looking at panel data from the Japanese Study of Aging and Retirement, fixed effects with time effects methods are used to account for the endogeneity of retirement. We then apply the fixed effects with time effects instrumental variable methods, after checking that the endogeneity ...
In:
Japanese Economic Review
67 (2016), 2, 169-191
| Hiroyuki Motegi, Yoshinori Nishimura, Kazuyuki Terada
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In the last years, there has been a shift from traditional measurements of affective well-being to approaches such as the day reconstruction method (DRM). While the traditional approaches often assess trait level differences in well-being, the DRM allows examining affective dynamics in everyday contexts. The latter may ultimately explain why some people feel more happy than others (e.g., because they ...
In:
Journal of Happiness Studies
20 (2019), 2, 641-663
| Dave Möwisch, Florian Schmiedek, David Richter, Annette Brose
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In:
Review of Managerial Science
1 (2008), 3, 209-235
| Grit Muehler, Michael Beckmann, Bernd Schauenberg
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In:
Small Business Economics
27 (2006), 1, 41-58
| Pamela Mueller