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Barcelona:
University of Barcelona,
2004,
| Magda Mercader-Prats, Horacio Levy
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In the face of persistent health inequalities in later life, the objective of the study is to examine whether distinct forms of health lifestyles and individual or collective social capital predict the probability of health resilience among a cohort of men and women aged 65 and older from lower social classes. A longitudinal study design based on four waves of the German Socio-Economic Panel (2002 ...
Wiesbaden:
Bundesinsitut für Bevölkerungsforschung (BiB),
2012,
(BiB Working Paper 2/2012)
| Andreas Mergenthaler
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Colchester:
University of Essex,
1993,
(European Scientific Network on Household Panel Studies (ESF) Working Paper No. 87)
| Lucie Merkle
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In:
Economics Letters
38 (1992), 1, 77-81
| Lucie Merkle, Klaus F. Zimmermann
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Berlin:
Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Wirtschaftswissenschaftliche Fakultät,
1996,
(Discussion Paper No. 55)
| Antje Mertens
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Aachen:
Shaker,
1998,
| Antje Mertens
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To counteract the financial pressure emerging in aging societies, statutory pension schemes are undergoing fundamental reforms in many Western countries. Starting with cohort 1937, Germany introduced permanent pension deductions for early retirement. This study examines the profitability of pension contributions against the background of this reform for cohorts 1935–1945. Internal rates of return (IRR) ...
In:
German Economic Review
17 (2016), 2, 206-233
| Holger Lüthen
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This study examines the social contexts of gambling and analyzes social motivations for playing the lottery. We test three sociological approaches simultaneously: network effects, consumption theory, and strain theory. The data used (SOEP-IS, N = 5868 individuals) has several advantages beyond being a large-scale representative sample of the German population. With information on households, we can ...
In:
Journal of Gambling Studies
34 (2018), 4, 1185–1203
| Mark Lutter, Daria Tisch, Jens Beckert
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In this article we present estimates of the tempo-adjusted total fertility rate in Western and Eastern Germany from 1955 to 2008. Tempo adjustment of the total fertility rate (TFR) requires data on the annual number of births by parity and age of the mother. Since official statistics do not provide such data for West Germany as well as Eastern Germany from 1990 on we used alternative data sources which ...
In:
Comparative Population Studies - Zeitschrift für Bevölkerungswissenschaft
35 (2010), 3, 605-636
| Marc Luy, Olga Pötzsch
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In:
Paul B. Biemer, Brad Edwards, Frauke Kreuter, Lars E. Lyberg, Clyde Tucker, Brady T. West, Stephanie Eckman ,
Total Survey Error in Practice
New York: Wiley
| Peter Lynn, Peter Lugtig