Publications Based on SOEP Data: SOEPlit

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  • Self-assessed health, reference levels, and mortality

    the article studies the relationship between self-assessed health (SAH) and subsequent mortality in the German Socio-Economic Panel. Specifically, I examine whether socio-economic characteristics of respondents have an effect on mortality, conditional on SAH. Such conditional effects are shown to exist for various covariates, including age, income and wealth. These findings question the comparability ...

    In: Applied Economics 40 (2008), 5, 569-582 | Hendrik Jürges
  • Health Insurance Status and Physician Behavior in Germany

    Germany has a two-tier system of statutory and primary private health insurance. Both insurance types provide fee-for-service insurance, but chargeable fees for identical services are more than twice as large for privately insured as for statutorily insured patients. Using German SOEP 2002 data, I analyze the effect of insurance status on the insured's number of doctor visits. Conditional on health, ...

    In: Schmollers Jahrbuch - SOEP after 25 Years. Proceedings of the 8th International Socio-Economic Panel User Conference 129 (2009), 2, 297-307 | Hendrik Jürges
  • Provision for Old Age - National and International Survey Data to Support Research and Policy on Aging

    This report reviews recent trends in the collection of multidisciplinary and longitudinal data in the area of aging research, both in Germany and internationally. It also discusses important developments such as linkage with administrative records, the inclusion of health measurements and biomarkers, and the inclusion of populations in institutions, particularly nursing homes.

    Berlin: Rat für Sozial- und WirtschaftsDaten (RatSWD), 2009,
    (RatSWD Working Paper No. 94)
    | Hendrik Jürges
  • Provision for Old Age: National and International Survey Data to Support Research and Policy on Aging

    This report reviews recent trends in the collection of multidisciplinary and longitudinal data in the area of aging research, both in Germany and internationally. It also discusses important developments such as linkage with administrative records, the inclusion of health measurements and biomarkers, and the inclusion of populations in institutions, particularly nursing homes.

    In: Rat für Sozial- und WirtschaftsDaten (RatSWD) , Building on Progress. Expanding the Research Infrastructure for the Social, Economic, and Behavioral Sciences
    Opladen: Budrich Unipress
    1093-1106
    | Hendrik Jürges
  • Studying Justice: Measurement, Estimation, and Analysis of the Actual Reward and the Just Reward

    Bonn: Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA), 2007,
    (IZA DP No. 2592)
    | Guillermina Jasso
  • Comparative Analysis of Family Benefits in Germany, Belgium, France, Great-Britain and Luxembourg

    Walferdange (Luxemburg): CEPS/INSTEAD, 1996,
    (PACO Document No. 14)
    | Bruno Jeandidier, Etienne Albiser
  • Measurement of the Income Distribution: An Academic User's View

    Köln: CEIES, 1999, | Stephen P. Jenkins
  • The British Household Panel Survey and its income data

    This paper provides a self-contained introduction to the British Household Panel Survey (BHPS), concentrating on aspects relevant to analysis of the distribution of household income. I discuss BHPS design features and how data on net household income are derived. The BHPS net household income definition is modelled on that used in Britain’s official personal income distribution statistics (Households ...

    Colchester: University of Essex, 2010,
    (ISER Working Paper 2010-33)
    | Stephen P. Jenkins
  • New Directions in the Analysis of Inequality and Poverty

    Colchester: University of Essex, Institute for Social and Economic Research (ISER), 2007,
    (ISER Working Paper No. 2007-11)
    | Stephen P. Jenkins, John Micklewright
  • Why are Child Poverty Rates Higher in Britain than in Germany? A Longitudinal Perspective

    We analyze why child poverty rates were much higher in Britain than in Western Germany during the 1990s, using a framework focusing on poverty transition rates. Child poverty exit rates were significantly lower, and poverty entry rates significantly higher, in Britain. We decompose these cross-national differences into differences in the prevalence of “trigger events” (changes in household composition, ...

    In: Journal of Human Resources 38 (2003), 2, 441-465 | Stephen P. Jenkins, Christian Schluter
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