Publications Based on SOEP Data: SOEPlit

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  • The Effect of Benefit Reductions on the Retirement Age: The Heterogeneous Response of Manual and Non‐Manual Workers

    I estimate the effect of benefit reductions on the timing of retirement. The introduction of actuarial adjustments in the German public pension system serves as a source of exogenous variation to estimate discrete time transition rates into retirement for individuals of age 60–66. Responses to benefit reductions are elaborated separately for manual and non-manual workers. On average, individuals postpone ...

    In: Review of Income and Wealth 64 (2018), 1, 213-238 | Matthias Giesecke
  • Bridge Unemployment in Germany: Response in Labour Supply to an Increased Early Retirement Age

    This study examines an increase in the early retirement age from 60 to 63 for the group of older unemployed men in Germany. As consequence of this policy reform, the time to retirement is increased from the perspective of recently unemployed individuals and therefore serves as a source of exogenous variation. We estimate continuous time hazard models for individuals at risk of leaving the state unemployment ...

    Bochum, Dortmund, Duisburg, Essen: Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Department of Economics, Technische Universität Dortmund, Department of Economics and Social Sciences, Universität Duisburg-Essen, Department of Economics and Rheinisch-Westfälisches Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung (RWI), 2013,
    (Ruhr Economic Papers #410)
    | Matthias Giesecke, Michael Kind
  • Inequality of Opportunity in Retirement Age – The Role of Physical Job Demands

    We quantify differences in the retirement age between manual and non-manual workers and evaluate these differences in the context of the literature on equality of opportunity. The focus is on the question how individual background during childhood transmits through physical demands of occupations on retirement ages. Individual retrospective data from the German Socio-Economic Panel are used to analyse ...

    Bochum, Dortmund, Duisburg, Essen: Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Department of Economics, Technische Universität Dortmund, Department of Economics and Social Sciences, Universität Duisburg-Essen, Department of Economics and Rheinisch-Westfälisches Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung (RWI), 2014,
    (Ruhr Economic Papers #492)
    | Matthias Giesecke, Sarah Okoampah
  • Differences in the Patterns of in-work Poverty in Germany and the UK

    This study analyses differences in individual-level working poverty determinants between Germany and the UK. These differences are linked to institutional patterns at the country level. Here, we observe that the two countries differ especially in bargaining centralisation, employment protection legislation and family policy. At the same time, the levels of decommodification and labour market regulation ...

    In: European Societies 17 (2015), 1, 27-46 | Marco Giesselmann
  • The Individual in Context(s): Research Potentials of the Socio-Economic Panel Study (SOEP) in Sociology

    The German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP) study is a rich resource for sociologists, mainly because it offers direct measures of respondents’ contexts. The SOEP data provide (i) information retrieved from individuals themselves, (ii) direct information retrieved from their parents, partners, and organizations, (iii) prospectively collected information on past characteristics, and (iv) regional and spatial ...

    In: European Sociological Review 35 (2019), 5, 738-755 | Marco Giesselmann, Sandra Bohmann, Jan Goebel, Peter Krause, Elisabeth Liebau, David Richter, Diana Schacht, Carsten Schröder, Jürgen Schupp, Stefan Liebig
  • Motherhood and mental well-being in Germany: Linking a longitudinal life course design and the gender perspective on motherhood

    Based on considerations of societal mothering ideologies, qualitative gender studies suggest detrimental effects of motherhood on women’s mental well-being. However, numerous quantitative life course analyses find no such effect. This dissonance may originate in the measurement of well-being usually employed in longitudinal quantitative designs, which does not capture the dimensions of well-being identified ...

    In: Advances in Life Course Research 37 (2018), September 2018, 31-41 | Marco Giesselmann, Marina Hagen, Reinhard Schunck
  • Measuring Well-Being: W3 Indicators to Complement GDP

    Plenty of people in Germany, including politicians and researchers, believe that gross domestic product (GDP) is an outdated indicator of a society’s prosperity. Therefore, at the end of 2010, the German Bundestag, the federal parliament, established a study commission (Enquete Kommission) tasked with developing an alternative to GDP for measuring growth, wealth, and quality of life. This commission ...

    2013, 10-19 | Marco Giesselmann, Richard Hilmer, Nico A. Siegel, Gert G. Wagner
  • The different roles of low-wage work in Germany: regional, demographical and temporal risk of low-paid workers

    In: Hans-Jürgen Andreß, Henning Lohmann , The Working Poor in Europe. Employment, Poverty and Globalization
    Cheltenham, Northampton: Edward Elgar
    96-122
    | Marco Giesselmann, Henning Lohmann
  • Editorial: From Panel Data to Longitudinal Analytical Designs: a Note on Contemporary Research Based on Data from the Socio Economic Panel Study (SOEP)

    In: Schmollers Jahrbuch 135 (2015), 1, 1-11 | Marco Giesselmann, Carsten Schröder, Johannes Giesecke, John P. Haisken-DeNew, Anika Rasner, Jule Specht
  • Constructing indices of multivariate polarization

    Multivariate indices of polarization are constructed to measure effects of non-income attributes like wealth and education. Polarization is considered as the presence of groups which are internally homogeneous, externally heterogeneous, and of similar size. We propose a class of polarization indices which is built from measures of relative groups size and from decomposable indices of socio-economic ...

    In: Journal of Economic Inequality 7 (2009), 4, 435-460 | Chiara Gigliarano, Karl Mosler
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