Publications Based on SOEP Data: SOEPlit

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  • So Far so Good: Age, Happiness, and Relative Income

    In a simple 2-period model of relative income under uncertainty, higher comparison income for the younger cohort can signal higher or lower expected lifetime relative income, and hence either increase or decrease well-being. With data from the German Socio-Economic Panel and the British Household Panel Survey, we first confirm the standard negative effects of comparison income on life satisfaction ...

    Berlin: DIW Berlin, 2011,
    (SOEPpapers 415)
    | Felix FitzRoy, Michael A. Nolan, Max F. Steinhardt, David Ulph
  • Testing the tunnel effect: comparison, age and happiness in UK and German panels

    In contrast to previous results combining all ages we find positive effects of comparison income on happiness for the under 45s, and negative effects for those over 45. In the BHPS these coefficients are several times the magnitude of own income effects. In GSOEP they cancel to give no effect of effect of comparison income on life satisfaction in the whole sample, when controlling for fixed effects, ...

    In: IZA Journal of European Labor Studies 3 (2014), 24, (online) | Felix R. FitzRoy, Michael A. Nolan, Max F. Steinhardt, David Ulph
  • Testing for State Dependence Effects in a Dynamic Model of Male Unemployment Behaviour

    In: H. Bunzel, P. Jensen, N. Westergaard-Nielsen , Panel Data and Labour Market Dynamics
    Amsterdam u.a.: North-Holland
    | Gebhard Flaig, Georg Licht, Viktor Steiner
  • Migrants in Germany: The Role of Intergenerational Relations in Economic Integration and Labor Market Effects (Dissertation)

    2012, | Regina Flake
  • Gender Differences in the Earnings Mobility of Migrants

    This study analyzes gender differences in the intergenerational earnings mobility of second-generation migrants in Germany. The analysis takes into account potential influences like assortative mating in the form of ethnic marriages and the parental integration measured by parents’ years since migration. First, intergenerational earnings elasticities are estimated at the mean and along the earnings ...

    In: Labour 27 (2013), 1, 58-79 | Regina Flake
  • Do More of Those in Misery Suffer from Poverty, Unemployment or Mental Illness?

    Studies of deprivation usually ignore mental illness. This paper uses household panel data from the USA, Australia, Britain and Germany to broaden the analysis. We ask first how many of those in the lowest levels of life-satisfaction suffer from unemployment, poverty, physical ill health, and mental illness. The largest proportion suffers from mental illness. Multiple regression shows that mental illness ...

    In: KYKLOS 70 (2017), 1, 27-41 | Sarah Flèche, Richard Layard
  • Ex Post Inequality of Opportunity Comparisons

    In this paper we propose different criteria to rank income distributions according to equality of opportunity. Different from existing ones, our criteria explicitly recognize the interplay between circumstances and effort. We characterize them axiomatically and we compare them with existing criteria; then we propose some scalar measures. We show that our ex post criteria are mostly obtained from "seemingly" ...

    In: Social Choice and Welfare 49 (2017), 3-4, 577-603 | Marc Fleurbaey, Vito Peragine, Xavier Ramos
  • Social Comparison Affects Reward-Related Brain Activity in the Human Ventral Striatum (supporting online material)

    In: Science 318 (2007), 5854, | Klaus Fließbach, Bernd Weber, Peter Trautner, Thomas Dohmen, Uwe Sunde, Christian E. Elger, Armin Falk
  • Causal Returns to Education: A Survey on Empirical Evidence for Germany

    In: Jahrbücher für Nationalökonomie und Statistik 226 (2006), 1, 6-23 | Anton L. Flossmann, Winfried Pohlmeier
  • Natives and Migrants in Home Production: The Case of Germany

    In this paper, we assess the impact of international migration and the induced homecare service labor supply shock on fertility decisions and the labor supply of native females in Germany. Specifically, we consider the individual data of native women from the German Socio-Economic Panel and merge them with data on the share of female immigrants and other regional labor market characteristics. We provide ...

    In: Review of Economics of the Household 19 (2021), 4, 1275-1307 | Emanuele Forlani, Elisabetta Lodigiani, Concetta Mendolicchio
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