Publications Based on SOEP Data: SOEPlit

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  • Inequality development in Germany in the last decade: A counterfactual decomposition of driving forces (Master thesis)

    2011, | Morgan Charlet
  • Equivalence Scales in an Intertemporal Setting with an Application to the Former West Germany

    In: Review of Income and Wealth 48 (2002), 1, 99-126 | Erwin Charlier
  • Comprehension and Risk Elicitation in the Field. Evidence from Rural Senegal

    In the past decade, it has become increasingly common to use simple laboratory games and decision tasks as a device for measuring both the preferences and understanding of rural populations in the developing world. This is vitally important for policy implementation in a variety of areas. In this paper, we report the results observed using three distinct risk elicitation mechanisms, using samples drawn ...

    Washington: International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), 2011,
    (IFPRI Discussion Paper 01135)
    | Gary Charness, Angelino Viceisza
  • Intergenerational income mobility revisited: Estimation with an income dynamic model with heterogeneous age profile

    The traditional method of estimating intergenerational income elasticity by using the average income over a few years for each generation is subject to attenuation bias due to measurement error and lifecycle bias. In this paper, I estimate the intergenerational elasticity using an income dynamic model with intergenerational linkages. The model can explicitly account for sources of biases such as heterogeneous ...

    In: Economics Letters 117 (2012), 3, 770-773 | Tak Wai Chau
  • Dynamics of Individual Income Rank Volatility: Evidence from West Germany and the US

    This paper presents a methodology for comparing income rank volatility profiles over time and across distributions. While most of the existing measures are affected by changes in marginal distributions, this paper proposes a framework that is based on individuals’ relative positions in the distribution, and is neutral in relation to structural changes that occur in the economy. Applying this approach ...

    In: B.E. Journal of Economic Analysis & Policy 19 (2019), 2, | Louis Chauvel, Anne Hartung, Flaviana Palmisano
  • Generational Inequalities and Welfare Regimes

    This paper uses a new age period cohort model to show that among cohorts born between 1935 and 1975, cohorts born around 1950 are significantly above the income trend in most countries. However, such inequalities between generations are much stronger in conservative, continental European welfare states, compared to social democratic and liberal welfare states. As we show, this is be cause conservative ...

    In: Social Forces 92 (2014), 4, 1259-1283 | Louis Chauvel, Martin Schröder
  • Inequality between birth cohorts of the 20th century in West Germany, France and the US

    This paper uses age-period-cohort models to show that the living standards (total monetary incomes after public benefits and contributions, adjusted for household size and inflation) of successive birth cohorts in the United States and Germany are strongly correlated with general changes in disposable incomes. This means that, after introducing controls, virtually every successive birth cohort in Germany ...

    Luxembourg: Luxembourg Income Study (LIS), 2015,
    (LIS Working Paper Series No. 628)
    | Louis Chauvel, Martin Schröder
  • The Development of Multidimensional Poverty in Germany 1985-2007

    This paper deals with concepts of multidimensional poverty measurement and applies them to Germany. Three concepts of poverty are examined and included into one multidimensional approach: economic well being, capability and social exclusion. The empirical application relies on indices introduced by Bourguigon and Chakravarty (2003), and Alkire and Foster (2008). It uses data from the German Socio-Economic ...

    Bonn: Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA), 2010,
    (IZA DP No. 4922)
    | Christopher Busch, Andreas Peichl
  • Investing in High Potentials or Educating the Rest of the Republic? Internal Migratin of Graduates in Germany 1984-2004

    Frankfurt/M.: Goethe-University, 2006, | Oliver Busch
  • Where have all the graduates gone? Internal cross-state migration of graduates in Germany 1984–2004

    The present paper analyzes the out-migration of graduates to other German states or abroad based on the German Socio-Economic Panel (GSOEP). Our duration analysis shows that the decision to out-migrate is mostly a matter of socio-economic variables than of state specific economic conditions. The longer the graduates stay in their state of study, the lower will be the propensity to leave. On the contrary, ...

    In: Annals of Regional Science 44 (2010), 3, 559-572 | Oliver Busch, Benjamin Weigert
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