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Data from the German Socio-Economic Panel provide insight into the relationship between standard and non-standard work, from the perspective of dual labour market theory. We identify two segments that largely correspond to the common distinction between these forms of employment and find substantial differences in the determination of wages, as well as the composition of worker and job characteristics. ...
In:
German Economic Review
14 (2013), 3, 349-371
| Marcel Garz
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2005,
| Vanessa Gash, Frances McGinnity
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In:
European Societies
9 (2007), 3, 429-458
| Vanessa Gash, Antje Mertens, Laura Romeu Gordo
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This paper asks whether part-time work makes women happy. Previous research on labour supply has assumed that as workers freely choose their optimal working hours on the basis of their innate preferences and the hourly wage rate, outcome reflects preference. This paper tests this assumption by measuring the impact of changes in working-hours on life satisfaction in two countries (the UK and Germany ...
In:
Manchester School
80 (2012), 1, 51-74
| Vanessa Gash, Antje Mertens, Laura Romeu Gordo
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In:
Journal of Economic Inequality
13 (2015), 4, 579-602
| Leonardo Gasparini, Leopoldo Tornarolli
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This paper analyzes the life-cycle career costs associated with child rearing and decomposes their effects into unearned wages (as women drop out of the labor market), loss of human capital, and selection into more child-friendly occupations. We estimate a dynamic life-cycle model of fertility, occupational choice, and labor supply using detailed survey and administrative data for Germany for numerous ...
Bonn:
Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA),
2011,
(IZA DP No. 6201)
| Jérôme Adda, Christian Dustmann, Katrien Stevens
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Bonn:
Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA),
2004,
(IZA DP No. 1252)
| John T. Addison, Mário Centeno, Pedro Portugal
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In:
Journal of Labor Research
30 (2008), 1, 1-8
| John T. Addison, Mário Centeno, Pedro Portugal
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This paper exploits survey information on reservation wages and data on actual wages from the European Community Household Panel to deduce, in the manner of Lancaster and Chesher, additional parameters of a stylized structural search model; specifically, reservation wage and transition/duration elasticities. The informational requirements of this approach are minimal, thereby facilitating comparisons ...
In:
Economica
77 (2010), 305, 46–59
| John T. Addison, Mário Centeno, Pedro Portugal
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Language attitudes matter; they influence people’s behaviour and decisions. Therefore, it is crucial to learn more about patterns in the way that languages are valued. One means of doing so is using a quantitative approach with data representative of a whole population, so that results mirror dispositions at a societal level. This kind of approach is adopted here, with a focus on the situation ...
In:
Journal of Language and Discrimination
3 (2019), 2, 232-253
| Astrid Adler