Publications Based on SOEP Data: SOEPlit

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6847 results, from 961
  • Children’s gendered trajectories of housework time when leaving home

    Objective: To examine how young adult women and men change their time for routine housework when moving out of the parental household. Background: From a life-course perspective, establishing an own household is one of the key markers of the transition to adulthood. Leaving home is associated with new liabilities concerning the organization of everyday life, including housework, and provides a new ...

    2023,
    (SocArXiv Papers)
    | Florian Schulz, Marcel Raab
  • Justice Evaluation of the Income Distribution (JEID): Development and validation of a short scale for the subjective assessment of objective differences in earnings

    Justice evaluations are proposed to provide a link between the objective level of inequality and the consequences at the individual and societal level. Available instruments, however, focus on the subjective perception of inequality and income distributions. In light of findings that subjective perceptions of inequality and income levels can be biased and subject to method effects, we present the newly ...

    In: PLOS ONE 18 (2023), 1, e0281021 | Désirée Nießen, Jule Adriaans, Stefan Liebig, Clemens M. Lechner
  • In sole or joint names? The role of employment and marriage biographies for married women’s asset ownership in later life

    The way women hold assets within couples (solely or jointly) is a crucial dimension of their economic situation. This study examines the distribution of women’s assets within married couples and how the interplay of their employment and marriage biographies is related to their asset holdings in later life. Using data from the Socio-Economic Panel Study (SOEP; 2002, 2007, 2012, 2017), the author applies ...

    In: Research in Social Stratification and Mobility 79 (2022), 100690 | Theresa Nutz
  • Trends and Changes in Socio-Economic Inequality in Self-Rated Health among Migrants and Non-Migrants: Repeated Cross-Sectional Analysis of National Survey Data in Germany, 1995–2017

    Socio-economic inequalities in health may change over time, and monitoring such change is relevant to inform adequate policy responses. We aimed to quantify socio-economic inequalities in health among people with direct, indirect and without migration background in Germany and to assess temporal trends and changes between 1995 and 2017. Using nationally representative survey data from the Socio-Economic ...

    In: International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19 (2022), 14, 8304 | Elisa Wulkotte, Kayvan Bozorgmehr
  • A ‘potential motherhood’ penalty? A longitudinal analysis of the wage gap based on potential fertility in Germany and the United Kingdom

    While labour market penalties related to motherhood are a widely studied topic, less is known about the implications of signalled potential fertility. We thus posed the question of whether potential fertility—operationalized as the likelihood that a childless woman will transition to motherhood depending on observed sociodemographic characteristics—is associated with a wage penalty and—if so—what the ...

    In: European Sociological Review 39 (2023), 6, 920–934 | Anna Zamberlan, Paolo Barbieri
  • Workplace segregation and the labour market performance of immigrants

    Immigrants are more likely to have conationals as colleagues, however the consequences of such workplace segregation is an open question. I study the effect of the conational share in an immigrant’s first job on subsequent labour market outcomes using register data from Germany. I instrument for the conational share using hiring trends in the local labour market and find that a ten-percentage-point ...

    Munich: CESifo, 2022,
    (CESifo Working Paper No. 9895)
    | Sébastien Willis
  • When the last child moves out: Continuity and convergence in spouses' housework time

    Objective: To examine how mothers' and fathers' time allocation for routine housework changes when the last child moves out of the family household. Background: During the transition to the empty nest, parental households are reduced to the situation before parenthood. Mothers and fathers are released from their direct parenting roles and parental time binds. This gradual transition creates ...

    In: Journal of Marriage and Family 85 (2023), 1, 305-320 | Florian Schulz, Marcel Raab
  • How to Catch a Falsifier: Comparison of Statistical Detection Methods for Interviewer Falsification

    Deviant interviewer behavior is a potential hazard of interviewer-administered surveys, with interviewers fabricating entire interviews as the most severe form. Various statistical methods (e.g., cluster analysis) have been proposed to detect falsifiers. These methods often rely on falsification indicators aiming to measure differences between real and falsified data. However, due to a lack of real-world ...

    In: Public Opinion Quarterly 86 (2022), 1, 51-81 | Silvia Schwanhäuser, Joseph W Sakshaug, Yuliya Kosyakova
  • Does living in districts with higher levels of ethnic violence affect refugees’ attitudes towards the host country? Empirical evidence from Germany

    While there are many quantitative studies examining the determinants of ethnic violence from the perspective of offenders, less is known about the effects of violence on the victims or target groups. In light of the increased refugee migration in Germany in 2015/2016, we provide empirical evidence that living in districts with a past of ethnic violence against refugees affects refugees' perception ...

    In: Ethnic and Racial Studies 45 (2022), 15, 2793-2821 | Nicole Schwitter, Ulf Liebe
  • Teleworking and Life Satisfaction during COVID-19: The Importance of Family Structure

    We carry out a difference-in-differences analysis of a representative real-time survey conducted as part of the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP) study and show that teleworking had a negative average effect on life satisfaction over the first two years of the COVID-19 pandemic. This average effect hides considerable heterogeneity reflecting genderrole asymmetry: lower life satisfaction is only found ...

    In: Journal of Population Economics 37 (2024), 8 | Claudia Senik, Andrew E. Clark, Conchita D'Ambrosio, Anthony Lepinteur, Carsten Schröder
6847 results, from 961
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