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Luxembourg:
Office of Official Publications of the European Communities,
2004,
(Employment in Europe 2004 - Recent Trends and Prospects)
| o.V.
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Florence:
UNICEF Innocenti Research Centre,
2005,
| o.V.
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Florence:
UNICEF Innocenti Research Centre,
2006,
(Innocenti Report Card 7)
| o.V.
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In:
IZA COMPACT (Engl.)
Dec. 2006 (2006), 4-7
| o.V.
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In:
ISER Newsletter Autumn 2007
(2007), 3
| o.V.
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Melbourne:
University of Melbourne, Melbourne Institute Institute of Applied Economic and Social Research,
2007,
| o.V.
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This paper assesses a recent prediction of the theoretical migration literature, according to which migration may be driven by a desire to avoid social humiliation arising from occupational stigma. To this end, we study the residential mobility of workers in occupations with relatively low prestige using data from the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP). In order to capture low occupational prestige, ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2013,
(SOEPpapers 562)
| Nina Neubecker
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This paper is an empirical overview of inequalities of pension outcomes in six European countries, which are shaped by a variety of institutional pensions schemes. The study contrasts pension system regulation in Denmark, Finland, Germany, Italy, Sweden and the United Kingdom; and analyses their impact on current pension income. The main focus is analyzing the current trends of income distribution ...
Luxembourg:
Luxembourg Income Study (LIS),
2014,
(LIS Working Paper Series No. 618)
| Jörg Neugschwender
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This paper analyses major pension system regulation in four European countries: Denmark, Germany, Sweden, and the United Kingdom. It is focused on the government’s and social partner’s efforts to provide old-age security benefits, and how these regulatory approaches have shaped the current structure of the public-private mix of pension protection systems. The different regulatory approaches may, in ...
Luxembourg:
Luxembourg Income Study (LIS),
2015,
(LIS Working Paper Series No. 627)
| Jörg Neugschwender
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2013,
| Dirk Neumann