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Syracuse:
Syracuse University, Maxwell School,
2004,
(Luxembourg Income Study Working Paper No. 367)
| Timothy M. Smeeding
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Syracuse:
Syracuse University, Maxwell School,
2005,
(Luxembourg Income Study Working Paper No. 417)
| Timothy M. Smeeding
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Syracuse:
Syracuse University, Maxwell School,
2005,
(Luxembourg Income Study Working Paper No. 426)
| Timothy M. Smeeding
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In:
Journal of Economic Perspectives
20 (2006), 1, 69-90
| Timothy M. Smeeding
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New and emerging technologies pose a serious challenge for the future of employment. As machines learn to accomplish increasingly complex production tasks, the concern arises that automation will wipe out a great number of jobs. This paper investigates the relationship between the risk posed by the automation of jobs and individual-level occupational mobility using a representative German household ...
In:
Foresight and STI Governance
11 (2017), 3, 37-48
| Alina Sorgner
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Often, a person will become an entrepreneur only after a period of dependent employment, suggesting that occupational choices precede entrepreneurial choices. We investigate the relationship between occupational choice and self-employment. The findings suggest that the occupational choice of future entrepreneurs at the time of labor market entry is partly guided by a taste for skill variety, the prospect ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2013,
(SOEPpapers 533)
| Alina Sorgner, Michael Fritsch
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In:
International Journal of Manpower
21 (2000), 3-4, 206-226
| Asunción Soro-Bonmati
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The present research tested whether the Big Five personality dimensions - extraversion, agreeableness, conscientiousness, neuroticism, and openness to experience - moderate the effects of income on life satisfaction. The authors analyzed data from three large-sample, nationally representative, longitudinal studies: the British Household Panel Survey, the German Socio-Economic Panel Study, and the Household ...
In:
Social Psychological and Personality Science
4 (2013), 1, 46-53
| Christopher J. Soto, Maike Luhmann
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Cambridge:
University of Cambridge, Microsimulation Unit,
2008,
(EUROMOD Working Paper No. EM 10/08)
| Amedeo Spadaro
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Few theories in the social sciences have gained more widespread acceptance than Max Weber’s The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism—despite a lack of conclusive empirical evidence. At the core of Weber’s theory lies a connection between Protestantism and attitudes toward work. Using micro-data from contemporary Germany, this paper investigates the impact of Protestantism on economic outcomes ...
In:
Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization
135 (2017), March 2017, 193-214
| Jörg L. Spenkuch