Publications Based on SOEP Data: SOEPlit

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  • The Cost of Babylon - Linguistic Distance in Applied Economics

    Linguistic distance, i.e. the dissimilarity between languages, is an important factor influencing international economic transactions such as migration or international trade flows by imposing hurdles for second language acquisition and increasing transaction costs. To measure these costs, we suggest using a new measure of linguistic distance. The Levenshtein distance is an easily computed and transparent ...

    In: Review of International Economics 21 (2013), 2, 354-369 | Ingo E. Isphording, Sebastian Otten
  • Linguistic barriers in the destination language acquisition of immigrants

    There are various degrees of similarity between the languages of different immigrants and the language of their destination country. This linguistic distance is an obstacle to the acquisition of a language, which leads to large differences in the attainments of the language skills necessary for economic and social integration in the destination country. This study aims at quantifying the influence ...

    In: Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization 105 (2014), September 2014, 30-50 | Ingo E. Isphording, Sebastian Otten
  • Increasing uncertainty in old age in Germany? The development of social inequality in later life since the mid-1980s

    Bamberg and Göttingen: University of Bamberg, Faculty of Social and Economic Sciences and University of Göttingen, Institute for Sociology, 2009,
    (flexCAREER Working Paper)
    | Annika Jabsen, Sandra Buchholz
  • The Causes of Seam Effects in Panel Surveys

    Colchester: University of Essex, Institute for Social and Economic Research (ISER), 2008,
    (ISER Working Paper No. 2008-14)
    | Annette Jäckle
  • Health and Wages - Panel data estimates considering selection and endogeneity

    Munich: Ifo Institute for Economic Research at the University of Munich, 2007,
    (ifo Working Papers No. 43)
    | Robert Jäckle
  • Health and Wages: Panel Data Estimates Considering Selection and Endogeneity

    This paper complements previous studies on the effects of health on wages by addressing the problems of unobserved heterogeneity, sample selection, and endogeneity in one comprehensive framework. Using data from the German Socio-Economic Panel (GSOEP), we find the health variable to suffer from measurement error and a number of tests provide evidence that selection corrections are necessary. Good health ...

    In: Journal of Human Resources 45 (2010), 2, 364-406 | Robert Jäckle, Oliver Himmler
  • Drivers of renewable technology adoption in the household sector

    Using data from the German Socio-Economic Panel, we undertake a simultaneous assessment of the importance of factors that are individually found to be significant for the adoption of renewable energy systems by households but are not yet tested jointly. These are sociodemographic and housing characteristics, environmental concern, personality traits, and economic factors; i.e. the expected costs of ...

    In: Energy Economics 81 (2019), June 2019, 216-226 | Anke Jacksohn, Peter Grösche, Katrin Rehdanz, Carsten Schröder
  • Marriage, Gender, and Class: The Effects of Partner Resources on Unemployment Exit in Germany

    Using data from the German Socio-Economic Panel (GSOEP), we find that cohabitation accelerates re-employment, whereas marriage increases the prospect of re-employment only for men. More specifically, the partner's labor market resources facilitate re-employment. Although partner income has no effect in absolute terms, unemployed men and women who were formerly minor earners refrain from re-entering ...

    In: Social Forces 92 (2014), 3, 839-871 | Marita Jacob, Corinna Kleinert
  • The Rich Demystified. A Reply to Bach, Corneo, and Steiner

    Munich: CESifo, 2008,
    (CESifo Working Paper No. 2478)
    | Martin Jacob, Rainer Niemann, Martin Weiss
  • The Legacy of Surveillance: An Explanation for Social Capital Erosion and the Persistent Economic Disparity between East and West Germany

    This paper presents an exemplary case of social capital destruction through state action. We investigate the patterns of economic backwardness in East Germany and put forward a formal model and empirical evidence in favor of an intuitive yet novel conjecture: the differences in the scale and depth of state security penetration of people's private lives as well as of the institutions of state and ...

    2010,
    (mimeo)
    | Marcus Jacob, Marcel Tyrell
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