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Studies of deprivation usually ignore mental illness. This paper uses household panel data from the USA, Australia, Britain and Germany to broaden the analysis. We ask first how many of those in the lowest levels of life-satisfaction suffer from unemployment, poverty, physical ill health, and mental illness. The largest proportion suffers from mental illness. Multiple regression shows that mental illness ...
In:
KYKLOS
70 (2017), 1, 27-41
| Sarah Flèche, Richard Layard
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In this paper we propose different criteria to rank income distributions according to equality of opportunity. Different from existing ones, our criteria explicitly recognize the interplay between circumstances and effort. We characterize them axiomatically and we compare them with existing criteria; then we propose some scalar measures. We show that our ex post criteria are mostly obtained from "seemingly" ...
In:
Social Choice and Welfare
49 (2017), 3-4, 577-603
| Marc Fleurbaey, Vito Peragine, Xavier Ramos
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In:
Science
318 (2007), 5854,
| Klaus Fließbach, Bernd Weber, Peter Trautner, Thomas Dohmen, Uwe Sunde, Christian E. Elger, Armin Falk
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A personal bankruptcy law that allows for a “fresh start” not only reduces the individual risk involved in entrepreneurship, but may also lead to higher interest rates charged by creditors. Both effects are less relevant for wealthy potential entrepreneurs. This paper illustrates these effects in a model and tests the hypotheses derived by exploiting the introduction of a “fresh start” policy in Germany ...
In:
American Law and Economics Review
16 (2014), 1, 269-312
| Frank M. Fossen
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We assess the relevance of formal education on the productivity of the self-employed, distinguishing between opportunity entrepreneurs, who voluntarily pursue a business opportunity, and necessity entrepreneurs, who lack alternative employment options. We expect differences in the returns to education between these groups due to different levels of control over the use of their human capital. The analysis ...
In:
Economics of Education Review
37 (2013), December 2013, 66-84
| Frank M. Fossen, Tobias Büttner
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Taxation changes the expectations of prospective university students about their future level and uncertainty of after-tax income. To estimate the impact of taxes on university enrollment, we estimate a structural microeconometric model, in which a high-school graduate decides to enter university studies if expected lifetime utility from this choice is greater than that anticipated from starting to ...
In:
International Tax and Public Finance
18 (2011), 6, 688-723
| Frank M. Fossen, Daniela Glocker
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Stated survey measures of risk preferences are increasingly being used in the literature, and they have been compared to revealed risk aversion primarily by means of experiments such as lottery choice tasks. In this paper, we investigate educational choice, which involves the comparison of risky future income paths and therefore depends on risk and time preferences. In contrast to experimental settings, ...
In:
European Economic Review
97 (2017), August 2017, 1-25
| Frank M. Fossen, Daniela Glocker
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We investigate the impact of a differential treatment of paid employees versus self-employed workers in a public health insurance system on the entry rate into self-employment. Health insurance systems that distinguish between the two sectors of employment create incentives or disincentives to start a business for different individuals. We estimate a discrete time hazard rate model of entry into self-employment ...
In:
Small Business Economics
49 (2017), 3, 647-669
| Frank M. Fossen, Johannes König
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Various studies interpret the positive correlation between income risk and wealth as evidence of significant precautionary savings. However, these high estimates emerge from pooling non-entrepreneurs and entrepreneurs, without controlling for heterogeneity. This article provides evidence for Germany based on representative panel data that includes private wealth balance sheets. Entrepreneurs, who face ...
In:
Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics
75 (2013), 4, 528-555
| Frank M. Fossen, Davud Rostam-Afschar
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Bonn:
Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA),
2006,
(IZA DP No. 2164)
| Frank M. Fossen, Viktor Steiner