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Families produce health, but changes in familial structures are made responsible for many negative health trends in the population. How does the health of younger children today in Germany develop when comparing whether the parents live together or separately? Using data from the German Socio-Economic Panel Study (SOEP), we are able to show that children in traditional marriages are not generally healthier ...
In:
Comparative Population Studies - Zeitschrift für Bevölkerungswissenschaft
38 (2013), 3, 719-740
| Hilke Brockmann
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First-generation immigrants in Germany are surprisingly satisfied with their life. We test to what extent selection, adaptation, or resilience explains their comparatively high level of subjective well-being (SWB). Using Panel data from 1984-2014, we run simultaneous probit and growth curve models and identify competing mechanisms of positive integration. We find mixed evidence for health selection: ...
San Domenico de Fiesole:
Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies (RSCAS), European University Institute (EUI),
2017,
(EUI RSCAS Working Papers 2017/63)
| Hilke Brockmann
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In:
Journal of Marriage and Family
66 (2004), 3, 567-581
| Hilke Brockmann, Thomas Klein
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Women with managerial careers are significantly less satisfied with their life than their male counterparts. Why? In a representative German panel dataset (GSOEP) we find biological constraints and substitutive mechanisms determining the subjective well-being of female managers. Women’s terminated fertility has a negative impact on women’s life satisfaction between the ages of 35 and 45, when managerial ...
In:
Journal of Happiness Studies
19 (2018), 3, 755-779
| Hilke Brockmann, Anne-Maren Koch, Adele Diederich, Christofer Edling
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This paper presents stylized facts about household disposable income and its components (the ‘income package’) in ten OECD countries, using data from the Luxembourg Income Study database for the period 1994–2000. The research design is an extension of the design in Todd and Sullivan (2002). Cross-national correlations reveal that there are systematic differences among nations in the relationship between ...
In:
Socio-Economic Review (Special Issue: Twenty years of research on income inequality, poverty and redistribution in the developed world)
2 (2004), 2, 315-339
| Erin Todd Bronchetti, Dennis H. Sullivan
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Due to the lack of consistent data, direct and robust comparisons of cross-country labour markets have been virtually impossible. This study uses a new panel data series that controls for inconsistencies, thus overcoming this problem. This study estimates gender wage differentials and gender discrimination in the German and United Kingdom labour markets. Panel estimates are used to identify general ...
Differdange, Luxemburg:
IRISS-C/I,
1999,
(Working Paper No. 2)
| Mick Brookes, Timothy Hinks, Duncan Watson
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Syracuse:
Syracuse University, Maxwell School,
2003,
(Luxembourg Income Study Working Paper No. 355)
| Robert L. Brown, Steven G. Prus
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We explore the determinants of debt, financial assets and net worth at the household level by using survey data for Germany, Great Britain and the USA. To identify which households are potentially vulnerable to adverse changes in the economic environment, we also explore the determinants of a range of measures of financial pressure: the probability that a household has negative net worth; the debt-to-income ...
In:
Journal of the Royal Statistical Society Series A - Statistics in Society
171 (2008), 3, 615 - 643
| Sarah Brown, Karl Taylor
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The current study examines how the financial crisis of 2008–2009 impacted individuals’ willingness to take risks (WTR). We find substantial changes in the WTR associated with the financial crisis which supports countercyclical risk aversion while controlling for wealth effects and risk perception. Yet, we also observe a quick recovery of the WTR immediately after the crisis. We find that managers are ...
In:
The Geneva Risk and Insurance Review
44 (2019), 1, 27-53
| Mark Browne, Verena Jaeger, Petra Steinorth
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We use the German Socio Economic Panel to analyze the impact of life changing events on individuals’ risk tolerance levels over time, which is reported in response to a question on individuals’ willingness to take risks. The dataset follows a representative sample of the German population. We find substantial changes in risk attitudes over time with respect to getting married or separating from a partner, ...
München:
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Institut für Risikomanagement und Versicherung,
2016,
(MRIC Working Paper No. 32, 2016)
| Mark J. Browne, Verena Jaeger, Andreas Richter, Petra Steinorth