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Are parent-couples with equal income more satisfied as their children grow up, than those who prioritize the father’s career (specialize)? For the first time, 384 German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP) study couples were categorized into life-course coupled earnings types, by tracing how earnings were divided within couples between the ages of 1 to 15 of their youngest child. Multivariate, multilevel analysis ...
In:
Work, Employment and Society
36 (2022), 1, 80-100
| Laura Langner
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This article aims to take stock of the various manifestations of on-call work in Germany. It is shown that formal on-call work is, by international standards, relatively strictly regulated in Germany, not least as the result of a 2019 reform of the law. Similar to other countries, however, other informal variants are used that lie outside the scope of the re-regulation or ‘normalisation’ of formal ...
In:
Transfer: European Review of Labour and Research
26 (2020), 4, 447-463
| Karen Jaehrling, Thorsten Kalina
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Two recent papers argue that many results based on ordinal reports of happiness can be reversed with suitable monotonic increasing transformations of the associated happiness scale (Bond and Lang 2019; Schröder and Yitzhaki 2017). If true, empirical research utilizing such reports is in trouble. Against this background, we make four main contributions. First, we show that reversals are fundamentally ...
Bonn:
Institute of Labor Economics (IZA),
2020,
(IZA DP No. 13905)
| Caspar Kaiser, Maarten C.M. Vendrik
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In:
David Maddison, Katrin Rehdanz, Heinz Welsch ,
Handbook on Wellbeing, Happiness and the Environment
Cheltenham, Northampton: Edward Elgar Publishing
297-317
| Christian Krekel
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I examine the pattern of selection on education of asylum seekers recently arrived in Germany from five key source countries: Afghanistan, Albania, Iraq, Serbia, and Syria. The analysis relies on original individual-level data collected in Germany combined with surveys conducted at origin. The results reveal a positive pattern of selection on education for asylum seekers who were able to flee Iraq ...
In:
Demography
57 (2020), 3, 1089-1116
| Lucas Guichard
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People differ from each other in their typical patterns of behavior, thought, and emotion and these patterns are considered to constitute their personalities (Funder, 2001). For various reasons, for example, because certain trait levels may help to attain certain goals or fulfill certain social roles, people may experience that their actual trait levels are different from their ideal trait levels. ...
In:
Psychology and Aging
35 (2020), 7, 1000-1015
| Marie Hennecke, Paul Schumann, Jule Specht
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This report introduces the German Job Search Panel, a longitudinal survey that follows people who register as job seeking over the course of up to two years. The focus of the survey is on job seekers’ well-being and health. An innovative survey app is used to allow for frequent measurement every month and for conducting the experience sampling method. The collected data may be linked to administrative ...
2020,
(OSF Preprints)
| Clemens Hetschko, Michael Eid, Mario Lawes, Ronnie Schöb, Gesine Stephan
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Dieser Beitrag untersucht geschlechterspezifische Unterschiede im Rentenübergang anhand von Persönlichkeitsmerkmalen in Deutschland. Im Mittelpunkt steht dabei die Stimulierung von bestimmten Einstellungen durch die Einführung der Mütterrente in den Jahren 2014 und 2019. Unter Anwendung des SOEP v.34 (2017) wurde die Zusammenhangsstruktur von Renteneintrittsalter und den Big Five untersucht, während ...
In:
Sozialer Fortschritt
69 (2020), 10, 687-710
| Charlotte Fechter, Marlene Haupt
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The non-take-up of social assistance has been receiving increased attention among policy makers in recent years as it would apparently underpin the effectiveness of public intervention in alleviating poverty. We examine whether receipt of private transfers affects the household decision to take-up social assistance in Germany between 2009 and 2011. We exploit the follow-up of households in the SOEP ...
Marseille:
Aix-Marseille School of Economics (AMSE),
2020,
(AMSE WP 2020 - Nr 23)
| Edwin Fourrier-Nicolai
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We investigate whether the Roman presence in the southern part of Germany nearly 2,000 years ago had a deep imprinting effect with long run consequences on a broad spectrum of measures ranging from present-day personality profiles to a number of socioeconomic outcomes and why. Today’s populations living in the former Roman part of Germany score indeed higher on certain personality traits, have higher ...
Groningen:
University of Groningen,
2020,
(SOM Research Reports 2020007-I&O)
| Michael Fritsch, Martin Obschonka, Fabian Wahl, Michael Wyrwich