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  • The value of health—Empirical issues when estimating the monetary value of a quality-adjusted life year based on well-being data

    Decisions on interventions or policy alternatives affecting health can be informed by economic evaluations, like cost-benefit or cost-utility analyses. In this context, there is a need for valid estimates of the monetary equivalent value of health (gains), which are often expressed in € per quality-adjusted life years (QALYs). Obtaining such estimates remains methodologically challenging, with a recent ...

    In: Health Economics 30 (2021), 8, 1849-1870 | Sebastian Himmler, Jannis Stöckel, Job van Exel, Werner B. F. Brouwer
  • Labour Market Participation of Refugees in Germany : Legal Context and Individual-level Factors

    Labour market access is a crucial aspect of integration. Among other things, it providesmigrants with economic resources to participate in societal life in the hostcountry. This chapter explores the factors of labour market access for refugees inGermany. First, we provide a brief overview of how labour market access is determinedby legal status. Second, we explore individual aspects of labour market ...

    In: Annette Korntheuer, Paul Pritchard, Débora B. Maehler, Lori Wilkinson , Refugees in Canada and Germany: From Research to Policies and Practice (Gesis-Schriftenreihe, 25)
    Mannheim: GESIS - Leibniz-Institut für Sozialwissenschaften
    189-201
    | Jannes Jacobsen, Magdalena Krieger, Nicolas Legewie
  • To work or to study? Postmigration educational investments of adult refugees in Germany - evidence from a choice experiment

    In diesem Artikel analysieren wir individuelle Faktoren und situative Bedingungen, unter denen Einwanderer mehr oder weniger wahrscheinlich in aufnahmeland-spezifisches Humankapital investieren. Theoretisch stützen wir unsere Analysen auf einen Ansatz des Humankapital-Investitionsmodells von Zuwanderern und verbinden diesen mit einem Basismodell für rationale Bildungsentscheidungen. Mit Hilfe eines ...

    In: Research in Social Stratification and Mobility 73 (2021), June 2021, 100610 | Andreas Damelang, Yuliya Kosyakova
  • Are the Losers of Communism the Winners of Capitalism? The Effects of Conformism in the GDR on Transition Success

    Following the fall of the Iron Curtain it was important for the acceptance of the new economic and political system that the former Communist elites did not maintain their privileges, and that protesters, who helped to overturn the old system, improved their situation. With newly available panel data on East Germany’s socialist past, the German Democratic Republic, we analyze how former Communist elites, ...

    Berlin: DIW Berlin, 2020,
    (SOEPpapers 1102)
    | Max Deter
  • Hartz and Minds: Happiness Effects of Reforming an Employment Agency

    Since the labor market reforms around 2005, known as the Hartz reforms, Germany has experienced declining unemployment rates. However, little is known about the reforms’ effect on individual life satisfaction of unemployed workers. This study applies difference-in-difference estimations and finds a decrease in life satisfaction after the reforms that is more pronounced for male unemployed in west Germany. ...

    In: Journal of Happiness Studies 22 (2021), 4, 1819-1838 | Max Deter
  • Food, classed? Social inequality and diet: Understanding stratified meat consumption patterns in Germany

    Based on a complementary mixed-methods design, the dissertation sheds light on the relationship between meat consumption practices and consumers’ socioeconomic position. In a first step, two large-scale data sets, the German Einkommens- und Verbrauchsstichprobe (EVS) 2013 and the Socioeconomic Panel (GSOEP) 2016, are used to establish empirical relationships between meat consumption practices and consumers’ ...

    2020, | Laura Einhorn
  • Do Adult Men and Women in Same-Sex Relationships Have Weaker Ties to Their Parents?

    Using a national sample of people in same-sex relationships (N = 843) and different-sex relationships (N = 510) in the Netherlands, we examine the frequently discussed but infrequently tested hypothesis of weaker intergenerational ties between parents and their adult daughters and sons in same-sex relationships. We also test hypotheses linking the strength of these ties to gender differences and the ...

    In: Journal of Family Psychology 35 (2021), 3, 288-298 | Mirjam Fischer, Matthijs Kalmijn
  • Integration of Refugee Children and Adolescents In and Out of School: Evidence of Success but Still Room for Improvement

    Germany has seen the arrival of a large number of displaced children and adolescents in recent years. Integration is vital for their lives today and in the future. Key indicators of successful integration are a sense of belonging to school, participation in extracurricular activities, both within school and outside it, and social contacts. The present report examines these indicators based on data ...

    In: DIW Weekly Report 34/2020 (2020), 345-354 | Ludovica Gambaro, Daniel Kemptner, Lisa Pagel, Laura Schmitz, C. Katharina Spieß
  • The Well-Being Benefits of Person-Culture Match Are Contingent on Basic Personality Traits

    People enjoy well-being benefits if their personal characteristics match those of their culture. This person-culture match effect is integral to many psychological theories and—as a driver of migration—carries much societal relevance. But do people differ in the degree to which person-culture match confers well-being benefits? In the first-ever empirical test of that question, we examined whether the ...

    In: Psychological Science 31 (2020), 10, 1283-1293 | Jochen E. Gebauer, Jennifer Eck, Theresa Entringer, Wiebke Bleidorn, Peter J. Rentfrow, Jeff Potter, Samuel D. Gosling
  • Industrial Robots, Workers’ Safety, and Health

    This study explores the relationship between the adoption of industrial robots and workplace injuries. Using establishment-level data on injuries, we find that a one standard deviation increase in our commuting zone-level measure of robot exposure reduces work-related annual injury rates by approximately 1.2 cases per 100 workers. US commuting zones more exposed to robot penetration experience a significant ...

    In: Labour Economics 78 (2022), October 2022, 102205 | Rania Gihleb, Osea Giuntella, Luca Stella, Tianyi Wang
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