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  • Determinants of earnings losses of displaced workers

    Using an unusually rich matched employer-employee data set for Portugal, we studied the persistent earnings losses of workers displaced due to firm closure, collective dismissals and individual dismissals. We found that those losses are rather severe and persistent, representing around 50 percent of the pre-displacement wages, six years after the separation event. Those losses are largely explained ...

    2013, | Pedro S. Raposo
  • Hours Risk and Wage Risk: Repercussions over the Life-Cycle

    We decompose permanent earnings risk into contributions from hours and wage shocks. To distinguish between hours shocks, modeled as innovations to the marginal disutility of work, and labor supply reactions to wage shocks we formulate a life-cycle model of consumption and labor supply. Both permanent wage and hours shocks are important to explain earnings risk, but wage shocks have greater relevance. ...

    In: Scandinavian Journal of Economics 125 (2023), 4, 956-996 | Robin Jessen, Johannes König
  • What Can We Obtain from Mental Health Care? The Dynamics of Physical and Mental Health

    This study analyzes the dynamic interaction of an individual's physical and mental health using the German Socio-Economic Panel and the Cross-National Equivalent File of Germany. Its main objective is to find a way to reduce people's health expenditure by examining the magnitude of the interdependence between physical and mental health. For the analysis, this study develops a dynamic correlated ...

    In: International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 16 (2019), 17, 3098 | Sung-Joo Yoon
  • Attrition and selectivity of the NEPS starting cohorts: an overview of the past 8 years

    This article documents the number of target persons participating in the panel surveys of the National Educational Panel Study (NEPS) as well as the number of respondents who temporarily dropout and of those leaving the panel (attrition). NEPS comprises panel surveys with six mutually exclusive starting cohorts covering the complete life span. Sample sizes, numbers of participants and temporary as ...

    In: AStA Wirtschafts- und Sozialstatistisches Archiv 14 (2020), 2, 163-206 | Sabine Zinn, Ariane Würbach, Hans Walter Steinhauer, Angelina Hammon
  • Public childcare provision and employment participation of East and West German mothers with different educational backgrounds

    By focusing on a period of a major public childcare expansion in Germany, this study investigates whether higher levels of childcare coverage for under-threes have been positively associated with employment among mothers with different educational backgrounds. Both standard economic labour theories and sociological theories presume that the effect of public childcare provision varies with mothers’ ...

    In: Journal of European Social Policy 30 (2020), 3, 370-385 | Gundula Zoch
  • Intergenerational educational mobility and health satisfaction across the life course: Does the long arm of childhood conditions only become visible later in life?

    The contemporaneous association of socioeconomic status (SES) with health is well-established, whereas much less is known about the health-related effects of social mobility (i.e., movements across different SES). This study investigates the impact of SES in childhood and adulthood on health satisfaction across the life course. Using data from the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP) and education as ...

    In: Social Science & Medicine 242 (2019), December 2019, 112603 | Nadia Steiber
  • Surveying Persons in Same-Sex Relationships in a Probabilistic Way : An Example from the Netherlands

    In the last decade, the call for improved estimates of lesbians, gay men and bisexual (LGB) populations has grown steadily. This is related to the increasing visibility of same-sex unions and the rapidly evolving changes in the legal and normative institutional frameworks regarding same-sex relationships in Western countries. The aim of this article is to present the sampling strategy and discuss the ...

    In: Journal of Official Statistics 35 (2019), 4, 753-776 | Stephanie Steinmetz, Mirjam Fischer
  • It Deepens Like a Coastal Shelf: Educational Mobility and Social Capital in Germany

    The prospects for the next generation—whether young people, regardless of their backgrounds, have equal chances of social success—pose a momentous problem for modern societies. Inequality of opportunity, often reflected by social immobility, is a threat to the egalitarian promise and the stability of your society. This work argues that social capital transmission plays an important role for the chances ...

    In: Social Indicators Research 142 (2019), 2, 855-885 | Fabian Stephany
  • A cross-cultural comparison of the ultrabrief mental health screeners PHQ-4 and SF-12 in Germany

    The testing of measurement invariance (MI) across different cultural backgrounds for short screeners of mental health has been mostly neglected. Therefore, we examined MI in the most common mental health screeners worldwide used to assess the psychological indicators of health among migrants and refugees: the Short-Form-12 Health Survey (SF-12) for health-related quality of life and the Patient Health ...

    In: Psychological Assessment 32 (2020), 7, 690-697 | Ana N. Tibubos, Hannes Kröger
  • Sustained Effects of Flexible Working Time Arrangements on Subjective Well-Being

    The article addressed the impact of a transition to two flexible working time arrangements, employee- and employer-oriented, on subjective well-being (measured by job satisfaction and satisfaction with leisure time) from a longitudinal perspective. The study investigated which of three patterns of well-being, i.e., stability, recovery, or chronic strain/long-term improvement, are associated with these ...

    In: Journal of Happiness Studies 19 (2018), 6, 1727-1748 | Ekaterina Uglanova, Jan Dettmers
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