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This article evaluates an expansion of employer-mandated sick leave from 80% to 100% of forgone gross wages in Germany. We employ and compare parametric difference-in-difference (DID), matching DID and mixed approaches. Overall workplace absences increased by at least 10% or 1 day per worker per year. We show that taking partial compliance into account increases coefficient estimates. Further, heterogeneity ...
In:
Journal of Applied Econometrics
29 (2014), 2, 208-230
| Nicolas R. Ziebarth, Martin Karlsson
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This study comprehensively assesses the immediate effects of extreme weather conditions and high concentrations of ambient air pollution on population health. For Germany and the years 1999 to 2008, we link the universe of all 170 million hospital admissions, along with all 8 million deaths, with weather and pollution data reported at the day-county level. Extreme heat significantly increases hospitalizations ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2014,
(SOEPpapers 646)
| Nicolas R. Ziebarth, Maike Schmitt, Martin Karlsson
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This paper studies the long-term impact of societal socialization on values using the example of doping behavior in sports. We apply the German Reunification Approach to the microcosm of Berlin and exploit its 40-year long division into a capitalist and a communist sector. We deliberately chose attitudes toward doping to test the impact of ideology on values since (i) post-1989 disappointed economic ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2013,
(DIW Discussion Paper No. 1280)
| Nicolas R. Ziebarth, Gert G. Wagner
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This article uses survey data from the German Socio-Economic Panel (GSOEP) to analyze the persistence of educational attainment across three generations in Germany. I obtain evidence of a robust effect of grandparents’ education on respondents’ own educational attainment in West Germany, net of parental class, education, occupational status, family income, parents’ relationship history, and family ...
In:
Sociological Science
3 (2016), December 2016, 1077-1102
| Andrea Ziefle
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In:
DIW Economic Bulletin
7 (2017), 5, 58
| Erich Wittenberg
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Tel Aviv, Israel:
1999,
| Theresa Wobbe, Roland Otte
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Previous research has found that moving has lasting effects on housing satisfaction while adaptation to changing living environments is surprisingly absent from this research. This paper challenges and extends this current state of research. Using data from a large-scale German household panel we find that housing satisfaction (a) sharply declines before the move (self-selection into relocation), (b) ...
In:
Journal of Happiness Studies
18 (2017), 5, 1359-1375
| Tobias Wolbring
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We examine the association between income and life satisfaction. Referring to the so-called Easterlin paradox, three mechanisms are discussed: basic human need satisfaction, interpersonal comparison processes, and adaptation. Hypotheses resulting from these considerations are empirically tested on the basis of two data sets: a self conducted cross-sectional survey among the population of Munich and ...
In:
European Sociological Review
29 (2013), 1, 86-104
| Tobias Wolbring, Marc Keuschnigg, Eva Negele
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Mannheim:
Zentrum für Europäische Wirtschaftsforschung,
1998,
(Discussion Paper No. 98-44)
| Elke Wolf
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In:
Joachim Merz, Manfred Ehling ,
Time Use - Research, Data and Policy. Contributions from the International Conference on time use (ICTU), University of Lüneburg, April 22 -25, 1998
Baden-Baden: Nomos
269-291
| Elke Wolf