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  • Effects of Employment on East Germany Fertility after Unification

    In: H. Birg, E.-J. Flöthmann , Abhandlungen des Demographischen Symposions des Instituts für Bevölkerungsforschung und Sozialpolitik 1995 (IBS), IBS-Materialien Band 40
    Bielefeld: Universität Bielefeld
    233-252
    | James C. Witte, Gert G. Wagner
  • The Economics of Fatherhood - An Analysis of Men in East and West Germany

    In: Proceedings of the 1996 Second International Conference of the German Socio-Economic Panel Study Users. Vierteljahrshefte zur Wirtschaftsforschung 66 (1997), 1, 111-117 | James C. Witte, Gert G. Wagner
  • The effect of working time preferences and fair wage perceptions on entrepreneurial intentions among employees

    To date, little is known about how working time preferences and fair wage perceptions affect employees’ entrepreneurial intentions. Using data from the German Socio-Economic Panel Study, we provide first evidence that the difference between the actual and desired amount of working hours in paid employment is positively related to the propensity to switch to self-employment. Furthermore, our analysis ...

    In: Small Business Economics 43 (2014), 1, 137-160 | Arndt Werner, Johanna Gast, Sascha Kraus
  • What can we learn from intentions data about future behavior - the case of East-Germany after reunification

    Berlin: Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Wirtschaftswissenschaftliche Fakultät, 1996,
    (Discussion Paper No. 56)
    | Axel Werwatz
  • Spatial structure counts: the relevance of regional labour-market conditions for educational transitions to vocational training

    Regional contextual factors can have a crucial impact on educational attainment processes of young adults and subsequently on individual life chances. This paper develops a systematic approach of the spatial references of such contextual settings. The flexible concept allows combining aggregate data for configurations of regional units in order to empirically determine the spatial extension of relevant ...

    In: Empirical Research in Vocational Education and Training 7:12 (2015), | Katarina Weßling, Andreas Hartung, Steffen Hillmert
  • Flexible Modelling of Duration of Unemployment Using Functional Hazard Models and Penalized Splines: A Case Study Comparing Germany and the UK

    The intention of this paper is to demonstrate the flexibility and capacity of penalized spline smoothing as estimation routine for modelling duration time data. We investigate the unemployment behaviour in Germany and the UK between 1995 and 2005 based on data from national panel studies. Functional duration time models are used to investigate the dynamics of covariate effects. The focus of our analysis ...

    In: Studies in Nonlinear Dynamics & Econometrics 16 (2012), 1, 1-27 | Nina Westerheide, Goeran Kauermann
  • Parental health and child behavior: evidence from parental health shocks

    This study examines the importance of parental health in the development of child behavior during early childhood. Our analysis is based on child psychometric measures from a longitudinal German dataset, which tracks mothers and their newborns up to age six. We identify major changes in parental health (shocks) and control for a variety of initial characteristics of the child including prenatal conditions. ...

    In: Review of Economics of the Household 14 (2016), 3, 577-598 | Franz Westermaier, Brant Morefield, Andrea M. Mühlenweg
  • Exploring the possibilities and boundaries of survey data for the analysis of wealth and wealth transfers

    In Germany, a flagrant lack of official register or tax data for scholarly use leads to a situation wherein survey data is the last remaining source of evidence about the distribution of wealth. Two of the four research chapters in this thesis aim to evaluate methods for the improvement of available survey data. The other two contributions discuss the possibilities and limitations of survey data for ...

    2017, | Christian Westermeier
  • Significant Statistical Uncertainty over Share of High Net Worth Households

    The analyses of wealth inequality based on survey data usually suffer from undercoverage of the upper percentiles of the very wealthy. Yet given this group’s substantial share of total net worth, it is of particular relevance. As no tax data are available in Germany, the largest fortunes can only be simulated using “rich lists.” For example, combining the Forbes list, with its approximately 50 German ...

    In: DIW Economic Bulletin 5 (2015), 14+15/2015, 210-219 | Christian Westermeier, Markus M. Grabka
  • Longitudinal Wealth Data and Multiple Imputation: An Evaluation Study

    Statistical analysis in surveys is generally facing missing data. In longitudinal studies for some missing values there might be past or future data points available. The question arises how to successfully transform this advantage into improved imputation strategies. In a simulation study the authors compare six combinations of cross-sectional and longitudinal imputation strategies for German wealth ...

    In: Survey Research Methods 10 (2016), 3, 237-252 | Christian Westermeier, Markus M. Grabka
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