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This article examines the implications of moving to Computer-Assisted Personal Interviewing (CAPI) for data quality by analyzing the transition from Paper-and-Pencil (PAPI) to Computer-Assisted Personal Interviewing (CAPI) on a subsample of the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP) conducted using an “experimental design” in Wave 1. The 2,000 addresses for the sample E of SOEP were split into two subsamples ...
In:
Journal of Official Statistics
26 (2010), 2, 233–269
| Jörg-Peter Schräpler, Jürgen Schupp, Gert G. Wagner
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This study examines the phenomenon of nonresponse in the first wave of a refresher sample (subsample H) of the German Socio-Economic Panel Study (SOEP). Our first step is to link additional (commercial) microgeographic data on the immediate neighborhoods of the households visited by interviewers. These additional data (paradata) provide valuable information on respondents and nonrespondents, including ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2010,
(SOEPpapers 288)
| Jörg-Peter Schräpler, Jürgen Schupp, Gert G. Wagner
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The results of a resurvey of non-respondents to the SOEP study carried out in 2006 show that this special effort of reinterviewing was relatively ineffective in two respects. First, the rate of successful conversions of passive to active respondents was low (less than 20 percent). Second, the composition of the longitudinal file did not improve. The same groups that showed high dropout rates in the ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2013,
(SOEPpapers 626)
| Jörg-Peter Schräpler, Jürgen Schupp, Gert G. Wagner
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Bonn:
Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA),
2003,
(IZA DP No. 969)
| Jörg-Peter Schräpler, Gert G. Wagner
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In:
Allgemeines Statistisches Archiv (ASTA)
89 (2005), 1, 7-20
| Jörg-Peter Schräpler, Gert G. Wagner
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We revisit the alleged retirement consumption puzzle. According to the life-cycle theory, foreseeable income reductions such as those around retirement should not affect consumption. However, we first recall that given higher leisure endowments after retirement, the theory does predict a fall of total market consumption expenditures. In order not to mistake this predicted drop for a puzzle we focus ...
In:
Review of Economics of the Household
20 (2022), 305-330
| Sven Schreiber, Miriam Beblo
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The term „fuel poverty“ describes to what extent increasing energy costs lead to a new kind of indebtness and poverty of low income households. Up to now there is no sufficient measuring method to identify fuel poverty households in Germany. The present paper reviews a British approach regarding its adaptability on German data. The aim is to examine the potential of the “Low-Income-High-Costs” indicator ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2015,
(SOEPpapers 811)
| Nadine Schreiner
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In response to increasing health expenditures and a high number of physician visits, the German government introduced a copayment for ambulatory care in 2004 for individuals with statutory health insurance (SHI). Because persons with private insurance were exempt from the copayments, this health-care reform can be regarded as a natural experiment. We used a difference-in-difference approach to examine ...
In:
European Journal of Health Economics
11 (2010), 3, 331-341
| Jonas Schreyögg, Markus M. Grabka
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Youth’s career attainment is associated with socioeconomic background, but may also be related to their beliefs about causes of success. Relationships between 17-year-olds’ socioeconomic status (SES) and causal beliefs about success, and whether these beliefs predict career attainment after completing a vocational or university degree were examined using data from the German Socio-Economic Panel Study ...
In:
Journal of Youth and Adolescence
46 (2017), 10, 2169-2180
| Joseph S. Kay, Jacob Shane, Jutta Heckhausen
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Education is not financed solely by the taxpayer— many institutions and activities require payment of top-up fees, at the very least, this applies for instance to education and care services for children. A household’s private expenditure on education depends largely on the families’ available financial resources. However, to date, very little research has been conducted on the relationship between ...
In:
DIW Economic Bulletin
5 (2015), 8, 113-123
| Carsten Schröder, C. Katharina Spieß, Johanna Storck