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Recent studies emphasize the impact of macroeconomic factors on educational attainment. They show that although individual factors like the educational level of one’s parents play a decisive role in determining the human capital accumulation of the children, the cohort size as well as the local labor market seem to have a significant impact, too. This paper analyzes the impact of birth cohort size ...
Bochum, Dortmund, Duisburg, Essen:
Ruhr Graduate School in Economics and RWI Essen,
2007,
(Ruhr Economic Papers #10)
| Torge Middendorf
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Bochum, Dortmund, Duisburg, Essen:
Ruhr Graduate School in Economics and RWI Essen,
2008,
(Ruhr Economic Papers #65)
| Torge Middendorf
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We address the empirical question to which extent higher fuel efficiency of cars affects additional travel and how this behavioural aspect is modified by additional variables. The data set used to estimate a theoretical model of the rebound effect covers two panel waves, 1998 and 2003, taken from the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP). To take full advantage of the information in the data available, ...
In:
Energy Policy
41 (2012), 1, 29-35
| Wenzel Matiaske, Roland Menges, Martin Spiess
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Following the discussion on reurbanization (changing intra-regional migration patterns), our research project treats transport-related consequences of this spatial development in German city regions. The hypothesis is that reurbanization bears potential to spread environmentally friendly ways of organizing daily mobility – but that the chance of those positive effects might be given away, if policy ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2012,
(SOEPpapers 459)
| Gesa Matthes
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This paper studies the intergenerational effects of parental unemployment on students’ transitions after completing upper secondary education. Besides estimating the average treatment effect of parental unemployment on transition outcomes, we also aim to identify the economic, psychological or other intra-familial mechanisms that might be responsible for any adverse impact of parental unemployment ...
In:
Research in Social Stratification and Mobility
62 (2019), August 2019,
| Kristina Lindemann, Markus Gangl
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It is widely acknowledged that data sharing has great potential for scientific progress. However, so far making data available has little impact on a researcher’s reputation. Thus, data sharing can be conceptualized as a social dilemma. In the presented study we investigated the influence of the researcher's personality within the social dilemma of data sharing. The theoretical background was ...
In:
PLOS ONE
12 (2017), 8,
| Stephanie Linek, Benedikt Fecher, Sascha Friesike, Marcel Hebing
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Using the 41-year division of Germany as a natural experiment, we show that the GDR’s gender-equal institutions created a culture that has undone the male breadwinner norm and its consequences. Since reunification, East Germany still differs from West Germany not only by a higher female contribution to household income, but also because East German women can earn more than their husbands without having ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2019,
(SOEPpapers 1031)
| Quentin Lippmann, Alexandre Georgieff, Claudia Senik
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This paper argues that the socialist episode in East Germany, which constituted a radical experiment in gender equality in the labor market and other instances, has left persistent tracks on gender norms. We focus on one of the most resilient and pervasive gender gaps in modern societies: mathematics. Using the German division as a natural experiment, we show that the underperformance of girls in math ...
In:
Journal of Comparative Economics
46 (2018), 3, 874-888
| Quentin Lippmann, Claudia Senik
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Attrition is mostly caused by not contacted or refusing sample members. On one hand it is well-known that reasons to attrite due to non-contact are different from those that are due to refusal. On the other hand does non-contact most probably affect household attrition, while refusal can be effective on both households and individuals. In this article, attrition on both the household and (conditional ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2009,
(SOEPpapers 164)
| Oliver Lipps
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The 1990s and 2000s were a gloomy period for Germany’s working class, hit by mass unemployment, welfare retrenchment and wage stagnation. We examine whether the growing economic disparity between the top and the bottom of Germany’s class structure was accompanied by a widening class gap in life satisfaction. We analyse whether there is a social class gradient in life satisfaction and whether, over ...
In:
European Societies
20 (2018), 4, 549-571
| Oliver Lipps, Daniel Oesch