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Ziel dieses Beitrags ist die Analyse privater Transfers in Deutschland mit Daten des Sozio-ökonomischen Panels (SOEP). Für das Jahr 1995 wird die Summe lebzeitiger Eltern-Kind-Transfers auf etwa 17 Milliarden DM geschätzt. Die ökonometrische Analyse basiert auf zwei Unterstichproben aus dem SOEP: einem Eltern-Datensatz, der Informationen über eine große Zahl von Elternhaushalten enthält, und einem ...
In:
Zeitschrift für Wirtschafts- und Sozialwissenschaften (ZWS)
119 (1999), 3, 429-453
| Hendrik Jürges
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In:
Scandinavian Journal of Economics
103 (2001), 3, 391-414
| Hendrik Jürges
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In:
Labour
16 (2002), 2, 347-381
| Hendrik Jürges
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Using German panel data, I examine the long-term development in satisfaction with work from 1984 until 2001. As was the case for many other industrialized countries, Germany witnessed a sharp decline in workers’ self-reported job satisfaction in the late 1980s and 1990s, the reason of which is yet unknown. I present a cohort analysis of job satisfaction using various identifying assumptions to examine ...
In:
Labour
17 (2003), 4, 439-518
| Hendrik Jürges
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Mannheim:
University of Mannheim, Mannheim Research Institute for the Economics of Aging (MEA),
2004,
| Hendrik Jürges
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In:
Schmollers Jahrbuch: Journal of Applied Social Science Studies/Zeitschrift für Wirtschafts-und Sozialwissenschaften
124 (2004), 3, 327-353
| Hendrik Jürges
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Berlin:
German Institute for Economic Research (DIW Berlin),
2005,
(DIW Discussion Paper No. 474)
| Hendrik Jürges
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In:
Schmollers Jahrbuch (Proceedings of the 6th International Conference of German Socio-Economic Panel Study Users, ed. by Büchel, Felix; D'Ambrosio, Conchita and Frick, Joachim R.)
125 (2005), 1, 157-165
| Hendrik Jürges
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In:
Review of Economics of the Household
4 (2006), 4, 299-323
| Hendrik Jürges
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Germany is one of the few OECD countries with a two-tier system of statutory and primary private health insurance. Both types of insurance provide fee-for-service insurance, but chargeable fees for identical services are more than twice as large for privately insured patients than for statutorily insured patients. This price variation creates incentives to induce demand primarily among the privately ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2007,
(SOEPpapers 8)
| Hendrik Jürges