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In:
Journal of the Royal Statistical Society Series A - Statistics in Society
170 (2007), 1, 43-61
| Hendrik Jürges
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the article studies the relationship between self-assessed health (SAH) and subsequent mortality in the German Socio-Economic Panel. Specifically, I examine whether socio-economic characteristics of respondents have an effect on mortality, conditional on SAH. Such conditional effects are shown to exist for various covariates, including age, income and wealth. These findings question the comparability ...
In:
Applied Economics
40 (2008), 5, 569-582
| Hendrik Jürges
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Germany has a two-tier system of statutory and primary private health insurance. Both insurance types provide fee-for-service insurance, but chargeable fees for identical services are more than twice as large for privately insured as for statutorily insured patients. Using German SOEP 2002 data, I analyze the effect of insurance status on the insured's number of doctor visits. Conditional on health, ...
In:
Schmollers Jahrbuch - SOEP after 25 Years. Proceedings of the 8th International Socio-Economic Panel User Conference
129 (2009), 2, 297-307
| Hendrik Jürges
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Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press,
1999,
| Lutz Leisering, Stefan Leibfried
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This chapter reviews the current state of German family policy with a special focus on rights and obligations. It identifies the peculiarities of family policies in the formerly socialist East and in the conservative-familist West. German unification merged two contrasting models of family policy: the East German dual-earner model and the West German male breadwinner model. While family policy in East ...
In:
Ilona Ostner, Christoph Schmitt ,
Family Policies in the Context of Family Change. The Nordic Countries in Comparative Perspective.
Wiesbaden: VS Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften
175-202
| Sigrid Leitner, Ilona Ostner, Christoph Schmitt
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Does birth order shape people’s propensity to take risks? Evidence is mixed. We used a three-pronged approach to investigate birth-order effects on risk taking. First, we examined the propensity to take risks as measured by a self-report questionnaire administered in the German Socio-Economic Panel, one of the largest and most comprehensive household surveys. Second, we drew on data from the Basel–Berlin ...
In:
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (PNAS)
116 (2019), 13, 6019-6024
| Tomas Lejarraga, Renato Frey, Daniel D. Schnitzlein, Ralph Hertwig
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We investigate the causal effect of age at migration on subsequent educational attainment in the destination country. To identify the causal effect we compare the educational attainment of siblings at age 21, exploiting the fact that they typically migrate at different ages within a given family. We consider several education outcomes conditional on family fixed effects. We take advantage of long running ...
In:
Economics of Education Review
63 (2018), April 2018, 78-99
| Dominique Lemmermann, Regina T. Riphahn
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This study investigates professional social mobility, i.e., changes in one’s occupational status compared to that of their parents. It uses data from the German Socio-Economic Panel (Sozio-oekonomisches Panel, SOEP) on middle-aged, western Germans who were born between 1939 and 1971. On average, social status relative to parents has increased (absolute social mobility). However, looking at how positions ...
In:
DIW Weekly Report
8 (2018), 20, 169-178
| Nicolas Legewie, Sandra Bohmann
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Randomized controlled trials (RCT) are the gold standard in research design for studying causal relationships. In migration studies, they can, for instance, help studying the effects of government and non-government programs on migrant integration. However, RCTs are challenging and cost-intensive to conduct. In this brief, we outline a research design that integrates RCTs into existing panel surveys ...
2019,
(Briefs on Methodological, Ethical and Epistemological Issues No. 7)
| Nicolas Legewie, Philipp Jaschke, Magdalena Krieger, Martin Kroh, Lea-Maria Löbel, Diana Schacht
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In a recent study, Bianchi (2014) showed that macroeconomic conditions (i.e. average unemployment rate) during the years of emerging adulthood (ages 18–25) are inversely related to adult narcissism. Fletcher (2015) called into question the robustness of the results and Grijalva et al. (2015) presented meta-analytic support for real gender differences in narcissism. Here we report combined results from ...
In:
Journal of Research in Personality
60 (2016), (February 2016), 8-11
| Marius Leckelt, Mitja D. Back, Joshua D. Foster, Roos Hutteman, Garrett Jaeger, Jessica McCain, Jean M. Twenge, W. Keith Campbell