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This paper is the first causal study using quasi-experimental methods to identify the effect of minimum wages on the reservation wages of non-workers. We exploit variation in regional exposure to the introduction of a high-impact minimum wage in Germany in 2015, combined with survey responses about wage acceptance thresholds of job seekers. Results show a 16% increase in reservation wages among non-employed ...
In:
Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization
183 (2021), March 2021, 397-419
| Alexandra Fedorets, Cortnie Shupe
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We examine the introduction of a gender quota law in Germany, mandating a minimum 30% of the underrepresented gender on the supervisory boards of a particular type of firms. We exploit the fact that Germany has a two-tier corporate system consisting of the affected supervisory boards and unaffected management boards within the same firm. We find a positive effect on the female share on supervisory ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2019,
(DIW Discussion Paper 1810)
| Alexandra Fedorets, Anna Gibert, Norma Burow
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There has been a universal statutory minimum wage in Germany for a good four years, but many employees still do not receive it. This is the finding of new calculations based on the Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP), which have updated noncompliance with the minimum wage for 2017. Even conservative calculations indicate that around 1.3 million people who are entitled to the minimum wage receive a lower wage ...
In:
DIW Weekly Report
86 (2019), 28/29, 223-231
| Alexandra Fedorets, Markus M. Grabka, Carsten Schröder
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Job mobility equilibrates disparities in local labour markets and influences the job-matching efficiency. We specify a matching function with regional, occupational and combined regional–occupational spillovers of unemployed and vacancies. To construct these spillovers, we use information on regional proximities and occupational similarities. Based on novel German data on new hires, the unemployed ...
In:
Regional Studies
53 (2019), 8, 1085-1098
| Alexandra Fedorets, Franziska Lottmann, Michael Stops
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Despite some skepticism among experts about the effects of a minimum wage, there is remarkably widespread public support for such policies. Using representative survey data from 2015 and 2016, we investigate the subjective attitudes driving public support for Germany’s recent minimum wage reform. We find that socio-economic characteristics and political orientations explain a minor part of the variation ...
In:
FinanzArchiv
75 (2019), 4, 357-379
| Alexandra Fedorets, Carsten Schröder
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In:
Proceedings of the 1998 Third International Conference of the GSOEP Study Users. Vierteljahrshefte zur Wirtschaftsforschung
68 (1999), 2, 237-242
| Christian Fehlker, Catriona Purfield
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In recent years, many social scientists have claimed that trust plays an important role in economic and social transactions. Despite its proposed importance, the measurement and the definition of trust seem to be not fully settled, and the identification of the exact role of trust in economic interactions has proven to be elusive. It is still not clear whether trust is just an epiphenomenon of good ...
In:
Journal of the European Economic Association
7 (2009), 2-3, 235–266
| Ernst Fehr
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In:
Schmollers Jahrbuch
122 (2002), 4, 519-542
| Ernst Fehr, Urs Fischbacher, Bernhard von Rosenbladt, Jürgen Schupp, Gert G. Wagner
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Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2008,
(SOEPpapers 133)
| Hans Fehr, Christian Habermann
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This paper aims to quantify the welfare effects of progressive pension arrangements in Germany. Starting from a purely contribution-related benefit system, we introduce basic allowances for contributions and a flat benefit fraction. Since our overlapping-generations model takes into account variable labor supply, borrowing constraints as well as stochastic income risk, we can compare the labor supply, ...
In:
Scandinavian Journal of Economics
110 (2008), 2, 419-443
| Hans Fehr, Christian Habermann