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In:
Review of Economic Dynamics
11 (2008), 4, 884-903
| Hans Fehr, Christian Habermann, Fabian Kindermann
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Although the number of flexible workers is constantly growing, little is known about career paths built up on flexible employment. In this article, we investigate the chances of former flexible workers to be employed in a permanent full-time position. In two field experiments, we asked for employers’ evaluation of applicants with a flexible employment history. Results indicate that former part-time ...
In:
Management revue
20 (2009), 1, 15-33
| Elisabeth Dütschke, Sabine Boerner
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Cross-country differences of market hours in 17 OECD countries are mainly due to the hours of women, especially low-skilled women. This paper develops a model to account for the gender-skill differences in market hours across countries. The model explains a substantial fraction of the differences in hours by taxes, which reduce market hours in favor of leisure and home production, and by subsidized ...
Bonn:
IZA Institute of Labor Economics,
2017,
(IZA DP No. 11002)
| Robert Duval-Hernandez, Lei Fang, L. Rachel Ngai
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This paper decomposes the differences in aggregate market hours between US and Europe across gender-skill groups and finds that low-skilled women are the biggest contributors to aggregate differences, with the exception of Nordic countries. We develop a model to account for the gender-skill differences in market hours across countries. Taxes, which reduce market hours in favor of leisure and home production, ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2018,
(SOEPpapers 962)
| Robert Duval-Hernández, Lei Fang, L. Rachel Ngai
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An active lifestyle including physical exercise and novelty processing is considered to promote brain health. Also, subjective future time perspectives (FTP) are known to shape motivation and goal-directed behavior, with links to objective health, well-being, and cognition. Nevertheless, the links between subjective FTP and brain physiology are largely unknown. We report data from 326 healthy older ...
In:
GeroPsych
31 (2018), 3, 127-136
| Sandra Düzel, Johanna Drewelies, Denis Gerstorf, Ilja Demuth, Simone Kühn, Ulman Lindenberger
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Three very large, nationally representative samples of married couples were used to examine the relative importance of 3 types of personality effects on relationship and life satisfaction: actor effects, partner effects, and similarity effects. Using data sets from Australia (N = 5,278), the United Kingdom (N = 6,554), and Germany (N = 11,418) provided an opportunity to test whether effects replicated ...
In:
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
99 (2010), 4, 690-702
| Portia S. Dyrenforth, Deborah A. Kashy, M. Brent Donnellan, Richard E. Lucas
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In the 1990s transition from socialism to capitalism in Eastern Europe life satisfaction followed the collapse and recovery of GDP, but failed to recover commensurately. By 2005, with GDP averaging about 25 per cent above its early 1990s level, life satisfaction was typically back to its earlier level, but was arguably still below pre-transition values. Increased satisfaction with material living levels ...
In:
Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization
71 (2009), 2, 130-145
| Richard A. Easterlin
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What do social survey data tell us about the determinants of happiness? First, that the psychologists' setpoint model is questionable. Life events in the nonpecuniary domain, such as marriage, divorce, and serious disability, have a lasting effect on happiness, and do not simply deflect the average person temporarily above or below a setpoint given by genetics and personality. Second, mainstream ...
In:
Holger Hinte, Klaus F. Zimmermann ,
Happiness, Growth, and the Life Cycle
Oxford, New York: Oxford University Press
231-247
| Richard A. Easterlin
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In:
Andrew E. Clark, Claudia Senik ,
Happiness & Economic Growth
Oxford: Oxford University Press
6-31
| Richard A. Easterlin
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In:
Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization
68 (2008), 3-4, 433-444
| Richard A. Easterlin, Anke C. Plagnol