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Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2007,
(SOEPpapers 20)
| Natalie Chen, Paola Conconi, Carlo Perroni
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This SDN studies the evolution of inequality across age groups leading up to and since the global financial crisis, as well as implications for fiscal and labor policies. Europe’s population is aging, child and youth poverty are rising, and income support systems are often better equipped to address old-age poverty than the challenges faced by poor children and/or unemployed youth today.
Washington, DC:
International Monetary Fund,
2018,
(Staff Discussion Notes No. 18/01)
| Tingyun Chen, Jean-Jacques Hallaert, Alexander Pitt, Haonan Qu, Maximilien Queyranne, Alaina Rhee, Anna Shabunina, Jérôme Vandenbussche, Irene Yackovlev
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In:
Review of Income and Wealth
55 (2009), 1, 75-100
| Wen-Hao Chen
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This paper examines the distributive impact of economic globalisation, technological progress and changes in labour market policies, regulations and institutions in OECD countries over the past quarter century, up to the Great Recession. It identifies the relevant pathways between macro-economic developments and earnings inequality among the whole working-age population by accounting for both changes ...
Luxembourg:
Luxembourg Income Study (LIS),
2013,
(LIS Working Paper Series No. 597)
| Wen Hao Chen, Michael Förster, Ana Llena-Nozal
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Florence:
UNICEF Innocenti Research Centre,
2005,
(Innocenti Working Paper 2005-02)
| Wen-Hao Chen, Miles Corak
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This paper investigates the effect of unemployment on life satisfaction from a comparative perspective. It also tests whether the link between unemployment and life satisfaction is moderated or reinforced by contextual unemployment across regions within a country—either through a negative spillover or a positive social-norm effect, or both. The results suggest that noticeable non-pecuniary costs are ...
In:
Applied Research in Quality of Life
14 (2019), 4, 1035-1058
| Wen-Hao Chen, Feng Hou
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In:
American Journal of Education
114 (2007), 1, 41-74
| Simon Cheng, Leslie Martin, Regina E. Werum
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There is a large amount of cross-sectional evidence for a midlife low in the life cycle of human happiness and well-being (a ‘U shape’). Yet no genuinely longitudinal inquiry has uncovered evidence for a U-shaped pattern. Thus, some researchers believe the U is a statistical artefact. We re-examine this fundamental cross-disciplinary question. We suggest a new test. Drawing on four data sets, and only ...
In:
Economic Journal
127 (2017), 599, 126-142
| Terence C. Cheng, Nattavudh Powdthavee, Andrew J. Oswald
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Purpose: The present paper assessed the validity of single-item life satisfaction measures by comparing single-item measures to the Satisfaction with Life Scale (SWLS)—a more psychometrically established measure. Methods: Two large samples from Washington (N = 13,064) and Oregon (N = 2,277) recruited by the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System and a representative German sample (N = 1,312) recruited ...
In:
Quality of Life Research
23 (2014), 10, 2809-2818
| Felix Cheung, Richard E. Lucas
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Previous research shows that the correlation between income and life satisfaction is small to medium in size. We hypothesized that income may mean different things to people at different ages and, therefore, that the association between income and life satisfaction may vary at different points in the life course. We tested this hypothesis in 3 nationally representative panel studies. Multilevel modeling ...
In:
Psychology and Aging
30 (2015), 1, 120-135
| Felix Cheung, Richard E. Lucas