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This paper uses age-period-cohort models to show that the living standards (total monetary incomes after public benefits and contributions, adjusted for household size and inflation) of successive birth cohorts in the United States and Germany are strongly correlated with general changes in disposable incomes. This means that, after introducing controls, virtually every successive birth cohort in Germany ...
Luxembourg:
Luxembourg Income Study (LIS),
2015,
(LIS Working Paper Series No. 628)
| Louis Chauvel, Martin Schröder
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This paper deals with concepts of multidimensional poverty measurement and applies them to Germany. Three concepts of poverty are examined and included into one multidimensional approach: economic well being, capability and social exclusion. The empirical application relies on indices introduced by Bourguigon and Chakravarty (2003), and Alkire and Foster (2008). It uses data from the German Socio-Economic ...
Bonn:
Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA),
2010,
(IZA DP No. 4922)
| Christopher Busch, Andreas Peichl
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Frankfurt/M.:
Goethe-University,
2006,
| Oliver Busch
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The present paper analyzes the out-migration of graduates to other German states or abroad based on the German Socio-Economic Panel (GSOEP). Our duration analysis shows that the decision to out-migrate is mostly a matter of socio-economic variables than of state specific economic conditions. The longer the graduates stay in their state of study, the lower will be the propensity to leave. On the contrary, ...
In:
Annals of Regional Science
44 (2010), 3, 559-572
| Oliver Busch, Benjamin Weigert
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The study examines supply-side mechanisms of occupational gender segregation, analysing work values and their effects on adolescents’ gender-(a)typical occupational aspirations. Supply-side theory assumes that women develop higher preferences for a good work/life balance and for social work content in their youth, whereas men develop higher extrinsic work values. This gender typicality in work values ...
In:
European Sociological Review
31 (2015), 1, 48-64
| Anne Busch-Heizmann
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Changing employment conditions lead to new chances, but also new risks for employees. In the literature, increasing permeability between occupational and private life is discussed as one special outcome of this development that employees must face, especially those in highly qualified positions. Drawing on existing research, we investigate in how far women and men in those positions differ in their ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2017,
(SOEPpapers 904)
| Anne Busch-Heizmann, Elke Holst
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Large, one-time investments in green energy installations effectively reduce domestic energy use and greenhouse gas emissions. Despite long-term economic benefits for households, the rate of green investments often remains moderate unless supported by financial subsidies. Beyond financial considerations, green investments may also be driven by individual psychological factors. The current study uses ...
In:
Collabra: Psychology
4 (2018), 4, 8
| Ante Busic-Sontic, Cameron Brick
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This study investigates whether energy efficiency investments are driven by differences in personality traits among homeowners. Using data on nearly 3,000 households in Germany, we estimate that compared to the median level, homeowners in the lowest quartile of Openness to Experience have 5.0%-23.4% lower propensity to invest in capital-intensive energy efficiency measures, while homeowners in the ...
University of Cambridge,
2017,
(Research Gate Working Paper)
| Ante Busic-Sontic, Franz Fuerst
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This paper evaluates how a reform relaxing regulations of the temporary help service sector in Germany affected job satisfaction of male temporary agency workers. We isolate the causal effect of this reform by combining a difference-in-difference and matching approach using rich survey data. We find that the regulatory change substantially decreased agency workers’ job satisfaction while leaving regular ...
In:
Industrial Relations
56 (2017), 3, 514-544
| Henna Busk, Elke J. Jahn, Christine Singer
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Many governments invest substantial public funds to foster early childhood education. And yet, there are still many open questions who responds to and who benefits from public investments into early childcare. We use the introduction of free public daycare in German states to analyze its effects on children and their families. Our results suggest that effects of the policy differ by child age, gender ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2018,
(SOEPpapers 958)
| Anna Busse, Christina Gathmann