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  • Premiums and penalties for surplus and deficit education - Evidence from the United States and Germany

    In: Economics of Education Review 19 (2000), 2, 169-178 | Mary C. Daly, Felix Büchel, Greg J. Duncan
  • The Syracuse University Panel Study of Income Dynamics and German Socio-Economic Panel Equivalent Data File

    Syracuse: Syracuse University, All-University Gerontology Center, 1994,
    (Program Project Paper No. 16 "Cross-National Studies in Aging")
    | Mary C. Daly, Barbara A. Butrica
  • A New Look at the Distributional Effects of Economic Growth during the 1980s: A Comparative Study of the United States and Germany

    Beginning in 1983, and following the worst recession since the Great Depression, the United States experienced six years of uninterrupted economic growth, the longest such period since World War II. Along with this expansion came an increase in income inequality that many suggest diminished the middle class and made the United States unique among industrialized nations in its pace of economic growth ...

    In: Economic Review (1997), 2, 18-31 | Mary C. Daly, Amy D. Crews, Richard V. Burkhauser
  • Managing the Public Use Version of the German Socio-Economic Panel with SAS

    New York: Syracuse University, All-University Gerontology Center, 1993,
    (Project Paper No. 3)
    | Mary C. Daly, Lowell W. Lutz, Richard V. Burkhauser
  • Cross-national trends in earnings inequality and instability

    In: Economics Letters 99 (2008), 2, 215-219 | Mary C. Daly, Robert G. Valetta
  • Unfairness at work: Well-being and quits

    We here consider the effect of the level of income that individuals consider to be fair for the job they do, which we take as measure of comparison income, on both subjective well-being and objective future job quitting. In six waves of German Socio-Economic Panel data, the extent to which own labour income is perceived to be unfair is significantly negatively correlated with subjective well-being, ...

    In: Labour Economics 51 (2018), April 2018, 307-316 | Conchita D'Ambrosio, Andrew E. Clark, Marta Barazzetta
  • Social outcomes of long-term survivors of adolescent cancer

    The study investigates psychosexual and family outcomes among German long-term survivors of adolescent cancer. Survivors of cancer during adolescence (n=820; age at onset of disease: M=15.8 years, SD=0.9, age at follow-up: M=30.4, SD=6.0 years) completed questionnaires on their family life and their psychosexual and autonomy development. Outcomes were compared to an age-matched sample (German Socio-Economic ...

    In: Psycho-Oncology 19 (2010), 12, 1277-1284 | Ute Dieluweit, Klaus-Michael Debastin, Desiree Grabow, Peter Kaatsch, Richard Peter, Diana C. M. Seitz
  • Educational and Vocational Achievement Among Long-Term Survivors of Adolescent Cancer in Germany

    Adolescence involves graduating from school and preparing one's professional career. The accomplishment of these tasks may be hampered by the experience of cancer. This study investigates the educational and professional achievements of German long-term survivors of adolescent cancer. Adult survivors of cancer during adolescence (n=820, age at onset between 15 and 18 years; M=15.8, SD=0.9 years; ...

    In: Pediatric Blood & Cancer 56 (2011), 3, 432-438 | Ute Dieluweit, Klaus-Michael Debatin, Desiree Grabow, Peter Kaatsch, Richard Peter, Diana C. M. Seitz, Lutz Goldbeck
  • Beyond the Hedonic Treadmill - Revising the Adaptation Theory of Well-Being

    According to the hedonic treadmill model, good and bad events temporarily affect happiness, but people quickly adapt back to hedonic neutrality. The theory, which has gained widespread acceptance in recent years, implies that individual and societal efforts to increase happiness are doomed to failure. The recent empirical work outlined here indicates that 5 important revisions to the treadmill model ...

    In: American Psychologist 61 (2006), 4, 305-314 | Ed Diener, Richard E. Lucas, Christie Napa Scollon
  • A note on representativeness and household finance

    Previous research has shown that social households have a higher probability of owning risky assets. Using a representative sample of the German population, we demonstrate that the sociability effect is much stronger among people younger than 50.

    In: Economics Letters 113 (2011), 1, 62-64 | Maik Dierkes, Alexander Klos, Thomas Langer
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