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This paper uses data from the 2000–08 waves of the German Socio-Economic Panel dataset (SOEP) to assess the impact of deprivation in various life domains upon individual well-being. Unobserved heterogeneity is controlled for by means of a random effects model extended to include a Mundlak term and explicit controls for the respondents' personality traits. The paper shows that people care about ...
In:
Review of Income and Wealth
60 (2014), 4, 655-682
| Maite Blázquez Cuesta, Santiago Budría
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Using the 2000–2013 waves of the German SOEP, this paper shows that non-cognitive skills have a predictive power on unemployment transitions. The econometric approach is based on a dynamic random effects probit model that takes account of the unobserved individual heterogeneity and the state dependence that surrounds unemployment transitions. The estimation results show that the risk of unemployment ...
Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics 69 (2017), August 2017, 29-37| Maite Blázquez Cuesta, Santiago Budría
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Theory and research have emphasized the impact of life events on personality trait change. In this article, we review prospective research on personality trait change in response to nine major life events in the broader domains of love and work. We expected to find that life events lead to personality trait change to the extent that they have a lasting influence on individuals' thoughts, feelings, ...
In:
Journal of Personality
86 (2018), 1, 83-96
| Wiebke Bleidorn, Christopher J. Hopwood, Richard E. Lucas
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Manski’s partial identification allows less restrictive, therefore, more credible assumptions than the assumption of random treatment assignment to solve the evaluation problem. In this article the theory of partial identification is applied to the welfare effect of the euro cash changeover. When evaluating the impact of the euro cash changeover on individual welfare, Wunder et al. (2008) face the ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2013,
(SOEPpapers 577)
| Sara Bleninger
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We tested Lykken’s (1995) theory that the personality trait of fearless dominance (FD) can result in positive or negative life outcomes depending on whether the socialization process was successful or not. We tested FD’s predictive and moderated relations with vocational success over a time interval of 4 years. We found that the relations between FD and change in income were moderated by level of education. ...
In:
Journal of Research in Personality
81 (2019), August 2019, 25-37
| Gerhard Blickle, Hanna A. Genau
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We exploit a data driven latent class model to classify individuals in two distinct trust classes: one for low, and one for high trust individuals. Subsequently, by entering class membership in a two-wave panel analysis we find that belonging to the high trust class positively influences an individual’s economic performance, as measured by individual wage earnings. We show that trust related income ...
In:
Schmollers Jahrbuch
133 (2013), 2, 335-343
| Ruben de Bliek
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o.O.:
2006,
(Discussion Paper at SSRN)
| Jörn Block, Philipp Sandner
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Using data from the German Socio-Economic Panel Study (GSOEP), we analyze whether necessity entrepreneurs differ from opportunity entrepreneurs in terms of self-employment duration. Using univariate statistics, we find that opportunity entrepreneurs remain in self-employment longer than necessity entrepreneurs. However, after controlling for the entrepreneurs’ education in the professional area where ...
In:
Journal of Industry, Competition and Trade
9 (2009), 2, 117-337
| Jörn Block, Philipp Sandner
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Starting a business involves risk and, thus, requires a risk-taking attitude. The concept of risk and entrepreneurship has been widely discussed in the entrepreneurship literature; most studies compare entrepreneurs with nonentrepreneurs such as managers or bankers. So far, little research exists on the risk attitudes of the different types of entrepreneurs—those who pursue a new business because of ...
In:
Journal of Small Business Management
53 (2015), 1, 183-206
| Joern Block, Philipp Sandner, Frank Spiegel
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Education is a well-known driver of (entrepreneurial) income. The measurement of its influence, however, suffers from endogeneity suspicion. For instance, ability and occupational choice are mentioned as driving both the level of (entrepreneurial) income and of education. Using instru-mental variables can provide a way out. However, two questions remain: whether endogeneity is really present and whether ...
In:
Entrepreneurship Research Journal
2 (2012), 3, 1-29
| Jörn H. Block, Lennart F. Hoogerheide, A. Roy Thurik