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2010,
| Eva M. Berger
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This paper investigates the effect of locus of control (LOC) on the length of mothers’ employment break after childbirth. Using data from the German Socio-Economic Panel Study (SOEP), duration data reveals that women with an internal LOC return to employment more quickly than women with an external LOC.We find that this effect is particularly pronounced in jobs in which the penalties in terms of lower ...
In:
Journal of Human Capital
10 (2016), 4, 442-481
| Eva M. Berger, Luke Haywood
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When renting an apartment, often a commission is payable by the renter. In a perfect market, standard economic reasoning predicts the rental price for an apartment with a commission payable by the renter to be lower than the price for the same apartment without commission. We test this hypothesis against an alternative hypothesis based on insights from behavioral economics about mental accounting, ...
Mainz:
Johannes Gutenberg University,
2018,
(Gutenberg School of Management and Economics & Research Unit "Interdisciplinary Public Policy" Discussion Paper Nr. 1716)
| Eva M. Berger, Felix Schmidt
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This paper investigates the association between maternal life satisfaction and the developmental functioning of two- to three-year-old children as well as the socio-emotional behavior of five- to six-year-old children. We use data from the German Socio-Economic Panel Study (SOEP), which allows us to control for a rich set of child and parental characteristics and to use the mother’s life satisfaction ...
In:
Journal of Economic Psychology
32 (2011), 1, 142-158
| Eva M. Berger, C. Katharina Spieß
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New York, NY:
2007,
| Helge Berger, Michael Neugart
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Dubrovnik:
1990,
| Peter A. Berger
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In:
European Sociological Review
9 (1993), 1, 43-61
| Peter A. Berger, Peter Steinmüller, Peter M. Sopp
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Frankfurt am Main:
Deutsche Bank,
2008,
(Deutsche Bank Research, 7. Januar 2008)
| Stefan Bergheim
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In:
FinanzArchiv
60 (2004), 3, 393-421
| Barbara Berkel, Axel H. Börsch-Supan
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While various empirical studies have found negative growth-effects of natural disasters, little is yet known about the microeconomic channels through which disasters might affect short- and especially long-term growth. This paper contributes to filling this gap in the literature by studying how natural disasters affect individual saving decisions. This study makes use of a natural experiment created ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2015,
(SOEPpapers 763)
| Michael Berlemann, Max Steinhardt, Jascha Tutt