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512 results, from 501
  • SOEPpapers 394 / 2011

    Continuous Training, Job Satisfaction and Gender: An Empirical Analysis Using German Panel Data

    Using data from the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP), this paper analyzes the relationship between training and job satisfaction focusing in particular on gender differences. Controlling for a variety of socio-demographic, job and firm characteristics, we find a difference between males and females in the correlation of training with job satisfaction which is positive for males but insignificant ...

    2011| Claudia Burgard, Katja Görlitz
  • Externe Monographien

    Four Essays in Development Microeconomics: Migration, Poverty and Well-Being in Asia ; Dissertation

    Berlin: Humboldt-Univ., 2012, 122 S. | Antje Kröger
  • SOEPpapers 493 / 2012

    Gender Differences in Residential Mobility: The Case of Leaving Home in East Germany

    This paper investigates gender differences in the spatial mobility of young adults when initially leaving their parental home. Using individual data from 11 waves (2000-2010) of the SOEP, we examine whether female home leavers in East Germany move across greater distances than males and whether these differences are explained by the gender gap in education. Our results reveal that female home leavers ...

    2012| Ferdinand Geissler, Thomas Leopold, Sebastian Pink
  • Externe Monographien

    High-Skilled Immigration Policy in Europe

    Bonn: IZA, 2010, 40 S.
    (Discussion Paper Series / Forschungsinstitut zur Zukunft der Arbeit ; 5399)
    | Martin Kahanec, Klaus F. Zimmermann
  • Diskussionspapiere 1096 / 2011

    High-Skilled Immigration Policy in Europe

    Whether Europe will be able to stand up to its internal and external challenges crucially depends on its ability to manage its internal mobility and inflows of international migrants. Using a unique expert opinion survey, we document that Europe needs skilled migrants, and skill mismatch is to be expected. A review of current immigration policies shows that despite a number of positive recent developments ...

    2011| Martin Kahanec, Klaus F. Zimmermann
  • SOEPpapers 748 / 2015

    Estimating Benefits from Regional Amenities: Internal Migration and Life Satisfaction

    This paper is the first to link economic theory with empirical life-satisfaction analyses referring to internal migration. We derive an extension of the Roback (1982) model to account for benefits from regional amenities in the utility function, while controlling for income, housing costs, and migration costs. Using highly disaggregated spatial panel information on people’s migration decisions and ...

    2015| Angela Faßhauer, Katrin Rehdanz
  • SOEPpapers 681 / 2014

    Regional Structures and Mobility Dispositions: A Multilevel Proportional- & Partial-Proportional Odds Approach

    In the light of persistent regional disparities in Germany, a wide range of studies discuss the role of regional characteristics in explaining the mobility behavior of individuals. Although multi-stage mobility theories underline the importance of regional structures particularly within the first stage of the decision-making process – whereas the actual mobility behavior is often seen as being dependent ...

    2014| Christoph Kern
  • SOEPpapers 459 / 2012

    Explaining Reurbanization: Empirical Evidence of Intraregional Migration as a Long-Term Mobility Decision from Germany

    Following the discussion on reurbanization (changing intra-regional migration patterns), our research project treats transport-related consequences of this spatial development in German city regions. The hypothesis is that reurbanization bears potential to spread environmentally friendly ways of organizing daily mobility - but that the chance ofthose positive effects might be given away, if policy ...

    2012| Gesa Matthes
  • SOEPpapers 483 / 2012

    The Impact of Social Support Networks on Maternal Employment: A Comparison of West German, East German and Migrant Mothers of Pre-School Children

    Given shortages in public child care in Germany, this paper asks whether social support with child care and domestic work by spouses, kin and friends can facilitate mothers' return to full-time or part-time positions within the first six years after birth. Using SOEP data from 1993-2009 and event history analyses for competing risks, the author compares the employment transitions of West German, East ...

    2012| Mareike Wagner
  • SOEPpapers 413 / 2011

    Testing the 'Residential Rootedness': Hypothesis of Self-Employment for Germany and the UK

    Based on the notion that entrepreneurship is a 'local event' , the literature argues that selfemployed workers and entrepreneurs are 'rooted' in place. This paper tests the 'residential rootedness'-hypothesis of self-employment by examining for Germany and the UK whether the self-employed are less likely to move or migrate than employees. Using longitudinal data from the German Socio-economic Panel ...

    2011| Darja Reuschke, Maarten Van Ham
512 results, from 501
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