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702 results, from 581
  • SOEPpapers 491 / 2012

    Unemployment and Smoking: Causation, Selection, or Common Cause? Evidence from Longitudinal Data

    Background: This study investigates possible mechanisms that can explain the association between unemployment and smoking, that is a) unemployment increases smoking probability (causation), b) smoking increases the probability to become unemployed (selection), and c) differences in both smoking and unemployment probabilities trace back to differences in socio-economic position (common cause). Methods: ...

    2012| Reinhard Schunck, Benedikt G. Rogge
  • Research Project

    Herders coping with hazards in Kyrgyzstan and Mongolia

    Completed Project
  • SOEPpapers 432 / 2012

    Does Job Loss Make You Smoke and Gain Weight?

    This paper estimates the effect of involuntary job loss on smoking behavior and body weight using German Socio-Economic Panel Study data. Baseline nonsmokers are more likely to start smoking due to job loss, while smokers do not intensify their smoking. Job loss increases body weight slightly, but significantly. In particular, single individuals as well as those with lower health or socioeconomic status ...

    2012| Jan Marcus
  • SOEPpapers 233 / 2009

    Why Are Middle-Aged People so Depressed? Evidence from West Germany

    Does happiness vary with age? The evidence is inconclusive. Some studies show happiness to increase with age (Diener et al. 1999; Argyle 2001). Others hold that the association is U-shaped with either highest depression rates (Mroczek and Christian, 1998; Blanchflower and Oswald, 2008) or highest happiness levels occurring during middle age (Easterlin, 2006). Current studies suffer from two shortcomings. ...

    2009| Hilke Brockmann
  • Vierteljahrshefte zur Wirtschaftsforschung 1 / 2001

    The Effect of Job Displacement on Subsequent Health

    Using data from the 1994-1996 waves of the German Socio-Economic Panel (GSOEP), this prospective longitudinal study investigates the association between job displacement and subsequent self-assessed health (SAH). The sample consists of 253 displaced workers and a comparison group of 6,934 continuously-employed workers. Controlling for baseline SAH and standard demographic characteristics, we find no ...

    2001| William T. Gallo, Elizabeth H. Bradley, Stanislav V. Kasl
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    In Vino Pecunia? The Association between Beverage-Specific Drinking Behavior and Wages

    The positive association between moderate alcohol consumption and wages is well documented in the economic literature. Positive health effects as well as networking mechanisms serve as explanations for the "alcohol-income puzzle". Using individual-based microdata from the SOEP for 2006, we confirm that this relationship exists for Germany as well. More importantly, we shed light on the alcohol-income ...

    In: Journal of Labor Research 30 (2009), 3, S. 219-244 | Nicolas R. Ziebarth, Markus M. Grabka
  • SOEPpapers 172 / 2009

    Long-Term Absenteeism and Moral Hazard: Evidence from a Natural Experiment

    Sick leave payments represent a significant portion of public health expenditures and labor costs. Reductions in replacement levels are a commonly used instrument to tackle moral hazard and to increase the efficiency of the health insurance market. In Germany's Statutory Health Insurance (SHI) system, the replacement level for periods of sickness of up to six weeks was reduced from 100 percent to 80 ...

    2009| Nicolas R. Ziebarth
  • Diskussionspapiere 888 / 2009

    Long-Term Absenteeism and Moral Hazard: Evidence from a Natural Experiment

    Sick leave payments represent a significant portion of public health expenditures and labor costs. Reductions in replacement levels are a commonly used instrument to tackle moral hazard and to increase the efficiency of the health insurance market. In Germany's Statutory Health Insurance (SHI) system, the replacement level for periods of sickness of up to six weeks was reduced from 100 percent to 80 ...

    2009| Nicolas R. Ziebarth
  • Externe Monographien

    Dynamics of Poor Health and Non-employment

    While there is little doubt that the probability of poor health increases with age, and that less healthy people face a more difficult situation on the labour market, the precise relationship between facing the risks of health deterioration and labour market instability is not well understood. Using twelve years of data from the German Socio-Economic Panel we study the nature of the relationship between ...

    Bonn: IZA, 2009, 21 S.
    (Discussion Paper Series / Forschungsinstitut zur Zukunft der Arbeit ; 4154)
    | Peter Haan, Michal Myck
  • SOEPpapers 194 / 2009

    Other-Regarding Preferences, Spousal Disability and Happiness: Evidence from German Couples

    This paper considers the impact of adverse health shocks that hit an individual's partner on subjective well-being. Using data on couples from the German Socio-Economic Panel for the years 1984 to 2006, I compare the losses in well-being caused by own and spousal disability using panel-regressions. I find that women and to a lesser extent men are harmed by spousal disability which is consistent with ...

    2009| Nils Braakmann
702 results, from 581
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