Publikationen mit SOEP-Daten: SOEPlit

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14277 Ergebnisse, ab 7181
  • So hoch wie möglich, so niedrig wie nötig: Was ist der optimale Mindestlohn?

    Für die Einführung eines gesetzlichen Mindestlohns stehen zwei Vorschläge im Raum: Einerseits die von der SPD vertretene Forderung nach einer Einstiegshöhe von 8,50 Euro, andererseits das Unionskonzept für eine paritätisch mit Arbeitgeber- und Arbeitnehmervertretern besetzte Lohnuntergrenzenkommission. Beide Vorschläge sind verbesserungsbedürſtig. Mit 8,50 Euro würde Deutschland einen im internationalen ...

    Essen: Rheinisch-Westfälisches Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung (RWI), 2013,
    (RWI Position #53)
    | Jochen Kluve
  • Gender Wage Differentials and the Occupational Injury Risk - Evidence from Germany and the US

    Numerous studies, in particular for the US, have shown that individuals in occupations with high injury risk are compensated for that risk by corresponding bonus payments. At the same time, male workers are overrepresented in the most dangerous occupations like scaffolders or miners, while females typically work in relatively safe occupations with respect to occupational injuries. It is therefore remarkable ...

    Bochum, Dortmund, Duisburg, Essen: Ruhr Graduate School in Economics and RWI Essen, 2007,
    (Ruhr Economic Papers #28)
    | Jochen Kluve, Sandra Schaffner
  • Labor Force Status Dynamics in the German Labor Market - Individual Heterogeneity and Cyclical Sensitivity

    The aggregate average unemployment rate in a given country is essentially the result of individual workers' transitions between the three core labor force states, employment, unemployment, and inactivity. The dynamics of these transitions depend both, on individual duration in a particular state and the transition probabilities between states. Individual transitions, in turn, depend on observable ...

    Bochum, Dortmund, Duisburg, Essen: Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Department of Economics, Technische Universität Dortmund, Department of Economics and Social Sciences, Universität Duisburg-Essen, Department of Economics and Rheinisch-Westfälisches Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung (RWI), 2009,
    (Ruhr Economic Papers #139)
    | Jochen Kluve, Sandra Schaffner, Christoph M. Schmidt
  • Low-wage Jobs — Springboard to High-paid Ones?

    We examine whether low-paid jobs have an effect on the probability that unemployed persons obtain better-paid jobs in the future (springboard effect). We make use of data from the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP) and apply a dynamic random effects bivariate probit model. Our results suggest that low-wage jobs can act as springboards to better-paid work. The improvement of the chance to obtain a high-wage ...

    In: Labour 27 (2013), 3, 310-330 | Andreas Knabe, Alexander Plum
  • Minimum Wages and their Alternatives: A Critical Assessment

    München: CESifo, 2008,
    (CESifo Working Paper No. 2494)
    | Andreas Knabe, Steffen Rätzel
  • Wie zufrieden macht die Arbeit? Eine neue Quantifizierung der nicht-pekuniären Kosten der Arbeitslosigkeit

    In: Deutscher Studienpreis , Mittelpunkt Mensch. Leitbilder, Modelle und Ideen der Vereinbarkeit von Arbeit und Leben
    Wiesbaden: VS Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften
    95-116
    | Andreas Knabe, Steffen Rätzel
  • Income, happiness, and the disutility of labour

    We re-examine the claim that the income effect on happiness is downward biased because higher income demands more work effort. We find no evidence of an underestimation because the impact of working hours on happiness is rather small and hill-shaped.

    In: Economics Letters 107 (2010), 1, 77-79 | Andreas Knabe, Steffen Rätzel
  • Quantifying the psychological costs of unemployment: the role of permanent income

    Unemployment causes significant losses in the quality of life. In addition to reducing individual income, it also creates nonpecuniary and psychological costs. We quantify these nonpecuniary losses by using the life satisfaction approach. In contrast to previous studies, we apply Friedman's (1957) permanent income hypothesis by distinguishing between temporary and permanent effects of income changes. ...

    In: Applied Economics 43 (2011), 21, 2751-2763 | Andreas Knabe, Steffen Rätzel
  • Scarring or Scaring? The Psychological Impact of Past Unemployment and Future Unemployment Risk

    We reassess the ‘scarring’ hypothesis which states that unemployment experienced in the past reduces a person's current life satisfaction even after the person has become reemployed. Our results suggest that the scar from past unemployment operates via worsened expectations of becoming unemployed in the future, and that it is future insecurity that makes people unhappy. Hence the terminology should ...

    In: Economica 78 (2011), 310, 283–293 | Andreas Knabe, Steffen Rätzel
  • Dissatisfied with Life but Having a Good Day: Time-Use and Well-Being of the Unemployed

    We apply the Day Reconstruction Method to compare unemployed and employed people with respect to their subjective assessment of emotional affects, differences in the composition and duration of activities during the course of a day and their self-reported life satisfaction. Employed persons are more satisfied with their life than the unemployed and report more positive feelings when engaged in similar ...

    In: Economic Journal 120 (2010), 547, 867-889 | Andreas Knabe, Steffen Rätzel, Ronnie Schöb, Joachim Weimann
14277 Ergebnisse, ab 7181
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