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Bonn:
Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA),
2005,
(IZA DP No. 1619)
| Chris M. Wilson, Andrew J. Oswald
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In:
Soziale Welt
63 (2012), 4, 361-378
| Thomas Wimmer
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Basel:
Prognos AG,
2008,
| Kerstin Windhövel, Claudia Funke, Jan-Christian Möller, Markus M. Grabka
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Seit 2006 gilt in Deutschland das Allgemeine Gleichbehandlungsgesetz – auch für den Wohnungsmarkt. Die vorliegenden Berechnungen auf Basis des Sozio-oekonomischen Panels zeigen jedoch, dass Mieterinnen und Mieter mit Migrationshintergrund deutschlandweit im Jahr 2013 durchschnittlich knapp elf Euro höhere Mieten pro Monat zahlten als Haushalte ohne Migrationshintergrund. Und das, obwohl ihre Wohnungen ...
In:
DIW Wochenbericht
83 (2016), 47, 1133-1143
| Tim Winke
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In times of ageing baby boomer cohorts and increasing regional disparities, residential choice in later life is important regarding family relations and the provision of social services. In this study, a new typology of later life moves is developed based on observed patterns and characteristics of residential changes. For this purpose, the German Socio-Economic Panel data has been linked to uniquely ...
In:
Comparative Population Studies
42 (2017), 3-24
| Tim Winke
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To assess the impact of segregation a better understanding is required why minorities and natives decide to move closer to ethnic peers. This study investigates the drivers for ethnic residential clustering from a household perspective. For this, household panel data for Germany is linked to small-scale information on the share of co-ethnic neighbours and to the number of regional housing offers and ...
In:
Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
44 (2018), 11, 1932-1953
| Tim Winke
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In:
Franz Haslinger, Oliver Stönner-Venkatarama ,
Aspects of Distribution of Income
Marburg: Metropolis Verlag
209-222
| Olaf Winkelhake, Jürgen John
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In:
Sozialer Fortschritt
47 (1998), 6, 144-150
| Olaf Winkelhake, Jürgen John
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In:
Sozial- und Präventivmedizin
(1997), 42, 3-10
| Olaf Winkelhake, Andreas Mielck, Jürgen John
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I research the consequences of changes in the deductibility of commuting costs in Germany from 2001 to 2006. Offícial figures provided by the Federal Statistical Office highlight the fact that German taxpayers claimed deductions for commuting allowances to the tune of 23-29 billion e over the years 2001-2004. Granting or not granting these deductions thus has wide ranging fiscal implications, a point ...
Paderborn:
Arbeitskreis Quantitative Steuerlehre,
2009,
(arqus Discussion Papers in Quantitative Tax Research Nr. 88)
| Martin Weiss