SOEP Research: Migration and Integration

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239 results, from 201
  • SOEPpapers 92 / 2008

    Bringing Home the Money: Xenophobia and Remittances: The Case of Germany

    The determinants of migrants' remittances are the subject of this study based on German SOEP data (2001-2006). In contrast to previous studies we analyze the motives for remittances not only for foreigners but also for the broader group of individuals with a personal migration background. Major findings are: First, concerns about xenophobia lead to higher remittances. Second, income and gender has ...

    2008| Elke Holst, Andrea Schäfer, Mechthild Schrooten
  • DIW Discussion Papers 774 / 2008

    Bringing Home the Money: Xenophobia and Remittances: The Case of Germany

    The determinants of migrants' remittances are the subject of this study based on German SOEP data (2001-2006). In contrast to previous studies we analyze the motives for remittances not only for foreigners but also for the broader group of individuals with a personal migration background. Major findings are: First, concerns about xenophobia lead to higher remittances. Second, income and gender has ...

    2008| Elke Holst, Andrea Schäfer, Mechthild Schrooten
  • SOEPpapers 111 / 2008

    Gender, Migration, Remittances: Evidence from Germany

    Gender-specific determinants of remittances are the subject of this study based on German SOEP data (2001-2006). In 2007, about 7.3 million foreigners were living in Germany. While the total number of foreigners has decreased over the last decade, female migration to Germany has increased. A feminization of migration is observable all over the world, and is changing gender roles in the households of ...

    2008| Elke Holst, Andrea Schäfer, Mechthild Schrooten
  • DIW Discussion Papers 800 / 2008

    Gender, Migration, Remittances: Evidence from Germany

    Gender-specific determinants of remittances are the subject of this study based on German SOEP data (2001-2006). In 2007, about 7.3 million foreigners were living in Germany. While the total number of foreigners has decreased over the last decade, female migration to Germany has increased. Today, women constitute 48.6% of migratory flows to Germany, although the proportion varies significantly by country ...

    2008| Elke Holst, Andrea Schäfer, Mechthild Schrooten
  • SOEPpapers 57 / 2007

    Ethnic Identity and Immigrant Homeownership

    Immigrants are much less likely to own their homes than natives, even after controlling for a broad range of life-cycle and socio-economic characteristics and housing market conditions. This paper extends the analysis of immigrant housing tenure choice by explicitly accounting for ethnic identity as a potential influence on the homeownership decision, using a two-dimensional model of ethnic identity ...

    2007| Amelie Constant, Rowan Roberts, Klaus F. Zimmermann
  • SOEPpapers 59 / 2007

    Wealth and Asset Holdings of Immigrants in Germany

    This paper examines the relative wealth position and the portfolio choices of immigrants in Germany. The empirical findings reveal significant differences in overall wealth and various wealth components between German natives and immigrants. Differences in real estate constitute the major part of different levels of net worth, indicating that disparities in home-ownership rates are responsible for ...

    2007| Mathias Sinning
  • SOEPpapers 26 / 2007

    When Have All the Graduates Gone? Internal Cross-State Migration of Graduates in Germany 1984-2004

    The present paper analyzes the out-migration of graduates to other German states or abroad based on the German Socio-Economic Panel (GSOEP). Applying duration analysis, it can be shown that, ten years after graduation, slightly more than seventy percent of the graduates still live in the state where they completed their studies. The parametric estimation model identifies personal characteristics that ...

    2007| Oliver Busch
  • SOEPpapers 63 / 2007

    Social Deprivation and Exclusion of Immigrants in Germany

    This paper aims at providing empirical evidence on social exclusion of immigrants in Germany. We demonstrate that when using a conventional definition of the social inclusion index typically applied in the literature, immigrants appear to experience a significant degree of social deprivation and exclusion, confirming much of the economic literature examining the economic assimilation of immigrants ...

    2007| John P. Haisken-DeNew, Mathias Sinning
  • SOEPpapers 64 / 2007

    Assimilation and Cohort Effects for German Immigrants

    Demographic change and the rising demand for highly qualified labor in Germany attracts notice to the analysis of immigration. In addition, the pattern of immigration changed markedly during the past decades. Therefore we use the latest data of the German Socioeconomic Panel up to the year 2006 in order to investigate the economic performance of immigrants. We perform regressions of three pooled cross ...

    2007| Sebastian Gundel, Heiko Peters
  • Sonstige Publikationen des DIW / Aufsätze 2007

    BIOIMMIG: Generated and Status Variables from SOEP for Foreigners and Migrants

    2007| Jan Goebel, Maria Richter
239 results, from 201
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