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This paper examines the effect of extending the primary school day on maternal labor supply. I exploit the staggered nature of the recent German reform to extend school hours and assess whether or not gaining access to a full day school increases the likelihood that mothers enter into the labor market or extend their hours worked if already employed. I use the German Socio-Economic Panel data set (GSOEP) ...
In:
Kyklos
72 (2019), 1, 118-151
| Nikki Shure
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Work-related stress can lead to substantial health problems and thereby result in immense costs for establishments. Therefore, the question as to what extent establishments contribute to their employees’ stress levels is of great importance for firm performance. In this paper, the relationship between personnel policy and work-related stress is investigated by considering a series of human resource ...
In:
Schmollers Jahrbuch
135 (2015), 4, 429-463
| Elena Shvartsman, Michael Beckmann
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Konstanz:
Universität Konstanz, Fakultät für Wirtschaftswissenschaften und Statistik,
1994,
(Diskussionspapier Nr. 18)
| Sikandar Siddiqui
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In:
Health Economics
6 (1997), 4, 425-438
| Sikandar Siddiqui
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In:
Journal of Population Economics
10 (1997), 4, 463-486
| Sikandar Siddiqui
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Bochum, Dortmund, Duisburg, Essen:
Ruhr Graduate School in Economics and RWI Essen,
2008,
(Ruhr Economic Papers #71)
| Stefanie Schurer
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Bochum, Dortmund, Duisburg, Essen:
Ruhr Graduate School in Economics and RWI Essen,
2008,
(Ruhr Economic Papers #57)
| Stefanie Schurer
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Policy-makers worldwide are embarking on school programmes aimed at boosting students’ resilience. One facet of resilience is a belief about cause and effect in life, locus of control. I test whether positive control beliefs work as a psychological buffer against health shocks in adulthood. To identify behavioural differences in labour supply, I focus on a selected group of full-time employed men of ...
In:
Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization
133 (2017), January 2017, 1-20
| Stefanie Schurer
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We investigate which socioeconomic groups are most likely to change their risk preferences over the lifecourse using data from a nationally representative German survey and methods to separate age from cohort and period effects. Tolerance to risk drops by 0.5 SD across all socioeconomic groups from late adolescence up to age 45. From age 45 socioeconomic gradients emerge – risk tolerance continues ...
In:
Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization
119 (2015), November 2015, 482-495
| Stefanie Schurer
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This paper studies the determinants of return migration by applying the Cox hazard model to longitudinal micro data from 1996 to 2012, including immigrants of a wide range of nationalities. The empirical results reveal the validity of the life cycle model of Migration Economics and a strong return probability decreasing effect of labor market integration and societal integration. Modeling non-proportional ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2016,
(SOEPpapers 881)
| Eric Schuss