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In health services research, endogenous healthcare utilization refers to the notion that the choice of utilizing health services is endogenous due to its correlation with the intensity of utilization outcomes, such as the number of emergency room visits. Greene in (Empir Econ 36:133–173, 2009) extended four conventional two-part models for zero-abundant count utilization to the two-part models that ...
In:
Health Services and Outcomes Research Methodology
20 (2020), 2, 111-139
| Xueyan Liu, Wencong Chen, Tian Chen, Hui Zhang, Bo Zhang
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Life course events such as new offspring or job loss affect a household’s demand for housing. At the same time, dynamics in the real estate market constrain where households find affordable housing. In a quasi-experimental design, this study examines the effect of increasing local housing prices on the relocation behaviour of low- and medium-income households. Difference-in-difference panel regressions ...
In:
Urban Studies
58 (2021), 12, 2389-2404
| Tim Winke
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Diese Arbeit trägt zum Verständnis der Arbeitsmarktwirkungen von internationalem Handel bei. Ein Schwerpunkt liegt hierbei auf den Effekten auf Lohn und Einkommensungleichheit. Die Arbeit nutzt qualitativ hochwertige Mikrodaten und wendet moderne ökonometrische Methoden und theoretische Konzepte an, um das Verständnis der Verteilungswirkungen von internationalem Handel zu verbessern. Die Arbeit fokussiert ...
2020,
| Erwin Winkler
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The present study compares the perceptions of fairness of national earned incomes between the populations of Germany and the rest of Europe based on recent data from the European Social Survey (ESS). The vast majority of European respondents consider very low gross earned incomes to be unjustly low. By contrast, very high incomes are less frequently considered too high in Germany than they are in the ...
In:
DIW Weekly Report
9 (2019), 44/45, 397-404
| Jule Adriaans, Philipp Eisnecker, Stefan Liebig
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Debates about affirmative action often revolve around fairness. Accordingly, we document substantial heterogeneity in the fairness perception of various affirmative action policies. But do these differences translate into different consequences? In a laboratory experiment, we study three different quota rules that favor individuals whose performance is low, either due to bad luck (discrimination), ...
In:
Economic Journal
133 (2023), 656, 3099-3135
| Hannah Schildberg-Hörisch, Chi Trieu, Jana Willrodt
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Cham:
Springer,
2021,
| Marcel Erlinghagen, Andreas Ette, Norbert F. Schneider, Nils Witte, (eds.)
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International migration is often characterised as a process of immigration from economically less developed to highly developed countries. Whereas the factors driving those flows and the integration of the respective ethnic groups are widely analysed, the international mobility of the populations of precisely those affluent societies is regularly missed and less-frequently studied. The chapter describes ...
In:
Marcel Erlinghagen, Andreas Ette, Norbert F. Schneider, Nils Witte ,
The Global Lives of German Migrants: Consequences of International Migration Across the Life Course
Cham: Springer
21-39
| Andreas Ette, Jean P. Décieux, Marcel Erlinghagen, Jean Guedes Auditor, Nikola Sander, Norbert F. Schneider, Nils Witte
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Germany today is one of the world’s most important countries of immigration but at the same time a country of emigration. During the last three decades, more than 3.3 million German citizens have left the country whereas 2.5 million have returned. Overall, 3.8 million Germans live outside Germany in another country of the OECD. The chapter analyses basic structures of German emigration and remigration. ...
In:
Marcel Erlinghagen, Andreas Ette, Norbert F. Schneider, Nils Witte ,
The Global Lives of German Migrants: Consequences of International Migration Across the Life Course
Cham: Springer
43-63
| Andreas Ette, Marcel Erlinghagen
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Economic approaches and socio-cultural integration are still the most prominent frameworks applied to explain return migration and permanent settlement. In contrast to the bulk of literature focusing on established migrations from poorer to richer regions, the contribution analyses the permanence of emigration from economically highly developed countries. Based on a life-course approach, it highlights ...
In:
Marcel Erlinghagen, Andreas Ette, Norbert F. Schneider, Nils Witte ,
The Global Lives of German Migrants: Consequences of International Migration Across the Life Course
Cham: Springer
101-118
| Andreas Ette, Lenore Sauer, Margit Fauser
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International movements by people from economically highly developed welfare states are a puzzle for the classic canon of migration theories, which generally focus on flows from less to more developed regions. Based on a simple theoretical framework linking largely disparate literatures on international and internal migration as well as the field of global work experience, this chapter provides an ...
In:
Marcel Erlinghagen, Andreas Ette, Norbert F. Schneider, Nils Witte ,
The Global Lives of German Migrants: Consequences of International Migration Across the Life Course
Cham: Springer
65-83
| Andreas Ette, Nils Witte