Publications Based on SOEP Data: SOEPlit

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  • Health Effects of Instruction Intensity: Evidence from a Natural Experiment in German High-Schools

    A large literature aims to establish a causal link between education and health using changes in compulsory schooling laws. It is however unclear how well more education is operationalized by marginal increases in school years. We shed a new light on this discussion by analyzing the health effects of a reform in Germany where total years of schooling for students in the academic track were reduced ...

    Berlin: DIW Berlin, 2017,
    (SOEPpapers 916)
    | Johanna Sophie Quis, Simon Reif
  • The Role of Firm Pensions for Job Change in Germany

    In: Schmollers Jahrbuch (Proceedings of the 6th International Conference of German Socio-Economic Panel Study Users, ed. by Büchel, Felix; D'Ambrosio, Conchita and Frick, Joachim R.) 125 (2005), 1, 63-74 | Birgitta Rabe
  • Occupational Pensions, Wages, and Job Mobility in Germany

    In: Scottish Journal of Political Economy 54 (2007), 4, 531-552 | Birgitta Rabe
  • Economic Consequences of Family Break-Ups Income Before and After Family Break-Ups of Women in Germany and the United States

    This paper analyzes the economic consequences of family break-ups on women’s household income using fixed effects panel regression on German (SOEP) and US American (PSID) panel data. Since Germany and the United States are two examples of opposing social models, reflected in their policy framework regarding family break-ups, country differences in the economic consequences are assumed. The cross-national ...

    In: Schmollers Jahrbuch - Proceedings of the 9th International Socio-Economic Panel User Conference 131 (2011), 2, 225-234 | Anke Radenacker
  • Economic consequences of family dissolution: Comparing Germany and the United States since the 1980s, and Married and Cohabiting Parents in Germany (dissertation)

    Welfare states and policies have changed greatly over the past decades, mostly characterized by retrenchments in terms of government spending or in terms of restricted access to certain benefits. In the area of family policies, however, a lot of countries have simultaneously expanded provisions and transfers for families. Bringing together the macro analysis of policy variation and household income ...

    2015, | Anke Radenacker
  • Social Approval in a Model of Time Allocation

    Dortmund: Universität Dortmund, Wirtschafts- und Sozialwissenschaftliche Fakultät, 1996,
    (Discussion Paper No. 96-04)
    | Petra Radke, Kerstin Schneider
  • Social Participation over the Life Course: A Longitudinal Study of Work and Family Events

    Social participation is a dynamic process that changes over the life course, while people fill different social roles as they age. Previous studies on social participation have looked at differences between age groups, but the great majority is based on cross-sectional data, with the inevitable limitations that go along with that. The first objective of this study is to provide a descriptive account ...

    Berlin: 2012, | Jonas Radl, Bram Lancee
  • SOEP Wave Report 2012

    2012 was an eventful year for the SOEP: The survey Families in Germany (FiD) released data collected for an overall assessment of German family policy measures for use outside the project. The SOEP Innovation Sample was expanded to almost 2,500 households. And, at the 10th SOEP User Conference, more than 80 scholars from around the world presented new research on income, education, health, and happiness. ...

    Berlin: DIW Berlin, 2013, | Uta Rahmann, (eds.) Jürgen Schupp
  • Subjective Income and Employment Expectations and Preferences for Redistribution

    In: Economics Letters 99 (2008), 3, 449-453 | Helmut Rainer, Thomas Siedler
  • Does Democracy Foster Trust?

    In: Journal of Comparative Economics 37 (2009), 2, 251–269 | Helmut Rainer, Thomas Siedler
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