Publications Based on SOEP Data: SOEPlit

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6847 results, from 331
  • Wealth and Family Formation: Insights from First Cohabitation, Marriage, and Birth in Germany

    Existing research has demonstrated that wealthier individuals differ in family formation. Potential explanations draw on wealth’s use and symbolic value as well as the relative economic bar of family formation. This study examines the relationship between wealth and three family formation events in Germany: first cohabitation, marriage, and birth. Data from the German Socio-Economic Panel Study (2002–2017) ...

    In: European Journal of Population 41 (2025), 1, 16 | Philipp M. Lersch
  • When You’re Down and Out: Who Benefits from Volunteering in Old Age?

    Theoretical considerations suggest that volunteering contributes to retirement adjustment because it compensates for role losses following retirement. However, the idea that mental health benefits of volunteering are stronger after retirement than prior to retirement has been hardly tested empirically. Moreover, it remains open to question who benefits from volunteering in retirement in particular. ...

    2024,
    (OSF Preprints)
    | Matthias Lühr
  • With Great Prestige Comes Great Responsibility: The Role of Occupations in Shaping Employee Behavior

    What compels a doctor to volunteer at a makeshift clinic in a remote village? Why do lawyers from elite firms devote hundreds of hours to pro-bono cases? These examples illuminate how occupations shape behavior beyond formal job requirements. As careers become increasingly defined by occupational rather than organizational membership, understanding the occupational forces that shape discretionary behaviors ...

    In: Academy of Management Proceedings 2025 (2025), 1, | Sridhar Polineni
  • Three Essays on Fertility, Import Competition, and Meta-Analysis (Dissertation)

    The current work relies on G-SOEP to study the effects of import competition on fertility choices. This phenomenon has been addressed by using a single-observation dataset following the seminal paper of Autor et al. (2014). The results show a negative and significant effect on the choice of childbearing.Moreover, the trade exposure measure has been computed by aggregating the Lander and, in a second ...

    2025, | Giulia Ulivieri
  • Ende zweier Ungleichheiten? Die Aufstiegschancen von Ostdeutschen und die Notwendigkeit zur Unterscheidung von Eliten- und Führungspositionen

    This article compares the promotion prospects of East Germans in leadership and elite positions. It starts from the observation that East Germans have lower chances of reaching leadership positions, although these have converged with those of West Germans in younger birth cohorts. Theoretical considerations on the distinction between leadership and elite positions, along with empirical findings based ...

    In: Zeitschrift für Soziologie 54 (2025), 2, 224-237 | Lars Vogel
  • Spatial overlap: trade-offs in refugees’ residential choices

    Social science research gives rise to what we call the ?refugee mobility puzzle?: While restrictions on the freedom of residence limit refugees? socio-economic integration, those who do not face such restrictions often move to areas with high unemployment that similarly hinder their labor market prospects. This study addresses a central element of this puzzle: What draws refugees to high unemployment ...

    In: Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 51 (2025), 5, 1075-1097 | Jonas Wiedner, Merlin Schaeffer
  • Identifying Optimizers, Extremists, and Indifferents: Latent Satisficing Patterns in Panel Surveys

    Data quality is known to be compromised when respondents cognitively shortcut the survey response process. This satisficing behavior leads to inaccurate and unreliable responses that are hard to compensate after data collection. Thus, detecting and understanding surrvey satisficing is crucial for developing and implementing effective preventive measures in longitudinal data collection contexts. We ...

    OSFPreprints: 2025, | Julia Witton, Carina Cornesse
  • DIW focus / 2025

    A simulation framework for studying the social impacts of algorithm-based refugee matching

    The integration chances of refugees in their host country are critically shaped by the contextual conditions of the location to which they are assigned upon arrival. Several research groups have developed algorithmic tools to optimize refugee-location matching, with the overall aim of improving refugees’ integration outcomes. These tools are used in a highly sensitive context and thus their design, ...

    2025| Christoph Kern, Jakob Kappenberger, Frederic Gerdon, Clara Strasser Ceballos, Daria Szafran, Florian Rupp, Ruben L. Bach
  • Active pension mainly relieves higher-earning pensioners; employment effects are uncertain

    The new German federal government coalition is planning a significant tax break for workers of retirement age: the active pension (Aktivrente). With the active pension, workers who have reached the statutory retirement age may earn up to 2,000 euros a month tax-free, a move that the government is hoping will motivate more pensioners to work longer to counteract the skilled worker shortage. Microsimulation ...

    In: DIW Weekly Report 25+26/2025 DIW Weekly Report 25+26/2025 | Stefan Bach, Hermann Buslei, Johannes Geyer, Peter Haan, Joris Pieper
  • Additive density-on-scalar regression in Bayes Hilbert spaces with an application to gender economics

    Motivated by research on gender identity norms and the distribution of the woman’s share in a couple’s total labor income, we consider additive regression models for densities as responses with scalar covariates. To preserve nonnegativity and integration to one under vector space operations, we formulate the model for densities in a Bayes Hilbert space, which allows to not only consider continuous ...

    In: The Annals of Applied Statistics 19 (2025), 1, 680-700 | Eva-Maria Maier, Almond Stöcker, Bernd Fitzenberger, Sonja Greven
6847 results, from 331
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