Publications Based on SOEP Data: SOEPlit

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7040 results, from 331
  • The long-term consequences of early school absences for educational attainment and labour market outcomes

    Abstract School absences can negatively impact a child's schooling, including the loss of teacher-led lessons, peer interactions, and, ultimately, academic achievement. However, little is known about the long-term consequences of school absences for overall educational attainment and labour market outcomes. In this paper, we used data from the 1970 British Cohort Study to examine long-term associations ...

    In: British Educational Research Journal 50 (2024), 4, 1636-1654 | Jascha Dräger, Markus Klein, Edward Sosu
  • The keys to the house: How wealth transfers stratify homeownership opportunities

    This study investigates how actual and anticipated intergenerational wealth transfers (i.e., inter-vivo gifts and inheritances) contribute to social stratification in the transition to homeownership. Utilizing discrete-time survival analysis on data from the German Socio-Economic Panel Study (N=13,018), we find that individuals whose parents were manual workers or service workers are less likely to ...

    In: Social Science Research 129 (2025), 103190 | Jascha Dräger, Nora Müller, Klaus Pforr
  • Cross-national Differences in Socioeconomic Achievement Inequality in Early Primary School: The Role of Parental Education and Income in Six Countries

    This paper presents comparative information on the strength of the association between socioeconomic status (SES) and literacy skills at ages 6–8, drawing on data from France, Germany, Japan, Rotterdam (Netherlands), the United Kingdom, and the United States. We investigate whether the strength of the association between SES and literacy skills in early-to-mid childhood depends on the operationalization ...

    In: AERA Open 10 (2024), 1, 1-18 | Jascha Dräger, Elizabeth Washbrook, Thorsten Schneider, Hideo Akabayashi, Renske Keizer, Anne Solaz, Jane Waldfogel, Sanneke de la Rie, Yuriko Kameyama, Sarah Kwon, Kayo Nozaki, Valentina Perinetti Casoni, Shinpei Sano, Alexandra Sheridan, Chizuru Shikishima
  • Studying the Family-Migration-Nexus: State of Research, Knowledge Gaps, and Empirical Perspectives

    This introductory chapter begins with a brief outline of key aspects of the current state of research on the family-migration-nexus, subsequently identifying key knowledge gaps. From this, we develop some more general thoughts about the kind of data are needed to fill existing research gaps, and then use the German Emigration and Remigration Panel Study (GERPS) as an example to describe a data set ...

    In: Marcel Erlinghagen, Karsten Hank , Transnational Family Relations of German Emigrants
    Wiesbaden: Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden
    1-17
    | Marcel Erlinghagen, Karsten Hank
  • Three Essays on Migration and Family Change

    The global population of international migrants has grown significantly over the past several decades—from 153 million in 1990 to 272 million in 2019—while the population of international migrants as the share of the world’s total population has remained quite steady. At the same time, the political importance of migration has increased, especially in the US and Western European countries. As a result, ...

    2021, | Jeylan Erman
  • Surprisingly absent! On the earnings penalty of second-generation immigrants in Germany

    Whether or not immigrants are well integrated into the labor market in Germany has been the focus of an ongoing public discussion. While there has been a lot of research on the career paths of first-generation immigrants, official statistics do not offer a lot of insight when it comes to the one of the offspring of the first generation. This paper seeks to address this issue for the second generation ...

    Berlin: 2012, | Chris Jürschik
  • Sporting Activity, Employment Status and Wage

    We propose a structural model of participation to sporty activities and labour supply. We jointly model employment, wage and sporting activity using a dynamic model. We estimate for the period going from 1994 to 1999 a dynamic multivariate model with random effects using the German Socioeconomic panel (GSOEP). The error terms of the equations of the model can be correlated. Each of these error terms ...

    In: Revue d'économie politique 132 (2022), 1, 49-78 | Thierry Kamionka
  • The effect of co-ethnic social capital on immigrants' labor market integration: a natural experiment

    Empirically identifying the causal effect of social capital on immigrants’ economic prospects is a challenging task due to the non-random residential sorting of immigrants into locations with greater opportunities for prior or co-ethnic connections. Our study addresses this selection-bias issue by using a natural-experimental dataset of refugees and other immigrants who were exogenously allocated to ...

    In: Comparative Migration Studies 10 (2022), 1, 15 | Klarita Gërxhani, Yuliya Kosyakova
  • Sources of growing labour market inequalities among low-skilled men in Western Germany

    We use the German Socio-Economic Panel 1984-2008 to identify the sources of this apparent „polarization“ among unskilled men. We start by confirming that earnings inequality among low-skilled men has grown substantially (measured as earnings over a given three-year period in order to minimize effects of short-term fluctuations). Drawing on economic and sociological theories, we then discuss potential ...

    Berlin: 2012, | Johannes Giesecke, Jan Paul Heisig, Heike Solga
  • An economical measure of attitudes towards artificial intelligence in work, healthcare, and education (ATTARI-WHE)

    Artificial intelligence (AI) has profoundly transformed numerous facets of both private and professional life. Understanding how people evaluate AI is crucial for predicting its future adoption and addressing potential barriers. However, existing instruments measuring attitudes towards AI often focus on specific technologies or cross-domain evaluations, while domain-specific measurement instruments ...

    In: Computers in Human Behavior: Artificial Humans 3 (2025), March 2025, 100106 | Timo Gnambs, Jan-Philipp Stein, Markus Appel, Florian Griese, Sabine Zinn
7040 results, from 331
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