-
In:
European Journal of Population
24 (2008), 2, 157-183
| Cheti Nicoletti, Maria Letizia Tanturri
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This paper investigates the interrelated dynamics of employment, cohabitation and fertility for German women and men. Using a simultaneous hazards approach due to Lillard (1993), I estimate a five-equation model with unobserved heterogeneity. One of the contributions of this paper is to include the current employment and nonemployment hazard rates and the union formation and union dissolution hazard ...
Tübingen:
University of Tübingen,
2013,
(Working Papers in Economics and Finance No. 51)
| Markus Niedergesäss
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In:
Ralph Friedmann, Lothar Knüppel, Helmut Lütkepohl ,
Econometric Studies: A Festschrift in Honour of Joachim Frohn (Empirische Wirtschaftsforschung und Ökonometrie, Bd. 8)
Münster-Hamburg-London: Lit
317-333
| Michaela Niefert, Notburga Ott, Kristina Rust
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This paper explores if more generous social spending polices in fact lead to less income inequality, or if redistributive outcomes are offset by behavioral disincentive effects. To account for the inherent endogeneity of social policies with regard to inequality levels, I apply the System GMM estimator and use the presumably random incidence of certain diseases as instruments for social spending levels. ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2010,
(SOEPpapers 336)
| Judith Niehues
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Adding to the rich literature on the economic integration of refugees, this article extends the scope towards the role of institutions by focusing on the transfer of human capital by means of credential recognition. The 2012 Federal Act of Recognition in Germany is a new institution that provides the possibility to study the transfer of human capital in depth. I argue that analysing the decision for ...
In:
Journal of Refugee Studies
34 (2021), 3, 3000-–3023
| Jannes Jacobsen
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Previous estimates of inequality of opportunity (IOp) are lower bounds because of the unobservability of the full set of endowed characteristics beyond the sphere of individual responsibility. Knowing the true size of unfair IOp, however, is important for the acceptance of (some) inequality and the design of redistributive policies as underestimating the true amount of IOp might lead to too little ...
In:
Social Choice and Welfare
43 (2014), 1, 73-99
| Judith Niehues, Andreas Peichl
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In:
Torben Tranæs, Klaus F. Zimmermann ,
Migrants, Work, and the Welfare State
Odense: University Press of Southern Denkmark
245-284
| Niels-Kenneth Nielsen
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This paper studies how cognitive and social skills in childhood are related to the duration of unemployment in adolescence and early adulthood. I estimate a flexible proportional hazard rate model for the probability of making a transition from unemployment to employment during an individual’s first unemployment spell. The analysis is based on British cohort data from the National Child Development ...
Mannheim:
Centre for European Economic Research,
2010,
(ZEW Discussion Paper No. 10-104)
| Verena Niepel
-
2014,
| Christiane Nieß
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Given the negative effects of unemployment on society and individuals alike, research needs to identify factors associated with reemployment. Under the guiding framework of the dynamic developmental model (DDM) of personality and work, the present study therefore investigates the role of locus of control as both a contributor to and an outcome of reemployment. Building on a sample of 538 participants ...
2013,
(Paper presented at the 27th Australian and New Zealand Academy of Management Conference, Dec 4-6, 2013)
| Christiane Nieß, Torsten Biemann