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Background Job insecurity has been identified as a risk factor for adverse health outcomes. Perceptions of job insecurity steeply increased during Europe's recent economic downturn, which commenced in 2008. The current study assessed whether job insecurity was associated with incident asthma in Germany during this period.Methods We used prospective data from the German Socio-Economic Panel for ...
In:
Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health
68 (2014), 12, 1196-1199
| Adrian Loerbroks, Jos A. Bosch, Jeroen Douwes, Peter Angerer, Jian Li
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Purpose: There is evidence to suggest that work stress is positively associated with the occurrence of asthma. A limitation is that the small number of prior studies utilized unestablished work stress measures, thus constraining interpretation and generalizability. The present study re-examined this association by assessing work stress based on the well-established effort–reward imbalance (ERI) model.Methods: ...
In:
International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health
88 (2015), 3, 351-358
| Adrian Loerbroks, Raphael M. Herr, Jian Li, Jos A. Bosch, Max Seegel, Michael Schneider, Peter Angerer, Burkhard Schmidt
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2018,
| Max Löffler
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This paper describes IZAΨMOD, the policy microsimulation model of the Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA). The model uses household microdata from the German Socio-Economic Panel Study and firm data from the German linked employer-employee dataset LIAB. IZAΨMOD consists of three components: First, a static module simulates the effects of a tax-benefit reform on the budget of the individual household. ...
Bonn:
Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA),
2014,
(IZA DP No. 5538)
| Max Löffler, Andreas Peichl, Nico Pestel, Sebastian Siegloch, Eric Sommer
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Although discrete hours choice models have become the workhorse in labor supply analyses. Yet, they are often criticized for being a black box due to their numerous underlying modeling assumptions, with respect to, e.g., the functional form, unobserved error components or several exogeneity assumptions. In this paper, we open the black box and show how these assumptions affect the statistical fit of ...
Frankfurt am Main:
Verein für Socialpolitik, German Economic Association,
2013,
| Max Löffler, Andreas Peichl, Sebastian Siegloch
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There is still considerable dispute about the magnitude of labor supply elasticities. While differences in micro and macro estimates are recently attributed to frictions and adjustment costs, we show that relatively low labor supply elasticities derived from microeconometric models can also be explained by modeling assumptions with respect to wages. Specifically, we estimate 3,456 structural labor ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2014,
(SOEPpapers 675)
| Max Löffler, Andreas Peichl, Sebastian Siegloch
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There is still considerable dispute about the magnitude of labor supply elasticities. While differences in estimates especially between micro and macro models are recently attributed to frictions and adjustment costs, we show that the variation in elasticities derived from structural labor supply models can also be explained by modeling assumptions. Specifically, we estimate 3,456 different models ...
Bonn:
IZA Institute of Labor Economics,
2018,
(IZA DP No. 11425)
| Max Löffler, Andreas Peichl, Sebastian Siegloch
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2005,
| Henning Lohmann
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This article regards the incidence of in-work poverty and how it is reduced by the payment of social transfers in 20 European countries. It combines a micro- and a macro-level perspective in two-level models. The basis for the analysis is micro-data from the EU Statistics on Income and Living Conditions (EU-SILC) 2005 and macro-data from sources such as the OECD and Eurostat. The broad comparative ...
In:
European Sociological Review
25 (2008), 4, 489-504
| Henning Lohmann
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In:
Hans-Jürgen Andreß, Henning Lohmann ,
The Working Poor in Europe. Employment, Poverty and Globalization
Cheltenham, Northampton: Edward Elgar
47-74
| Henning Lohmann