Publications Based on SOEP Data: SOEPlit

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  • A Forgotten Issue: Distributional Effects of Day Care Subsidies in Germany

    In general, day care subsidies are accepted as a means of creating equal chances for both children and mothers in the labour market. Although there is a broad consensus that the use of children's day care should be publicly supported, there is no consensus on how this should be done. Moreover, there is little knowledge on the distributional effects of day care subsidies. In order to assess whether ...

    In: European Early Childhood Education Research Journal 11 (2003), 2, 159-175 | Michaela Kreyenfeld, C. Katharina Spieß, Gert G. Wagner
  • A Forgotten Issue: Distributional Effects of In-Kind Subsidies - The Case of Day Care in Germany

    In general child care subsidies are widely accepted as a means to create equal chances for mothers in the labour market as well as for children. Although there is a general consensus that the use of child care should be publicly supported, there is no consensus on how this should be done. Moreover, there is little knowledge on the distributional effects of child care subsidies. In order to assess whether ...

    Colchester: University of Essex, 1999,
    (Working papers of ESRC Research Centre on Micro-social Change. Paper No. 99-21)
    | Michaela Kreyenfeld, Gert G. Wagner
  • Female Education and the Second Child: Great Britain and Western Germany Compared

    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, 145-156 | Michaela Kreyenfeld, Cordula Zabel
  • Fertility Data for German-speaking Countries: What is the Potential? Where are the Pitfalls?

    This paper provides an overview of fertility data for Germany, Austria and Switzerland. Particular attention is given to the availability of order-specific fertility data. We discuss the quality of data provided by the Statistical Offices, both birth registration data and censuses or microcensuses. In addition, we explore how social science surveys can be used to generate order-specific fertility indicators, ...

    In: Comparative Population Studies - Zeitschrift für Bevölkerungswissenschaft 36 (2011), 2-3, 349-380 | Michaela Kreyenfeld, Kryštof Zeman, Marion Burkimsher, Ina Jaschinski
  • Tied and Troubled: Revisiting Tied Migration and Subsequent Employment

    Objective: This article looks at couples' migration decision making processes and their gender‐specific employment consequences after migration to Germany. Background: International migration has evolved into a common experience for couples around the globe. Previous research has focused on the internal migration of couples and families. This article is the first to consider couples' international ...

    In: Journal of Marriage and Family 82 (2020), 3, 934-952 | Magdalena Krieger
  • Back to Bismarck? Shifting Preferences for Intergenerational Redistribution in OECD Pension Systems

    Luxembourg: Luxembourg Income Study (LIS), 2008,
    (Luxembourg Income Study Working Paper No. 485)
    | Tim Krieger, Stefan Traub
  • Language Acquisition of Recently Arrived Immigrants in England, Germany, Ireland, and the Netherlands

    This study examines processes of language acquisition among new immigrants from Poland and Turkey in different European destinations focusing on the first few months after arrival. Starting from a human capital framework, a variety of pre- and post-migration conditions of language learning are addressed, including economic and non-economic incentives, the amount of exposure to the destination language ...

    In: Ethnicities 16 (2016), 2, 190-212 | Cornelia Kristen, Peter Mühlau, Diana Schacht
  • The contribution of health selection to occupational status inequality in Germany – differences by gender and between the public and private sectors

    Objectives: Estimating the size of health inequalities between hierarchical levels of job status and the contribution of direct health selection to these inequalities for men and women in the private and public sector in Germany. Study design: The study uses prospective data from the Socio-Economic Panel study on 11,788 women and 11,494 men working in the public and private sector in Germany. Methods: ...

    In: Public Health 133 (2016), April 2016, 67-74 | Hannes Kröger
  • The stratifying role of job level for sickness absence and the moderating role of gender and occupational gender composition

    The study investigates whether sickness absence is stratified by job level - understood as the authority and autonomy a worker holds – beyond the association with education, income, and occupation. A second objective is to establish the moderating role of gender and occupational gender composition on this stratification of sickness absence. Four competing hypotheses are developed that predict different ...

    In: Social Science & Medicine 186 (2017), August 2017, 1-9 | Hannes Kröger
  • The Association between Cvd-Related Biomarkers and Mortality in the Health and Retirement Survey

    Background: It has become increasingly common in multiple purpose general population surveys to integrate different kinds of biomarker in the data collection process.Objective: In this article we test the predictive power of five different functional forms of CVD-related biomarkers for all-cause and CVD mortality in the Health and Retirement Study (HRS). Methods: We use five different functional forms ...

    In: Demographic Research 38 (2018), Art. 62, 1933-2002 | Hannes Kröger, Rasmus Hoffmann
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