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Previous research on immigrant economic incorporation has predominantly focused on dimensions of labor market access, while income poverty and its determinants have not yet received as much attention. The present study sets out to address this gap, and it has a particular focus on the relative utility of intra- and interethnic contacts. Applying social capital considerations, we investigate to what ...
In:
Research in Social Stratification and Mobility
46, Part B (2016), December 2016, 73-85
| Boris Heizmann, Petra Böhnke
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In this article, the influence of immigrant occupational composition on the earnings of immigrants and natives in Germany is examined. Using data from the German Socio-Economic Panel Study and the German Microcensus, several relevant concepts are tested. The notion of quality sorting states that the differences in wages that are associated with the immigrant share within occupations are due only to ...
In:
International Migration Review
51 (2017), 2, 475-505
| Boris Heizmann, Anne Busch-Heizmann, Elke Holst
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In:
Johannes Schwarze, Friedrich Buttler, Gert G. Wagner ,
Labour Market Dynamics in Present Day Germany
Frankfurt/M. - New York: Campus
142-164
| Christof Helberger, Ulrich Rendtel, Johannes Schwarze
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Job insecurity has become increasingly evident in European countries in recent years. In Germany, legislation has increased insecurity through erosion of the standard employment relationship. Fixed-term contracts are central to definitions of insecurity based on atypical or precarious work but there is still limited understanding of what creates insecurity and how it affects workers. Drawing on Bourdieu’s ...
In:
Social Indicators Research
137 (2018), 3, 1145-1162
| Laura Helbling, Shireen Kanji
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Berlin:
Deutsches Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung (DIW Berlin),
2014,
(SOEPpapers 644)
| Tomas Hellebrandt
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We examine the relationship between preferences for the public funding of school children day care and the share of foreign pupils in German jurisdictions. To this end, we employ multilevel models to analyze individual-level data from the 1997 and 2002 waves of the German Socio-Economic Panel and data on different jurisdiction-levels from official sources. In contrast to a number of recent studies ...
In:
Social Indicators Research
119 (2014), 2, 997-1029
| Ulrich Hendel, Salmai Qari
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Empirical literature has found evidence in favor of household bargaining models. In contrast to earlier tests that are limited to assignable private goods, we use child preference data in order to extend the empirical evidence on household bargaining to public household goods. In the empirical analysis, we exploit the different theoretical predictions for couples with heterogeneous and homogeneous ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2010,
(SOEPpapers 323)
| Timo Hener
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In many parts of the developed world, governments devote a significant share of public funds to unconditional family cash transfers in an attempt to promote the economic well-being of households. But how successful are such policies? Germany has one of the world’s most generous child benefit systems, which was subject to a major reform in the mid-1990s. This article exploits the reform using a difference-in-differences ...
In:
CESifo Economic Studies
62 (2016), 4, 624-649
| Timo Hener
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Some sociologists argue that non-intact family structures during childhood have a negative effect on adult children's civic engagement, since they undermine, and in some cases prevent, the processes and activities through which parents shape their children's political attitudes and orientations. In this paper, we evaluate this hypothesis on the basis of longitudinal data from the German Socio-Economic ...
In:
Journal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series A (Statistics in Society)
179 (2015), 3, 633-656
| Timo Hener, Helmut Rainer, Thomas Siedler
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Does the information provided by mass media have the power to persistently affect individual beliefs about the drivers of success in life? To answer this question empirically, this contribution exploits a natural experiment on the reception of West German television in the former German Democratic Republic. After identifying the impact of Western television on individual beliefs and attitudes in the ...
In:
Journal of Comparative Economics
43 (2013), 4, 956–980
| Tanja Hennighausen