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Luxemburg:
Luxembourg Income Study (LIS),
1992,
(Luxembourg Income Study Working Paper No. 84)
| Maria Cancian, Robert F. Schoeni
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Luxembourg:
Luxembourg Income Study,
2007,
(Luxembourg Income Study Working Paper No. 469)
| Emanuele Canegrati
-
In:
Applied Economics
37 (2005), 1, 87-91
| David Cantarero, Marta Pascual, José María Sarabia
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In:
Peter Krause, Gerhard Bäcker, Walter Hanesch ,
Combating Poverty in Europe: The German Welfare Regime in Practice
Aldershot: Ashgate
317-329
| Bea Cantillon, Karel van den Bosch
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Syracuse:
Syracuse University, Maxwell School,
2002,
(Luxembourg Income Study Working Paper No. 337)
| Bea Cantillon, Ive Marx, Karel van den Bosch
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Data from the German Socio-Economic Panel are used to examine the roles of individual heterogeneity and job match quality in generating commonly observed wagetenure profiles. The evidence presented in the paper indicates that once those factors are reflected in the estimations, the returns to seniority are no longer measurable. Job match quality appears to be the dominant factor in the German labor ...
In:
Proceedings of the Fourth International Conference of German Socio-Economic Panel Study Users. Vierteljahrshefte zur Wirtschaftsforschung
70 (2001), 1, 39-43
| Kenneth A. Couch
-
In:
Journal of Human Resources
32 (1996), 1, 210-232
| Kenneth A. Couch, Thomas A. Dunn
-
In:
Miles Corak ,
Generational Income Mobility in North America and Europe
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
190-206
| Kenneth A. Couch, Dean R. Lillard
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This paper examines the extent to which solo self-employment serves as a vehicle for job creation. Using panel data from the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) Survey, a dynamic multinomial logit model of transitions between labour market states is estimated. The empirical strategy closely follows that used in a previous study employing household data from Germany by Lechmann ...
In:
Labour Economics
68 (2021), January 2021, 101942
| Michael Leith Cowling, Marc Wooden
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The objective of this paper is to distinguish between different types of working poverty, on the basis of the mechanisms that produce it. Whereas the poverty literature identifies a myriad of risk factors and of categories of disadvantaged workers, we focus on three immediate causes of working poverty, namely low wage rate, weak labour force attachment, and high needs, the latter mainly due to the ...
Luxembourg:
Luxembourg Income Study (LIS),
2010,
(Luxembourg Income Study Working Paper No. 539)
| Eric Crettaz, Giuliano Bonoli