31 results on '"Christoph Wunder"'
Search Results
2. The early costs of plant closures: Evidence on lead effects on workers’ subjective and objective outcomes
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Tugba Zeydanli and Christoph Wunder
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Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management ,Economics and Econometrics ,Matching (statistics) ,Earnings ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Immigration ,Outcome (game theory) ,Confidence interval ,0502 economics and business ,Position (finance) ,Demographic economics ,Job satisfaction ,050207 economics ,Lead (electronics) ,Psychology ,050205 econometrics ,media_common - Abstract
This study investigates the lead effects of future plant closures for prospective displaced workers’ subjective and objective outcomes. We analyze the effects on their forward-looking subjective outcomes (job insecurity, probabilistic expectations of job loss and of job search), a current subjective outcome (job satisfaction), and current objective outcomes (weekly hours of work, earnings). We estimate the causal effect of the knowledge of future plant closure by combining propensity-score matching with fixed-effects difference-in-differences regressions using longitudinal data from the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP). Our analysis shows significant lead effects in the year before plant closure. Although wide confidence intervals preclude definitive conclusions, our evidence does not exclude the existence of lead effects two years prior to a plant closure. Additionally, the lead effects do not generally show heterogeneous results based on job position, gender, or immigrant status.
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- 2021
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3. The dynamics of solo self-employment: Persistence and transition to employership
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Christoph Wunder and Daniel S. J. Lechmann
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Persistence (psychology) ,Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management ,Economics and Econometrics ,Transition (fiction) ,05 social sciences ,language.human_language ,German ,Dynamics (music) ,Stepping stone ,0502 economics and business ,language ,Econometrics ,Economics ,State dependence ,050207 economics ,050203 business & management ,Self-employment ,Multinomial logistic regression - Abstract
This study examines dynamics of solo self-employment. In particular, we investigate the extent of true state dependence and cross state dependence, i.e., whether experiencing solo self-employment causally affects the probability of becoming an employer in the future. We use data from the German Socio-Economic Panel to estimate dynamic multinomial logit models. Our results show that the extent of true (cross) state dependence is rather small. The observed persistence in solo self-employment as well as transitions from solo self-employment to employership can largely be explained by observed and unobserved heterogeneity.
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- 2017
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4. Using the Life Satisfaction Approach to Value Daylight Savings Time Transitions: Evidence from Britain and Germany
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Daniel Kuehnle and Christoph Wunder
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Labour economics ,Cost–benefit analysis ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Shadow price ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,05 social sciences ,Life satisfaction ,jel:H41 ,Wirtschaftswissenschaften ,Public good ,jel:I31 ,Daylight savings time, life satisfaction, regression discontinuity, UK, Germany ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,0502 economics and business ,Regression discontinuity design ,Economics ,Deadweight loss ,050207 economics ,Welfare ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Daylight saving time ,media_common - Abstract
Daylight savings time (DST) represents a public good with costs and benefits. We provide the first comprehensive examination of the welfare effects of the spring and autumn transitions for the UK and Germany. Using individual-level data and a regression discontinuity design, we estimate the effect of the transitions on life satisfaction. Our results show that individuals in both the UK and Germany experience deteriorations in life satisfaction in the first week after the spring transition. We find no effect of the autumn transition. We attribute the negative effect of the spring transition to the reduction in the time endowment and the process of adjusting to the disruption in circadian rhythms. The effects are particularly strong for individuals with young children in the household. We conclude that the higher the shadow price of time, the more difficult is adjustment. Presumably, an increase in flexibility to reallocate time could reduce the welfare loss for individuals with binding time constraints.
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- 2015
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5. The Dynamics of Solo Self-Employment: Persistence and Transition to Employership
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Daniel S. J. Lechmann and Christoph Wunder
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German ,Persistence (psychology) ,Dynamics (music) ,Stepping stone ,Transition (fiction) ,language ,Economics ,Econometrics ,State dependence ,language.human_language ,Self-employment ,Multinomial logistic regression - Abstract
This study examines dynamics of solo self-employment. In particular, we investigate the extent of true state dependence and cross state dependence, i.e., whether experiencing solo self-employment causally affects the probability of becoming an employer in the future. We use data from the German Socio-Economic Panel to estimate dynamic multinomial logit models. Our results show that the extent of true (cross) state dependence is rather small. The observed persistence in solo self-employment as well as transitions from solo self-employment to employership can largely be explained by observed and unobserved heterogeneity.
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- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Do Multinational Enterprises Exploit a Window of Opportunity? An Empirical Analysis of Profit Shifting in the Absence of Restrictions
- Author
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Carolin Holzmann and Christoph Wunder
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Window of opportunity ,Profit (accounting) ,Multinational corporation ,Subsidiary ,Legislation ,Business ,Internal debt ,Monetary economics ,Controlled foreign corporation ,Capitalization - Abstract
This paper investigates multinational enterprises’ (MNEs) response to a unique window of opportunity for temporarily unrestricted profit shifting. The window unexpectedly opened because of a ruling by the European Court of Justice in 2006 that suspended the application of controlled foreign corporation (CFC) rules within the European Economic Area. It closed with a subsequent piece of anti-shifting legislation on thin capitalization in 2007. We identify causal effects of the suspension of the CFC rules on profit shifting by exploiting random variation in the size of MNEs’ windows that results from variation in the business year starting dates across MNEs. Using detailed balance sheet information on internal debt shifting between foreign low tax subsidiaries and their parents, we find that MNEs’ response to the window of opportunity is remarkably moderate in terms of both the probability and the volume of internal lending. On the one hand, this results from substantial short-term rigidities: internal lending increases with window size. On the other hand, MNEs in general responded with a fair amount of reserve which is indicated by low total levels of internal lending throughout the window. Presumably, this is caused by legal uncertainty about the scope of internal debt shifting that would be accepted by tax offices.
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- 2017
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7. Is Posner Right? An Empirical Test of the Posner Argument for Transferring Health Spending from Old Women to Old Men
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Johannes Schwarze and Christoph Wunder
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Gerontology ,Empirical research ,Spouse ,Propensity score matching ,Life expectancy ,Life satisfaction ,Redistribution (cultural anthropology) ,Positive psychology ,Subjective well-being ,Psychology ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) - Abstract
Posner (Aging and old age, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1995) proposes the redistribution of health spending from old women to old men to equalize life expectancy. His argument is based on the assumption that the woman’s utility is higher if her husband is alive. Using self-reported satisfaction measures from a long-running German panel survey, the Socio-Economic Panel Study (SOEP), the present study conducts an empirical test of this assumption and investigates the question of whether and to what extent widowed women’s utility responds to her spouse’s death. We apply a combination of propensity score matching and parametric regression techniques. Our results reveal satisfaction trajectories of women who experience the death of their spouse and identifies the causal effect of widowhood. The average level of satisfaction in a control group of non-widowed women serves as a reference to measure the degree of adaptation to widowhood. The results suggest bereavement has no enduring effect on satisfaction, and that is evidence against Posner’s assumption. We conclude that elderly women would not benefit from Posners policy proposal.
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- 2013
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8. The welfare use of immigrants and natives in Germany: the case of Turkish immigrants
- Author
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Regina T. Riphahn, Christoph Wunder, and Monika Sander
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Receipt ,Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management ,Labour economics ,Turkish ,Strategy and Management ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Immigration ,Segmented assimilation ,Random effects model ,language.human_language ,German ,Linear probability ,Management of Technology and Innovation ,language ,Economics ,Welfare ,media_common - Abstract
Purpose – This paper aims to analyze the welfare use of Turkish immigrants and natives in Germany. The authors ask whether the immigrant‐native gap in welfare use can be explained by observable characteristics, whether the mechanisms behind welfare dependence differ for Turkish immigrants and natives, and, finally, they compare the situation before and after the 2005 reform of the German welfare system.Design/methodology/approach – Using data from the German Socio‐Economic Panel Study, the authors estimate linear probability models with random effects to investigate the correlates of transfer receipt for Turkish immigrants and natives.Findings – Turkish immigrants have a higher propensity to use welfare benefits than natives. After controlling for general individual and household level characteristics, the difference in welfare receipt is statistically significant only for the group of second generation immigrants. The correlation of observable characteristics with welfare dependence differs significantly...
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- 2013
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9. Well-Being over the Life Span: Semiparametric Evidence from British and German Longitudinal Data
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Helmut Küchenhoff, Johannes Schwarze, Christoph Wunder, and Andrea Wiencierz
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Economics and Econometrics ,Life span ,Longitudinal data ,subjective well-being, life satisfaction, semiparametric regression, penalized splines ,jel:C23 ,Life satisfaction ,jel:D10 ,British Household Panel Survey ,jel:C14 ,language.human_language ,jel:I31 ,German ,Well-being ,language ,Econometrics ,Semiparametric regression ,Subjective well-being ,Psychology ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) - Abstract
This paper applies semiparametric regression models using penalized splines to investigate the profile of well-being over the life span. Using data from the British Household Panel Survey (BHPS) and the German Socio-Economic Panel Study (SOEP), the analysis shows a common, and quite similar, age-specific pattern of life satisfaction for both Britain and Germany that can be characterized by three age stages. The evidence suggests that the U-shaped profile is a good approximation of decreasing and increasing well-being in the first and second stage. After people reached their late 60s, however, a decline in well-being is found in the third stage. © 2013 The President and Fellows of Harvard College and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
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- 2013
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10. Patterns of Welfare Dependence before and after a Reform: Evidence from First Generation Immigrants and Natives in Germany
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Christoph Wunder and Regina T. Riphahn
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Receipt ,Economics and Econometrics ,Labour economics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Immigration ,Single parent ,Welfare state ,Human capital ,language.human_language ,German ,language ,Economics ,Welfare ,Socioeconomic status ,health care economics and organizations ,media_common - Abstract
This paper studies the patterns of welfare dependence among first generation immigrants and natives in Germany before and after a substantial recent reform of the welfare system. Using data from the German Socio-Economic Panel Study, the analysis presents life cycle trajectories of transfer receipt for immigrants and natives and studies the correlation between contextual factors and transfer receipt. We find no statistically significant differences in the probability of transfer receipt between immigrants and natives once socioeconomic characteristics are taken into account. Being a single parent, labor market status, and human capital are most closely correlated with the incidence of transfer receipt for both natives and immigrants. Interestingly, recent welfare reforms did not reverse prior patterns of welfare dependence.
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- 2012
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11. Adaptation to Income Over Time: A Weak Point of Subjective Well-Being
- Author
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Christoph Wunder
- Subjects
medicine.medical_treatment ,jel:C23 ,Life satisfaction ,Adaptation (eye) ,General Medicine ,Discount points ,Educational attainment ,jel:I31 ,Desensitization (psychology) ,Adaptation, financial satisfaction, subjective well-being, standards of judgment ,medicine ,Econometrics ,Economics ,Household income ,Subjective well-being - Abstract
This paper holds the view that the intertemporal comparison of people’s subjective evaluations of their lives and living conditions are only meaningful to t he extent the standard of judgement is unaltered. In consequence, the inferences from an analysis of intertemporal changes in subjective well-being are restricted since it is indisti nct whether such changes are caused by a variation in the living conditions or by an adjustment of st andards. This is a weak point of subjective well-being measures. The present study investigates the change in the satisfaction judgements resulting from adaptation to income over time. Adaptation is understood as desensitization (sensitization) to the hedonic effect of income resulting from increases (decreases) in income. An estimator for the rate of adaptation is derived from an adaptive utility function. Using data on self-reported satisfaction with household inco me and global life satisfaction from the German Socio-Economic Panel Study (SOEP), it is found that adaptation leads to a reduction in the hedonic effect of income of approximately 4% (satisfaction with the household income) and 6% (life satisfaction), respectively. Calculating a co mpensating income variation indicates that an increase in income of roughly 2% year is fully offset by adaptation. Furthermore, the results indicate that adaptation is asymmetric: People ada pt faster to increases (gains) than to decreases (losses) in income. Finally, it is found that the r ate of adaptation varies with education: Respondents with a high (low) educational attainment exhibit a low (high) propensity to adapt to income.
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- 2009
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12. Patterns of Regional Inequality in the Enlarged Europe
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Martin Heidenreich and Christoph Wunder
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Economic growth ,Sociology and Political Science ,Inequality ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Politics ,Economic inequality ,Homogeneous ,Development economics ,European integration ,Economics ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,Slow convergence ,European union ,Shift-share analysis ,media_common - Abstract
Regional economic inequalities are increasing in most of the European Union (EU) member states, while between-nation inequalities in the enlarged Europe are declining in the last years. The economic differences between East and West Europe are gradually diminishing and the EU is becoming a relatively homogeneous economic, legal, and political field, which promotes social and economic cohesion in Europe (at a rate of approximately 2 per cent per year). Most of the regional economic inequalities are already inequalities within nations. The economic and income inequalities in the enlarged EU can be largely explained by different regional employment patterns, industrial structures and the region's location within the European space: central urban regions with a good research and traffic infrastructure, qualified employees, a high employment rate and knowledge-intensive services are the best predictors for high income levels. The slow convergence process in the enlarged EU may not increase popular support for the European integration process because the most important frame of reference is still the nation-state where regional inequalities are increasing.
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- 2007
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13. Intrafamilial Upstream Transfers and Household Production
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Christoph Wunder
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Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,General Economics, Econometrics and Finance ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) - Published
- 2007
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14. State Dependence in Welfare Receipt: Transitions Before and After a Reform
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Regina T. Riphahn and Christoph Wunder
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Statistics and Probability ,Economics and Econometrics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Immigration ,jel:J61 ,Welfare reform ,German ,Mathematics (miscellaneous) ,0502 economics and business ,Economics ,unemployment benefit II, state dependence, social assistance, immigration, dynamic multinomial logit ,State dependence ,050207 economics ,050205 econometrics ,Multinomial logistic regression ,media_common ,Receipt ,Social assistance, state dependence, unemployment benefit II, immigration, dynamic multinomial logit ,05 social sciences ,language.human_language ,Welfare system ,jel:I38 ,language ,Demographic economics ,Welfare ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) - Abstract
We study state dependence in welfare receipt and investigate whether welfare transitions changed after a welfare reform. Using data from the German Socio-Economic Panel, we apply dynamic multinomial logit estimators and find that state dependence in welfare receipt is not a central feature of the German welfare system. We find that welfare transitions changed after the reform: transitions from welfare to employment became more likely and persistence in welfare and inactivity declined. We observe a large relative increase in transitions from employment to welfare. Immigrants’ responsiveness to the labor market situation increased after the reform.
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- 2015
15. Does subjective well-being dynamically adjust to circumstances?
- Author
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Christoph Wunder
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,Actuarial science ,Computer science ,Adaptation level ,Econometrics ,Window (computing) ,Subjective well-being ,Empirical evidence ,Finance ,Simple (philosophy) - Abstract
This paper introduces a simple model to estimate the dynamic adjustment of subjective well-being that results from an updating of expectations in response to changing circumstances. Empirical evidence indicates that adjustment takes place within a relatively short window of time.
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- 2012
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16. Are we architects of our own happiness? The importance of family background for well-being
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Daniel D. Schnitzlein and Christoph Wunder
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Economics and Econometrics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Economics, Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous) ,Generationengerechtigkeit ,050105 experimental psychology ,jel:J62 ,0502 economics and business ,ddc:330 ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,050207 economics ,Sibling ,Subjective well-being ,Socioeconomics ,media_common ,intergenerational mobility ,05 social sciences ,Life satisfaction ,Zufriedenheit ,Social mobility ,subjective well-being, family background, intergenerational mobility, siblings ,jel:I31 ,family background ,subjective well-being ,Familie ,Well-being ,Happiness ,Household income ,Job satisfaction ,Demographic economics ,jel:D3 ,Psychology - Abstract
This paper analyzes whether individuals have equal opportunity to achieve happiness (or well-being). We estimate sibling correlations and intergenerational correlations in self-reported life satisfaction, satisfaction with household income, job satisfaction, and satisfaction with health. We find high sibling correlations for all measures of well-being. The results suggest that family background explains, on average, between 30% and 60% of the inequality in permanent well-being. The influence is smaller when the siblings’ psychological and geographical distance from their parental home is larger. Results from intergenerational correlations suggest that parental characteristics are considerably less important than family and community factors. Dieser Beitrag ist mit Zustimmung des Rechteinhabers aufgrund einer (DFG-geförderten) Allianz- bzw. Nationallizenz frei zugänglich. - This publication is with permission of the rights owner freely accessible due to an Alliance licence and a national licence (funded by the DFG, German Research Foundation) respectively.
- Published
- 2014
17. The dynamics of welfare entry and exit amongst natives and immigrants
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Regina T. Riphahn and Christoph Wunder
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,Labour economics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Yield (finance) ,Immigration ,Market states ,Rechts- und Wirtschaftswissenschaftliche Fakultät ,Economics ,ddc:330 ,State dependence ,Transition matrices ,Welfare ,Welfare trap ,media_common ,Multinomial logistic regression - Abstract
This article studies welfare entry and exit in Germany and determines the relevance of state dependence for natives and immigrants. Based on dynamic multinomial logit estimations, we calculate transition matrices between three labour market states. We find that temporal persistence in welfare participation can mostly be explained by observed and unobserved characteristics. Immigrants appear to have a higher risk of welfare entry and a lower probability of welfare exit compared to natives. The results do not yield strong evidence of state dependence or of an overall welfare trap.
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- 2014
18. Are We Architects of Our Own Happiness? The Importance of Family Background for Well-Being
- Author
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Daniel D. Schnitzlein and Christoph Wunder
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media_common.quotation_subject ,Well-being ,Happiness ,Household income ,Life satisfaction ,Demographic economics ,Job satisfaction ,Subjective well-being ,Sibling ,Psychology ,Social mobility ,media_common - Abstract
This paper analyzes whether individuals have equal opportunity to achieve happiness (or wellbeing). We estimate sibling correlations and intergenerational correlations in self-reported life satisfaction, satisfaction with household income, job satisfaction, and satisfaction with health. We find high sibling correlations for all measures of well-being. The results suggest that family background explains, on average, between 30% and 60% of the inequality in permanent wellbeing. The influence is smaller when the siblings’ psychological and geographical distance from their parental home is larger. Results from intergenerational correlations suggest that parental characteristics are considerably less important than family and community factors.
- Published
- 2014
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19. The effects of smoking bans on self-assessed health: evidence from Germany
- Author
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Christoph Wunder and Daniel Kuehnle
- Subjects
Male ,Population ,jel:C23 ,Health benefits ,jel:D04 ,German ,03 medical and health sciences ,Diagnostic Self Evaluation ,0302 clinical medicine ,Adverse health effect ,Environmental health ,Germany ,smoking bans, self-assessed health, difference-in-differences ,0502 economics and business ,Sanctions ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,050207 economics ,education ,Enforcement ,health care economics and organizations ,education.field_of_study ,Family Characteristics ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,05 social sciences ,Smoking ,Middle Aged ,Wirtschaftswissenschaften ,jel:I10 ,language.human_language ,Difference in differences ,Smoke-Free Policy ,Socioeconomic Factors ,language ,Household income ,Female ,Tobacco Smoke Pollution ,jel:D4 ,business - Abstract
The 16 German federal states introduced smoking bans on different dates during 2007 and 2008. These bans restricted smoking in enclosed public places, particularly in restaurants and bars. This study examines the effects of smoking bans on self-assessed health. Using data from the Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP), difference-in-differences estimations provide evidence for health improvements for the population at large. Health benefits from the secondhand smokefree environment are equivalent to an increase in household income of approximately 30%. Further subgroup analyses show that health improvements are largest among young non-smokers (below 30 years) whereas smokers report no or even adverse health effects in response to bans. Exploiting differences in the dates of introduction and enf orcement, we find no evidence that the effects of bans depend on enforcement measures.
- Published
- 2013
20. The Effects of Smoking Bans on Self-Assessed Health: Evidence from Germany
- Author
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Daniel Kuehnle and Christoph Wunder
- Subjects
German ,education.field_of_study ,Adverse health effect ,Environmental health ,Population ,language ,Household income ,Business ,Health benefits ,education ,Enforcement ,language.human_language ,Difference in differences - Abstract
The 16 German federal states introduced smoking bans on different dates during 2007 and 2008. These bans restricted smoking in enclosed public places, particularly in restaurants and bars. This study examines the effects of smoking bans on self-assessed health. Using data from the Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP), difference-in-differences estimations provide evidence for health improvements for the population at large. Health benefits from the secondhand smoke-free environment are equivalent to an increase in household income of approximately 30%. Further subgroup analyses show that health improvements are largest among young non-smokers (below 30 years) whereas smokers report no or even adverse health effects in response to bans. Exploiting differences in the dates of introduction and enforcement, we find no evidence that the effects of bans depend on enforcement measures.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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21. Working Time Preferences, Hours Mismatch and Well-Being of Couples: Are There Spillovers?
- Author
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Guido Heineck and Christoph Wunder
- Subjects
Working hours ,Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management ,Economics and Econometrics ,Labour economics ,Subjective well-being, life satisfaction, working time preferences, working time mismatch, spillovers, utility interdependence ,subjective well-being,life satisfaction,working time preferences,working time mismatch,spillovers,utility interdependence ,Life satisfaction ,spillovers, subjective well-being, life satisfaction, working time preferences, working time mismatch, utility interdependence ,Working time ,jel:J21 ,jel:I31 ,Underemployment ,stomatognathic diseases ,jel:J22 ,Spillover effect ,Well-being ,Economics ,Subjective well-being - Abstract
We analyze how well-being is related to working time preferences and hours mismatch. Self-reported measures of life satisfaction are used as an empirical approximation of true wellbeing. Our results indicate that well-being is generally lower among workers with working time mismatch. Particularly underemployment is detrimental for well-being. We further provide first evidence on spillovers from the partner's working time mismatch. However, the spillover becomes insignificant once we control for the partner's well-being. This suggests that well-being is contagious, and the spillover is due to interdependent utilities. Females experience the highest well-being when their partner is working full-time hours. Male wellbeing is unaffected over a wide interval of the partner's working hours.
- Published
- 2012
22. Working Time Preferences, Hours Mismatch and Well-Being of Couples: Are There Spillovers?
- Author
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Christoph Wunder and Guido Heineck
- Subjects
Underemployment ,Working hours ,stomatognathic diseases ,Labour economics ,Spillover effect ,Well-being ,Control (management) ,Economics ,Life satisfaction ,Subjective well-being ,Working time - Abstract
We analyze how well-being is related to working time preferences and hours mismatch. Self-reported measures of life satisfaction are used as an empirical approximation of true wellbeing. Our results indicate that well-being is generally lower among workers with working time mismatch. Particularly underemployment is detrimental for well-being. We further provide first evidence on spillovers from the partner's working time mismatch. However, the spillover becomes insignificant once we control for the partner's well-being. This suggests that well-being is contagious, and the spillover is due to interdependent utilities. Females experience the highest well-being when their partner is working full-time hours. Male wellbeing is unaffected over a wide interval of the partner's working hours.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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23. Is Posner Right? An Empirical Test of the Posner Argument for Transferring Health Spending from Old Women to Old Men
- Author
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Johannes Schwarze and Christoph Wunder
- Subjects
Estimation ,Empirical research ,Argument ,Propensity score matching ,Economics ,Life expectancy ,Life satisfaction ,Redistribution (cultural anthropology) ,Subjective well-being ,Social psychology - Abstract
Posner (1995) proposes the redistribution of health spending from old women to old men to equalize life expectancy. His argument is based on the assumption that women's utility is higher if they are married. Thus, extending the lifespan of men would benefit women. Using life satisfaction data from the German Socio-Economic Panel Study (SOEP), we conduct an empirical test of this assumption. We apply a two-step estimation strategy: first, we use a propensity score matching approach to generate a control group of non-widowed women. The average level of life satisfaction in the control group serves as a reference to measure the degree of adaptation to widowhood. In the second step, the life satisfaction trajectories of both groups are estimated using penalized spline regressions. The results suggest bereavement has no enduring effect on life satisfaction, and that falsifies Posner's assumption.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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24. What (If Anything) Do Satisfaction Scores Tell Us about the Intertemporal Change in Living Conditions
- Author
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Christoph Wunder and Johannes Schwarze
- Subjects
adaptation, dynamic panel data model, subjective well-being, satisfaction ,jel:C23 ,jel:I31 - Abstract
This paper looks at the information content of satisfaction scores. It is argued that the information content depends on the extent to which people adapt to living conditions in general. Using data from the German Socio-Economic Panel Study (SOEP), the estimation of a dynamic panel data model provides evidence that adaptation takes place within a relatively short window of time: changes in living conditions are, for the most part, absorbed by an adjustment of the adaptation level within one year. This leads to the conclusion that the information content of satisfaction scores accentuates recent changes in living conditions. Remote changes are notcaptured by the according survey questions, even if these changes have long-term impact on living conditions. The usefulness of satisfaction scores as an indicator of people's living conditions is discussed.
- Published
- 2010
25. What (If Anything) Do Satisfaction Scores Tell Us About the Intertemporal Change in Living Conditions?
- Author
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Christoph Wunder and Johannes Schwarze
- Subjects
Estimation ,German ,Adaptation level ,language ,Subjective well-being ,Psychology ,Adaptation (computer science) ,Social psychology ,language.human_language ,Panel data - Abstract
This paper looks at the information content of satisfaction scores. It is argued that the information content depends on the extent to which people adapt to living conditions in general. Using data from the German Socio-Economic Panel Study (SOEP), the estimation of a dynamic panel data model provides evidence that adaptation takes place within a relatively short window of time: changes in living conditions are, for the most part, absorbed by an adjustment of the adaptation level within one year. This leads to the conclusion that the information content of satisfaction scores accentuates recent change.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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26. Is Posner right? An empirical test of the Posner argument for transferring health spending from old women to old men
- Author
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Johannes Schwarze and Christoph Wunder
- Subjects
propensity score matching ,Alte Menschen ,Geschlecht ,Widowhood ,adaptation ,Alleinlebende ,jel:D10 ,Zufriedenheit ,Ältere Menschen ,Lebenszufriedenheit ,penalized spline regression ,jel:C14 ,jel:I31 ,satisfaction with household income ,Sterblichkeit ,subjective well-being ,Gesundheitskosten ,widowhood, adaptation, subjective well-being, life satisfaction, penalized spline regression, propensity score matching ,widowhood, adaptation, subjective well-being, life satisfaction, satisfaction with household income, propensity score matching ,ddc:330 ,C14 ,I31 ,Deutschland ,life satisfaction ,D10 - Abstract
Posner (1995) proposes the redistribution of health spending from old women to old men to equalize life expectancy. His argument is based on the assumption that women's utility is higher if they are married. Thus, extending the lifespan of men would benefit women. Using life satisfaction data from the German Socio-Economic Panel Study (SOEP), we conduct an empirical test of this assumption. We apply a two-step estimation strategy: first, we use a propensity score matching approach to generate a control group of non-widowed women. The average level of life satisfaction in the control group serves as a reference to measure the degree of adaptation to widowhood. In the second step, the life satisfaction trajectories of both groups are estimated using penalized spline regressions. The results suggest bereavement has no enduring effect on life satisfaction, and that falsifies Posner's assumption.
- Published
- 2009
27. Well-Being over the Life Span: Semiparametric Evidence from British and German Longitudinal Data
- Author
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Johannes Schwarze, Philipp Bleninger, Andrea Wiencierz, Sara Kleyer, Christoph Wunder, and Helmut Kuechenhoff
- Subjects
German ,Cohort effect ,Statistics ,Life expectancy ,language ,Econometrics ,Life satisfaction ,Semiparametric regression ,Subjective well-being ,British Household Panel Survey ,Regression ,language.human_language ,Mathematics - Abstract
This paper applies semiparametric regression models using penalized splines to investigate the profile of well-being over the life span. Splines have the advantage that they do not require a priori assumptions about the form of the curve. Using data from the British Household Panel Survey (BHPS) and the German Socio-Economic Panel Study (SOEP), the analysis shows a common, quite similar, age-specific pattern of life satisfaction for both Britain and Germany that can be characterized by three age stages. In the first stage, life satisfaction declines until approximately the fifth life decade. In the second age stage, well-being clearly increases and has a second turning point (maximum) after which well-being decreases in the third age stage. Several reasons for the three-phase pattern are discussed. We point to the fact that neither polynomial functions of the third nor the fourth degree describe the relationship adequately: polynomials locate the minimum and the maximum imprecisely. In addition, our analysis discusses the indistinguishability of age, period, and cohort effects: we propose estimating age-period models that control for cohort effects including substantive variables, such as the life expectancy of the birth cohort, and further observed socioeconomic characteristics in the regression.
- Published
- 2009
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28. Well-Being over the Life Span: Semiparametric Evidence from British and German Longitudinal Data
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Christoph Wunder, Andrea Wiencierz, Johannes Schwarze, Helmut Kuechenhoff, Sara Kleyer, and Philipp Bleninger
- Subjects
jel:C23 ,Subjective well-being, life satisfaction, semiparametric regression, penalized splines, age-period model, age-cohort model ,jel:D10 ,jel:C14 ,jel:I31 - Abstract
This paper applies semiparametric regression models using penalized splines to investigate the profile of well-being over the life span. Splines have the advantage that they do not require a priori assumptions about the form of the curve. Using data from the British Household Panel Survey (BHPS) and the German Socio-Economic Panel Study (SOEP), the analysis shows a common, quite similar, age-specific pattern of life satisfaction for both Britain and Germany that can be characterized by three age stages. In the first stage, life satisfaction declines until approximately the fifth life decade. In the second age stage, well-being clearly increases and has a second turning point (maximum) after which well-being decreases in the third age stage. Several reasons for the three-phase pattern are discussed. We point to the fact that neither polynomial functions of the third nor the fourth degree describe the relationship adequately: polynomials locate the minimum and the maximum imprecisely. In addition, our analysis discusses the indistinguishability of age, period, and cohort effects: we propose estimating age-period models that control for cohort effects including substantive variables, such as the life expectancy of the birth cohort, and further observed socioeconomic characteristics in the regression.
- Published
- 2009
29. Adaptation to Income over Time: A Weak Point of Subjective Well-Being
- Author
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Christoph Wunder
- Subjects
Desensitization (psychology) ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine ,Econometrics ,Economics ,Subjective well-being ,Adaptation (computer science) ,Discount points ,Social psychology - Abstract
This article holds the view that intertemporal comparisons of subjective well-being measures are only meaningful when the underlying standards of judgment are unaltered. This is a weak point of such measures. The study investigates the change in the satisfaction judgments resulting from adaptation to income over time. Adaptation is defined to be desensitization (sensitization) to the hedonic effect of income resulting from an upward (downward) adjustment of the standards. A framework is introduced that provides empirical estimates for the rate of adaptation using data from the Socio-Economic Panel Study (SOEP).
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Welfare Effects of the Euro Cash Changeover
- Author
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Gerhard Krug, Johannes Schwarze, Christoph Wunder, and Bodo Herzog
- Subjects
Inflation ,Consumption (economics) ,Economics and Econometrics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Monetary economics ,jel:E31 ,British Household Panel Survey ,jel:I31 ,Currency ,Cash ,Political Science and International Relations ,Money illusion ,Economics ,Household income ,Subjective well-being, euro cash changeover, perceived inflation, difference-indifferences ,Budget constraint ,media_common - Abstract
Using merged data from the British Household Panel Survey (BHPS) and the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP), this paper applies a parametric difference-in-differences approach to assess the real effects of the introduction of the euro on subjective well-being. A complementary nonparametric approach is also used to analyze the impact of difficulties with the new currency on well-being. The results indicate a loss in well-being associated with the introduction of the new currency, with the predicted probability that a person is contented with his/her household income diminishing by 9.7 percentage points. We calculate a compensating income variation of approximately one-third. That is, an increase in post-government household income of more than 30% is needed to compensate for the clear decline in well-being. The reasons for the negative impact are threefold. First, perceived inflation overestimates the real increase in prices resulting in suboptimal consumption decisions. Second, money illusion causes a false assessment of the budget constraint. Third, individuals have to bear the costs from the conversion and the adjustment to the new currency. Moreover, it is thought that losses are higher for persons who have difficulties with the new currency. However, the impact of difficulties in using and converting the new currency is rather small, and the initial problems were overcome within one year of the introduction of euro cash.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Zufriedenheit mit der Altersvorsorge und Präferenzen für alternative Sicherungsmodelle: empirische Analysen mit dem Sozio-oekonomischen Panel (SOEP)
- Author
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Christoph Wunder and Johannes Schwarze
- Subjects
jel:H55 ,jel:C25 ,Satisfaction ,German public pension system ,Ordered probit model ,German Socio-Economic Panel Study - Abstract
Using data from the German Socio-Economic Panel Study 2002, we show that satisfaction with the German public pension system is significantly lower in the younger generation. This effect is independent from the individual economic situation and cannot be observed in earlier years. Whereas long periods of full time employment increase satisfaction with old-age security, unemployment has a significant negative impact. In spite of being rather discontented with old-age security, large parts of the population are mistrustful of a more comprehensive privatization of old-age pensions. In general, the dissatisfied tend to prefer a state-organized old-age security. Most respondents consider state subsidies to be important for private old-age security. However, the incentives do not seem to be suitable for broader implementation of private provision.
- Published
- 2004
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