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Life Course Risks Project - The Economic Consequences of Key Life Risks in Germany and the US and Their Evolution since the 1980s

Research Fields
Welfare State and Social Inequality
Project Management
Duration
April 2009 - May 2012

In recent years many commentators and social scientists have claimed that individuals and households in Western societies are facing increased economic insecurities. One alleged force behind this trend is the downscaling of welfare state mechanisms that ameliorate the negative economic consequences of critical events such as unemployment or separation. These claims have rarely been tested empirically, however. The project will therefore use German and US panel data to study the changing consequences of key life risks such as unemployment, illness, separation, and single parenthood. The US is of particular interest, as it arguably comes closer than any other Western country to the “residual” welfare state that constitutes an important reference point in public and scientific debates on welfare state reform. On a more general level, the time- and country-comparative design of the project aims at a better understanding of how the welfare state affects the short-and long-term consequences of critical life events. To maximize the analytical leverage, the analysis of micro-data will therefore be combined with systematic and thorough accounts of institutional change. The project will thus provide an all-too-rare combination of macro-level institutional analysis and micro-level welfare analysis.

Methodology:

Regression models for panel data (in particular fixed effects models, dynamic panel models), country comparison Germany-USA

Publications
  • Kohler, Ulrich/Ehlert, Martin/Grell, Britta/Heisig, Jan Paul/Radenacker, Anke/Wörz, Markus (2012): "Verarmungsrisiken nach kritischen Lebensereignissen in Deutschland und den USA". In: Kölner Zeitschrift für Soziologie und Sozialpsychologie, Jg. 64, H. 2, S. 223-245.
  • Radenacker, Anke (2011): "Economic Consequences of Family Break-ups. Income Before and After Family Break-ups of Women in Germany and the United States". In: Schmollers Jahrbuch - Zeitschrift für Wirtschafts- und Sozialwissenschaften, Vol. 131, No. 2, Special Issue: "SOEP 2010. Proceedings of the 9th International Socio-Economic Panel User Conference", edited by Kathrin Leuze/Thomas Siedler/Ingrid Tucci/Arne Uhlendorff, S. 225-234.
  • Wörz, Markus (2011): Financial Consequences of Falling Ill. Changes in the German Health Insurance System since the 1980s. Working Paper Life Course Risks No. 8. WZB Discussion Paper SP I 2011-209. Berlin: WZB.
  • Wörz, Markus (2011): Old-age Provisions in Germany. Changes in the Retirement System since the 1980s. Working Paper Life Course Risks No. 7. WZB Discussion Paper SP I 2011-208. Berlin: WZB.
  • Wörz, Markus (2011): Family Dissolution and Public Policies in Germany. Social Provisions and Institutional Changes since the 1980s. Working Paper Life Course Risks No. 6. WZB Discussion Paper SP I 2011-207. Berlin: WZB.
  • Wörz, Markus (2011): Unemployment Compensation in Germany. Provisions and Institutional Changes since the 1980s. Working Paper Life Course Risks No. 5. WZB Discussion Paper SP I 2011-206. Berlin: WZB.
  • Ehlert, Martin (2011): Shifted Labor Market Risks? The Changing Economic Consequences of Job Loss in the United States and West Germany. Working Paper Life Course Risks No. 4. WZB Discussion Paper  SP I 2011-205. Berlin: WZB.
  • Grell, Britta (2011): Old-age Provisions in the United States. Changes in the Retirement System since the 1980s. Working Paper Life Course Risks No. 3. WZB Discussion Paper SP I 2011-204. Berlin: WZB.
  • Grell, Britta (2011): Family Dissolution and Public Policies in the United States. Social Provisions and Institutional Changes since the 1980s. Working Paper Life Course Risks No. 2. WZB Discussion Paper SP I 2011-203. Berlin: WZB.
  • Grell, Britta (2011): Unemployment Compensation in the United States. Provisions and Institutional Changes since the 1980s. Working Paper Life Course Risks No. 1. WZB Discussion Paper SP I 2011-202. Berlin: WZB.
  • Alber, Jens (2010): "What the European and American Welfare States Have in Common and Where They Differ. Facts and Fiction in Comparisons of the European Social Model and the United States". In: Journal of European Social Policy, Vol. 20, No. 2, S. 102-125.