Luxembourg Income Study (Organization)
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Luxembourg Income Study (Organization)
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Luxembourg Income Study (Organization)
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- An international comparison of married women's labor supply
- Female income differentials and social benefits, a four country comparison
- Working but poor, a cross-national comparison of earnings adequacy
- Working but still economically dependent?, hourly wage earned by working married women and by their working spouses in Australia, Canada, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, the Netherlands, the United States and West Germany around 1980
- More is not necessarily better, an empirical analysis of the inequality-growth tradeoff using the Luxembourg income study
- Social protection for the poor in the developed world: The evidence from LIS
- Inequality in the family, the institutional aspects of wives' earning dependency
- All the world's entrepreneurs, the role of self-employment in nineteen nations
- Social transfers and income inequality in old-age, a multi-national perspective?
- How do income distributions change in Europe?
- Does social policy matter?, poverty cycles in OECD countries
- Inequality dynamics, evidence from some European countries
- Hours of paid work in dual earner couples, the U.S. in cross-national perspective
- Single motherhood, employment, or social assistance, why are U.S. women poorer than women in other affluent nations?
- Brave new world?, value of education in post-socialist Poland
- Comparative analysis of the effective income tax function, empirical evidence using LIS data
- Rethinking the sociological measurement of poverty
- The economic well-being of older people in international across perspective: a critical review
- Single mothers, low income, and women's economic risks, the cases of Sweden, West Germany and the United States
- Does the profile of income inequality matter for economic growth?
- Educational attainment and family gaps in women's wages, evidence from five industrialized contries
- Can economic structure explain gender differences in economic reward, a comparison of Australia, Sweden and the United States
- Household income distribution and hours of work: An international comparison
- The redistributive aim of social policy, a comparative analysis of taxes, tax expenditure transfers and direct transfers in eight countries
- Regional redistribution, applying data from household income data
- Inequality and poverty in old age, a comparison between West Germany, the United Kingdom, Sweden and Switzerland
- Inequality, growth and welfare, an international comparison
- Combining consistency with simplicity when estimating tax incidence, alternative assumptions and findings for three countries
- Poverty alleviation and the degree of centralisation in European Schemes of social assistance
- An equality-growth tradeoff?
- For better or for worse, economic postions of the rich and the poor 1985-1995
- Ein alternativer Ansatz zur Charakterisierung von Armutmassen mit einer Analyse der relativen Einkommensarmut in der Bundesrepublik Deutschland
- Social policy or structure?, income transfers, socio-demographic factors and poverty in the Nordic countries and in France
- The gender-poverty gap, what we can learn from other countries
- Children, social assistance and outcomes, cross national comparisons
- Male pre and post tax wage inequality, a six country comparison
- Income poverty in advanced countries
- International comparisons of income poverty and extreme income poverty
- Cross-national differences in the rise in earnings inequality market and institutional factors
- The effects of children on household income packages, a cross-national analysis
- A cross-national analysiss of economic gender equity and welfare state development
- Gender equality in the labour market: Women's employment and earnings
- The redistributive effects of the tax system in West Germany, Sweden, and the United States, a comparative tax incidence study
- Balancing data access and data protection, the Luxembourg Income Study experience
- Comparing living standards across nations, real incomes at the top, the bottom and the middle
- The state and poverty alleviation in advanced capitalist democracies
- Exploring the subnational dimension of income inequality, an analysis of the relationship between inequality and electoral turnout in the developed countries
- Old-age security reforms in Central-Eastern Europe, the cases of Czech Republic, Slovak, Hungary and Poland
- Generations and the distribution of well-being and poverty, cross national evidence for Europe, Scandinavia and the colonies
- Income distribution and social expenditures, a cross-national perspective
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