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@article{ Scheuring2021,
 title = {Does Fixed-Term Employment Have Spillover Effects on the Well-Being of Partners? A Panel Data Analysis for East and West Germany},
 author = {Scheuring, Sonja and Voßemer, Jonas and Baranowska-Rataj, Anna and Tattarini, Giulia},
 journal = {Journal of Happiness Studies},
 pages = {3001-3021},
 volume = {22},
 year = {2021},
 issn = {1573-7780},
 doi = {https://doi.org/10.1007/s10902-020-00353-2},
 urn = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-95232-7},
 abstract = {This paper answers three research questions: What is the impact of fixed-term employment on the well-being of partners? How do these spillover effects differ by gender, and do gender differences depend on socialization in East or West Germany? Do individual well-being, perceived job insecurity, and financial worries mediate the spillover effects? We use longitudinal data from the Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP), 1995-2017, and a sample of heterosexual couples living together, to estimate fixed-effects panel regression models. In contrast to previous studies, we consider asymmetric effects of entering and leaving fixed-term contracts by focusing on transitions from unemployment into fixed-term and fixed-term into permanent jobs. Confirming previous research on spillover effects of unemployment, we find that fixed-term re-employment increases partners' well-being and that these effects are larger in case of re-employment by men and partners' socialization in West Germany. We also show that transitions from fixed-term to permanent jobs do not substantially increase the well-being of partners with little differences by gender and place of socialization. While the spillover effect of re-employment is mediated by changes in the well-being of the individual re-entering the labor market, changes in job insecurity and financial worries due to transitions from fixed-term to permanent jobs are too small to produce meaningful effects on well-being. Although fixed-term contracts have been referred to as a new source of inequality, our results show that they cause little difference in the well-being of individuals and their partners and that finding a job matters more than the type of contract.},
 keywords = {Wohlbefinden; well-being; Bundesrepublik Deutschland; Federal Republic of Germany; befristetes Arbeitsverhältnis; term contract; geschlechtsspezifische Faktoren; gender-specific factors; Partnerschaft; partnership}}