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- Dual Returns to ExperienceReplication files of "Dual Returns to Experience"
- Data for: All that glitters is not gold: wages and education for US immigrantsOur analysis uses data from the 2001-2017 rounds of the American Community Survey. We restrict our sample to foreign-born men aged 25 to 64 living outside group quarters at the time of the interview, but excluding US citizens born abroad. We also restrict our sample to migrants (i ) who arrived in United States between 2 and 10 years before the survey, and (ii ) were at least 25 years-old at the time of immigration.
- Data for: The Role of Non-Contributory Pensions on Internal Mobility in SpainStata programs to accompany The Role of Non-Contributory Pensions on Internal Mobility in Spain, by Catalina Amuedo-Dorantes and Cristina Borra
- Data for: The Ins and Outs of Involuntary Part-time EmploymentData of: The Ins and Outs of Involuntary Part-time Employment The content of each *_baseline MS Excel data file is as follows: time series of seasonally-adjusted stocks (normalized by the corresponding population size), and time-series of seasonally-adjusted transition probabilities, corrected for margin error and time aggregation bias. The content of each *_reclassified MS Excel data file is identical but transition probabilities are in addition adjusted for potentially spurious transitions. The data run from January 1976 through December 2019. Variable names: • F: Full-time employment. • V: Voluntary part-time employment. • I: Involuntary part-time employment. • S: Involuntary part-time employment, slack work. • C: Involuntary part-time employment, cannot find full-time job. • U: Unemployment. • N: Non-participation. • j_k: Transition probability from j to k. • Y: Year. • M: Month. Description of data files: • all_baseline.xls and all_reclassified.xls: time series for the working-age population. • men_baseline.xls and men_reclassified.xls: time series for working-age men. • women_baseline.xls and women_reclassified.xls: time series for working-age women.
- Data for: Hiring Discrimination Against Transgender People: Evidence from a Field ExperimentThis paper presents the results of the first correspondence study that examined hiring discrimination against transgender people. Fictitious job applications (N = 2,224) were sent to employers with job postings in 12 low-skill occupations in Sweden. Overall, 40 percent of cisgender applicants received a positive employer response to their applications, while 34 percent of transgender applicants did. This result was not robust to the Heckman-Siegelman critique. However, when compared to the dominant gender in both male- and female-dominated occupations, estimates of discrimination were large and robust to the critique: Cisgender male applicants had an 83 percent relative advantage over transgender male and female applicants in male-dominated occupations and cisgender female applicants had a 53 percent relative advantage over transgender male and female applicants in female-dominated occupations. As no clear evidence of statistical discrimination was found, the observed differences between cisgender and transgender applicants can be attributed to taste-based discrimination.
- Data for: Understanding the mechanisms through which adverse childhood experiences affect lifetime economic outcomesThis file contains three files: Data extracted from the National Child Development Study: - ncds-main.dta (Data to be opened in Stata 15 or above) - NCDS_pay.dta (Data to be opened in Stata 15 or above) Do files: Do-file Schurer et al.do (to be opened in Stata, any release). User needs to change paths to where data is saved.
- Data for: Immigrants move where their skills are scarce: Evidence from English proficiencyMigration across EU countries at the cohort level.
- Data for: Unemployment expectations: A socio-demographic analysis of the effect of newsThis excel file contains the unemployment expectations for 16 assessed socio-demographic consumer groups, as well as the assessed macroeconomic variables.