We consider the effect of non-ignorable dropout in the analysis of residential mobility in household panel surveys. To investigate the effect of such dropout, we consider two types of selection model: the first allows dropout to depend directly on the individual's potentially missing moving status, and the second is a Heckman-type selection model with correlated errors. We discuss the identification and estimation of these models and use simulations to study the role of exclusion restrictions in minimizing the dependence of inferences on unverifiable parametric assumptions. The models are both applied to data from the British Household Panel Survey
This book discusses the problem of panel effects. As respondents in a panel are subject to a heavy r...
Diggle and Kenward (Appl. Statist. 43 (1994) 49) proposed a selection model for continuous longitudi...
The objective of this paper is to present a panel data model of car ownership and mobility. Unobserv...
We consider the effect of non-ignorable dropout in the analysis of residential mobility in household...
We propose a model of transitions into and out of low paid employment that accounts for non-ignorabl...
A key problem in the literature on the economics of migration is how emigration of an individual a↵e...
"Panel surveys suffer from attrition. Most panel studies use propensity models or weighting class ap...
Panel attrition is a process producing data absent from panel records due to survey non-participatio...
Transportation researchers often have used panel data to examine the dynamics of travel behavior. Al...
By 1989 the Michigan Panel Study on Income Dynamics (PSID) had experienced approximately 50 percent ...
Published online: 28 December 2011Empirical study of university student performance is often complic...
This paper examines the relationship between residential mobility and unit non-response in the first...
The traditional formulation of the attrition problem in econometrics treats it as a special case of ...
In this paper, we study, within a modeling framework, the joint treatment of nonignorable dropout an...
Empirical study of university student performance is often complicated by missing data, due to stude...
This book discusses the problem of panel effects. As respondents in a panel are subject to a heavy r...
Diggle and Kenward (Appl. Statist. 43 (1994) 49) proposed a selection model for continuous longitudi...
The objective of this paper is to present a panel data model of car ownership and mobility. Unobserv...
We consider the effect of non-ignorable dropout in the analysis of residential mobility in household...
We propose a model of transitions into and out of low paid employment that accounts for non-ignorabl...
A key problem in the literature on the economics of migration is how emigration of an individual a↵e...
"Panel surveys suffer from attrition. Most panel studies use propensity models or weighting class ap...
Panel attrition is a process producing data absent from panel records due to survey non-participatio...
Transportation researchers often have used panel data to examine the dynamics of travel behavior. Al...
By 1989 the Michigan Panel Study on Income Dynamics (PSID) had experienced approximately 50 percent ...
Published online: 28 December 2011Empirical study of university student performance is often complic...
This paper examines the relationship between residential mobility and unit non-response in the first...
The traditional formulation of the attrition problem in econometrics treats it as a special case of ...
In this paper, we study, within a modeling framework, the joint treatment of nonignorable dropout an...
Empirical study of university student performance is often complicated by missing data, due to stude...
This book discusses the problem of panel effects. As respondents in a panel are subject to a heavy r...
Diggle and Kenward (Appl. Statist. 43 (1994) 49) proposed a selection model for continuous longitudi...
The objective of this paper is to present a panel data model of car ownership and mobility. Unobserv...