We propose a model of transitions into and out of low paid employment that accounts for non-ignorable panel dropout, employment retention and base year low pay status (‘initial conditions’). The model is fitted to data for men from the British Household Panel Survey. Initial conditions and employment retention are found to be non-ignorable selection processes. Whether panel dropout is found to be ignorable depends on how item non-response on pay is treated. Notwithstanding these results, we also find that models incorporating a simpler approach to accounting for non-ignorable selections provide estimates of covariate effects that differ very little from the estimates from the general model
Draft. Please do not cite or quote The aim of this paper is to investigate the effect of measurement...
We consider the effect of non-ignorable dropout in the analysis of residential mobility in household...
This paper uses Italian panel data to analyse transition probabilities at the bottom of the earnings...
We propose a model of transitions into and out of low paid employment that accounts for non-ignorabl...
We model annual low pay transition probabilities taking account of three potentially endogenous sele...
We model transitions between unemployment, low-paid and high-paid employment by British men using a ...
This paper models low pay transitions in Britain using a bivariate probit model with endogenous sele...
There is a great interest in Britain in the extent to which there exist a ‘low pay/no pay cycle’. Th...
The aim of the paper is to investigate the effect of measurement error on low pay transition probabi...
We examine the determinants of low income transitions using first-order Markov models that control f...
Are low wages an instrument for the unemployed to switch to high-paying jobs within a medium-term pe...
Draft. Please do not cite or quote In this paper, we investigate the wage and employment perspective...
We examine the determinants of low income transitions using first-order Markov models that control f...
This paper analyses the extent to which existing econometric models of low-pay transition probabilit...
We investigate transitions between unemployment, low-paid employment and higher-paid employment usin...
Draft. Please do not cite or quote The aim of this paper is to investigate the effect of measurement...
We consider the effect of non-ignorable dropout in the analysis of residential mobility in household...
This paper uses Italian panel data to analyse transition probabilities at the bottom of the earnings...
We propose a model of transitions into and out of low paid employment that accounts for non-ignorabl...
We model annual low pay transition probabilities taking account of three potentially endogenous sele...
We model transitions between unemployment, low-paid and high-paid employment by British men using a ...
This paper models low pay transitions in Britain using a bivariate probit model with endogenous sele...
There is a great interest in Britain in the extent to which there exist a ‘low pay/no pay cycle’. Th...
The aim of the paper is to investigate the effect of measurement error on low pay transition probabi...
We examine the determinants of low income transitions using first-order Markov models that control f...
Are low wages an instrument for the unemployed to switch to high-paying jobs within a medium-term pe...
Draft. Please do not cite or quote In this paper, we investigate the wage and employment perspective...
We examine the determinants of low income transitions using first-order Markov models that control f...
This paper analyses the extent to which existing econometric models of low-pay transition probabilit...
We investigate transitions between unemployment, low-paid employment and higher-paid employment usin...
Draft. Please do not cite or quote The aim of this paper is to investigate the effect of measurement...
We consider the effect of non-ignorable dropout in the analysis of residential mobility in household...
This paper uses Italian panel data to analyse transition probabilities at the bottom of the earnings...