Microsimulation has gained attention for its use in analyzing and forecasting the individual impacts of alternative economic and social policy measures. In practice, however, microsimulation cannot be carried out from a single data source, since it requires far more information than any single data source can provide. This paper discusses ways to combine separate data sources when there are no identical key variables, using imputation techniques, to make a large but synthetic data source for microsimulation. A new approach based on propensity score matching is suggested and discussed
This paper summarizes the contributions of microeconometrics to economic knowledge. Four main themes...
Recent changes in the social policy development arena in New Zealand mean that traitional methods of...
Microsimulation is a family of computer simulations that all depend on individual-level data as inpu...
During the last twenty years, microsimulation models have been increasingly applied in qualitative a...
During the last 20 years, microsimulation models have been increasingly applied in qualitative and q...
This essential dimensions of microsimulation as an instrument to analyze and forecast the individual...
Microsimulation is well known as a tool for static analysis of tax and transfer policies, for the ge...
New Pathways to Microsimulation is a volume which covers a variety of applications on microsimulatio...
We provide an overview of microsimulation approaches for assessing the effects of policy on income d...
This paper develops a method that improves researchers’ ability to account for behavioral responses ...
Microsimulation as a Tool for the Evaluation of Public Policies: Methods and Applications brings tog...
This paper reviews the recent work on the application of the CGE-microsimulation models. The discuss...
In recent years microsimulation models (MSMs) have been increasingly applied in quantitative analyse...
Incomplete data are ubiquitous in social sciences; as a consequence, available data are inefficient ...
ABSTRACT: In the microsimulation literature, it is still uncommon to test the statistical significan...
This paper summarizes the contributions of microeconometrics to economic knowledge. Four main themes...
Recent changes in the social policy development arena in New Zealand mean that traitional methods of...
Microsimulation is a family of computer simulations that all depend on individual-level data as inpu...
During the last twenty years, microsimulation models have been increasingly applied in qualitative a...
During the last 20 years, microsimulation models have been increasingly applied in qualitative and q...
This essential dimensions of microsimulation as an instrument to analyze and forecast the individual...
Microsimulation is well known as a tool for static analysis of tax and transfer policies, for the ge...
New Pathways to Microsimulation is a volume which covers a variety of applications on microsimulatio...
We provide an overview of microsimulation approaches for assessing the effects of policy on income d...
This paper develops a method that improves researchers’ ability to account for behavioral responses ...
Microsimulation as a Tool for the Evaluation of Public Policies: Methods and Applications brings tog...
This paper reviews the recent work on the application of the CGE-microsimulation models. The discuss...
In recent years microsimulation models (MSMs) have been increasingly applied in quantitative analyse...
Incomplete data are ubiquitous in social sciences; as a consequence, available data are inefficient ...
ABSTRACT: In the microsimulation literature, it is still uncommon to test the statistical significan...
This paper summarizes the contributions of microeconometrics to economic knowledge. Four main themes...
Recent changes in the social policy development arena in New Zealand mean that traitional methods of...
Microsimulation is a family of computer simulations that all depend on individual-level data as inpu...