This article utilizes an exact match file between the 1978 March Current Population Survey and administrative records from the Social Security Administration to analyze errors in the reporting of annual income using nonparametric methodology. The article extends work of John Bound and Alan B. Krueger (1991) and the results confirm many of the findings in Bound and Krueger. Three new findings are of interest: there is higher measurement error in cross-sectional samples than in panels; the negative relationship between measurement error and earnings is driven largely by overreporting among low earners; and median response errors are not related to earnings. Copyright 1998 by University of Chicago Press.
The paper analyses the sources of income measurement error in surveys with a unique data set. We us...
This paper examines whether reported income and consumption generate biases for studies on income an...
This paper considers data quality issues to analyze the pattern of con-sumption inequality in the 19...
We develop and apply new statistical models for linked survey and administrative data on employment ...
We provide new evidence on the extent of measurement error in respondent-reported earnings data by e...
We provide both a theoretical and empirical analysis of the relation between administrative and surv...
Earnings nonresponse is currently about 30 % in the CPS-ORG and 20 % in the March CPS. Census impute...
The third chapter investigates measurement error in SIPP annual job earnings data linked to SSA admi...
When we understand admin data has errors, surveys don’t look bad. This paper analyses the measureme...
One of the prominent features of the Current Employment Statistics (CES) survey conducted by the U.S...
Abstract: I report the measurement error in self-reported earnings for a developing country. Admini...
The paper analyses the sources of income measurement error in surveys with a unique data set. We use...
A (local) survey on income carried out in the city of Modena in 2002, with income reference year 200...
Non-technical summary Panel surveys mainly collect information about the situation of respondents ar...
A primary focus of empirical earnings research is whether accounting earnings contain meaningful and...
The paper analyses the sources of income measurement error in surveys with a unique data set. We us...
This paper examines whether reported income and consumption generate biases for studies on income an...
This paper considers data quality issues to analyze the pattern of con-sumption inequality in the 19...
We develop and apply new statistical models for linked survey and administrative data on employment ...
We provide new evidence on the extent of measurement error in respondent-reported earnings data by e...
We provide both a theoretical and empirical analysis of the relation between administrative and surv...
Earnings nonresponse is currently about 30 % in the CPS-ORG and 20 % in the March CPS. Census impute...
The third chapter investigates measurement error in SIPP annual job earnings data linked to SSA admi...
When we understand admin data has errors, surveys don’t look bad. This paper analyses the measureme...
One of the prominent features of the Current Employment Statistics (CES) survey conducted by the U.S...
Abstract: I report the measurement error in self-reported earnings for a developing country. Admini...
The paper analyses the sources of income measurement error in surveys with a unique data set. We use...
A (local) survey on income carried out in the city of Modena in 2002, with income reference year 200...
Non-technical summary Panel surveys mainly collect information about the situation of respondents ar...
A primary focus of empirical earnings research is whether accounting earnings contain meaningful and...
The paper analyses the sources of income measurement error in surveys with a unique data set. We us...
This paper examines whether reported income and consumption generate biases for studies on income an...
This paper considers data quality issues to analyze the pattern of con-sumption inequality in the 19...