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Household Panel Surveys – Going beyond the Cross-National Equivalent File (CNEF) Joachim R. Frick German Socio-Economic Panel Study (SOEP) Exploring possibilities for the development of European data infrastructures for research in the social sciences London, UK 23 June 2010
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“Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 20092 “Household Panel Surveys“2 | 18 “Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 20092 Increasing Opportunities for Long-running HH Panels … in a Comparative Context Cumulation of rare events by pooling (mortality, divorce, …) Increasing coverage of changes in institutional settings and the potential impact on individual behavior Observation unit “household” guarantees appropriate coverage of births and deaths from cradle to crave Linking objective outcome measures to subjective indicators satisfaction as a proxy for utility Comparison of “intentions” and actual behavior how relevant are expectations at the individual level? Intergenerational analysis linking parents and children Increasing potential for cohort analysis Exploiting cultural, institutional and macro-economic variation across regions and countries
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“Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 20093 “Household Panel Surveys“3 | 18 “Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 20093 Scientific and Social Benefits of Harmonized Panel Data Compare social and economic outcomes across nations (and welfare regimes) in order to: Identify best policy practices Use world’s quasi-”natural” experiments greater policy and institutional variation much different policy mixes opportunity to test “out-of-sample” Understand fundamental human behavior
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“Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 20094 “Household Panel Surveys“4 | 18 “Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 20094 This Talk... (A)Cross-country Panel Data Harmonization Projects (ex-post) (B)Cross-country Harmonized Panel Data Collection (ex-ante)
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“Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 20095 “Household Panel Surveys“5 | 18 “Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 20095 (A.1) Cross-country Panel Data Harmonization Projects under direction of official statistics European Community Household Panel, ECHP –EU15 (1994-2001) –input-harmonized, blueprint questionnaire European Union Statistics on Income and Living Conditions, EU-SILC –EU27, Norway, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Switzerland (2004+) –Less stringent harmonization process based on Eurostat recommendations (methodology, indicators)
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“Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 20096 “Household Panel Surveys“6 | 18 “Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 20096 (A.2) Cross-country Panel Data Harmonization Projects (ex-post) under academic direction CNEF
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“Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 20097 “Household Panel Surveys“7 | 18 “Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 20097 Cross-National Equivalent File (CNEF) Standardized / Harmonized Measures: Income, Demogr., Employment, Health, Satisfaction Worldwide availability for scientific research Supporting link to underlying national microdata USAPSID–Panel Study of Income Dynamics GermanySOEP–German Socio- Economic Panel Study Great BritainBHPS–British Household Panel Survey [USoc–Understanding Society] CanadaSLID–Survey of Labour and Income Dynamics AustraliaHILDA–Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia Switzerland SHP–Swiss Household Panel Korea KLIPS–Korea Labor and Income Panel Survey Frick, J.R., Jenkins, S. P., Lillard, D. R., Lipps, O. and Wooden, M. (2007): The Cross-National Equivalent File (CNEF) and its Member Country Household Panel Studies. Schmoller’s Jahrbuch - Journal of Applied Social Science Studies. 127 (4): 627-654.
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“Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 20098 “Household Panel Surveys“8 | 18 “Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 20098
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“Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 20099 “Household Panel Surveys“9 | 18 “Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 20099 Four Types of Ex-Post Data Harmonization 1. Convert data to common metric - age in months → age in years - height in feet → height in meters 2. Manipulate response categories - collapse to common set (least common denominator) - combine to create equivalent set 3. Aggregate to common concept (usually income) - collect different types of income to match “(cash) post-tax post-transfer income” 4. Create new information - tax simulations (e.g. NBER-TaxSim in the USA)
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“Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 200910 “Household Panel Surveys“10 | 18 “Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 200910 CNEF evolves in two ways Add panel data from other countries -Russia (Russian Longitudinal Monitoring Survey, RLMS) in 2011 -China (China Health and Nutrition Survey, CHNS) in 2012 Expand number of variables -Most recent addition: “Satisfaction with life” pushing comparative happiness research -Next: Psychological constructs (Big Five, …) Individual researchers (comparative projects) are the driving force However, missing availability of variables slows down the process -Ideally, new comparative research projects can help to introduce a variable already (or construct) surveyed in country A into the questionnaires of country B More information contact: CNEF@cornell.edu or Google “ CNEF Cornell ”CNEF@cornell.edu
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“Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 200911 “Household Panel Surveys“11 | 18 “Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 200911 (B) Cross-country Harmonized Panel Data Collection (ex-ante)
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“Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 200912 “Household Panel Surveys“12 | 18 “Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 200912 … under academic direction (B.1) Ex-ante Harmonized Data Collection in on-going Household Panel Studies ? (B.2) Setting-up a new Ex-ante Harmonized Cross-Country Household Panel Study ? (B.3) Funding issues and moving ahead
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“Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 200913 “Household Panel Surveys“13 | 18 “Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 200913 (B.1) Ex-ante Harmonization in on- going Household Panel Studies ? Regional Perspective: Which surveys to include ? European Surveys: e.g. SOEP, BHPS / USoc, SHP, … Unfortunately, some older European panel initiatives have been crowded out by ECHP/EU-SILC (e.g. Ireland: LII, Lux: PSELL) Non-European Panels: e.g. USA-PSID, Australia-HILDA, South Africa- NIDS, Korea-KLIPS, … Harmonization process driven by research interests: Straightforward International Standard Classifications: ISCED, CASMIN, ISCO, NACE, NUTS, Canberra Group income definitions, … Timing of topical modules by asking identical questions at the same time across countries (e.g. how did people react to the financial crisis?) Phrasing of questions: “When did you quit smoking” vs. “What age did you quit smoking?” or asking for an “anchor event” (Dean Lillard, Cornell)
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“Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 200914 “Household Panel Surveys“14 | 18 “Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 200914 Ex-ante harmonization in on-going Household Panel Surveys (2) Operationalization of constructs, e.g. Which indicators shall be used when measuring material deprivation (e.g. heating in Southern Italy vs. Finland) ? How to ask for substantive information: e.g. Periodicity: Income receipt per month or per (calendar) year Type of Income: gross or net of taxes Scale: 11-point satisfaction scale (SOEP, HILDA), 5-scale (BHPS, …) Sequence of questions within questionnaire E.g. SOEP: Satisfaction with life at the end of the questionnaire
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“Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 200915 “Household Panel Surveys“15 | 18 “Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 200915 Ex-ante harmonization in on-going Household Panel Surveys (3) Hard (or even not at all) to harmonize issues: Observation Unit: all adult household members vs. „husband-wife“ Methodology issues Periodicity of interview, e.g. (bi-)annual, quarterly, … Survey Mode (F2F, mail, PAPI, CAPI, CATI, Web) Sampling Design, Imputation, Weighting, Incentives Nation-specific demands Financing agencies (commitment to survey) Legal restrictions about what one can ask Users: Harmonization starting from wave t impacts on comparability with data collected until t-1 (intergenerational transmission?) Many more questions than answers: Is there an alternative ?
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“Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 200916 “Household Panel Surveys“16 | 18 “Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 200916 (B.2) Is there enough momentum to create a new ex-ante harmonized Cross-Country Household Panel Study under academic direction ? EU-wide vs. worldwide initiative Open for discussion !
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“Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 200917 “Household Panel Surveys“17 | 18 “Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 200917 (B.3) Funding issues and moving ahead European Commission: upcoming FP 7-call for Integrated Activity (IA); deadline of November 25 (EU-Call INFRA-2011-1.1.2) European Data Infrastructure for multidisciplinary research in the socio-economic behaviour of individuals and households, related to sustainability policy, climate change policy and environmental risk. A project under this topic should aim to integrate, with a long term perspective, the large scale and longitudinal data infrastructures in Europe, which provide information on the social, economic and general well-being of individuals and households. Linking these structures at the most detailed level to indicators of energy consumption, transport, environmental conditions, waste recycling will provide researchers with the high quality European comparative data, needed to investigate the drivers of changes in behaviour in Europe, and which is critical to progress in these areas. Open for discussion … but time pressure !!!
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“Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 200918 “Household Panel Surveys“18 | 18 “Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 200918 Thank you for your attention! E-mail: jfrick@diw.de SOEP-Hotline: soepmail@diw.de SOEP-Homepage: www.diw.de/gsoep
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“Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 200919 “Household Panel Surveys“19 | 18 “Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 200919 “Division of Labor” Short-running panels by Official Statistics (at least in the EU) ECHP terminated in 2001 (max. 8 waves); EU-SILC only 4-wave panel Satisfying information needs of EU policy makers (“Laeken” indicators) Long-running panel surveys under academic direction Satisfying needs for truly longitudinal research intergenerational analyses, understanding / explaining human behavior, separating nature and nurture effects Advantages Mutual cross-validation Complementary contents, e.g. In-depth income data in official panel surveys Personal traits, health, subjective indicators in academic panels
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“Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 200920 “Household Panel Surveys“20 | 18 “Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 200920 Selected Challenges for Comparative Household Panel Data Collection and Research Population coverage How to represent recent immigrants in the ongoing sample ? Incorporation of refreshment samples (control for panel effects) ? Residential mobility: following households into institutions ? Severely sick individuals (dementia) solution: proxy interviews ? Homeless (in panel perspective) ? Measuring “unobservables” lacking (international) standards reduced comparability Examples: Health, (Non-)Cognitive Capability, Psychological constructs (e.g. Big Five, Trust, Reciprocity)
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“Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 200921 “Household Panel Surveys“21 | 18 “Household Panel Surveys – Challenges for Social Science Research: The example of SOEP“, Lausanne, 4-5 June 200921 Response Rates in CNEF Panel Surveys Source: Frick et al. (2007): 637
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