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Quantitative policy evaluation can benefit from
a rich set of econometric methods for analyzing count data
Often, economic policies are directed toward
outcomes that are measured as counts. Examples of economic variables that
use a basic counting scale are number of children as an indicator of
fertility, number of doctor visits as an indicator of health care demand,
and number of days absent from work as an indicator of employee shirking.
Several econometric methods are available for analyzing such data, including
the Poisson and negative binomial models. They can provide useful insights
that cannot be obtained from standard linear regression models. Estimation
and interpretation are illustrated in two empirical examples.
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Data on rapid, unexpected refugee flows can credibly
identify the impact of migration on native workers’ labor market outcomes
Estimating the causal effect of immigration on the labor
market outcomes of native workers has been a major concern in the literature. Because
immigrants decide whether and where to migrate, immigrant populations generally consist
of individuals with characteristics that differ from those of a randomly selected
sample. One solution is to focus on events such as civil wars and natural catastrophes
that generate rapid and unexpected flows of refugees into a country unrelated to their
personal characteristics, location, and employment preferences. These “natural
experiments” yield estimates that find small negative effects on native workers’
employment but not on wages.
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Google search activity data are an
unconventional survey full of unbiased, revealed answers in need of the
right question
Using Google search activity data can help
detect, in real time and at high frequency, a wide spectrum of breaking
socio-economic trends around the world. This wealth of data is the result of
an ongoing and ever more pervasive digitization of information. Search
activity data stand in contrast to more traditional economic measurement
approaches, which are still tailored to an earlier era of scarce computing
power. Search activity data can be used for more timely, informed, and
effective policy making for the benefit of society, particularly in times of
crisis. Indeed, having such data shifts the relation between theory and the
data to support it.
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Combining survey and administrative data is
growing in popularity, even though data access is still highly
restricted
Using administrative records data and survey
data to enhance each other offers huge potential for scientific and
policy-related research. Two recent changes have expanded the potential for
creating such linked data: the improved availability of data sources and
progress in data-matching technology. These developments are reflected,
among other ways, in the growing number of academic papers in labor
economics that use linked survey and administrative data. While the number
of studies using linked data is still small, the trend is clearly upward.
Slowing the growth, however, are concerns about data security and privacy,
which impede data access.
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“Happiness data” may help assess the welfare
effects of a new labor market policy, like a change in benefit
generosity
Imagine a government confronted with a
controversial policy question, like whether it should cut the level of
unemployment benefits. Will social welfare rise as a result? Will some
groups be winners and other groups be losers? Will the welfare gap between
the employed and unemployed increase? “Happiness data” offer a new way to
make these kinds of evaluations. These data allow us to track the well-being
of the whole population, and also sub-groups like the employed and
unemployed people, and correlate the results with relevant policy
changes.
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Knowing people’s history helps in understanding
their present state and where they are heading
Information from longitudinal surveys transforms
snapshots of a given moment into something with a time dimension. It
illuminates patterns of events within an individual’s life and records
mobility and immobility between older and younger generations. It can track
the different pathways of men and women and people of diverse socio-economic
background through the life course. It can join up data on aspects of a
person’s life, health, education, family, and employment and show how these
domains affect one another. It is ideal for bridging the different silos of
policies that affect people’s lives.
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Effective measurement can help policymakers
harness a wide variety of gains from entrepreneurship
Policymakers rely on entrepreneurs to create
jobs, provide incomes, innovate, pay taxes to support public revenues,
create competition in industries, and much more. Due to its highly
heterogeneous nature, the choice of entrepreneurship measures is critically
important, impacting the diagnosis, analysis, projection, and understanding
of potential and existing policy. Some key aspects to measure include the
how (self-employment, new firm formation),
why (necessity, opportunity), and what (growth). As such, gaining better insight into
the challenges of measuring entrepreneurship is a necessary and productive
investment for policymakers.
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Consistent measures of migration are needed to
understand patterns and impacts on labor market outcomes
International migration alters the
socio-economic conditions of the individuals and families migrating as well
as the host and sending countries. The data to study and to track these
movements, however, are largely inadequate or missing. Understanding the
reasons for these data limitations and recently developed methods for
overcoming them is crucial for implementing effective policies. Improving
the available information on global migration patterns will result in
numerous and wide-ranging benefits, including improved population
estimations and providing a clearer picture of why certain migrants choose
certain destinations.
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Panel data provide an efficient and
cost-effective means to measure changing behaviors and attitudes over
time
Stability and change are essential elements of
social reality and economic progress. Cross-sectional surveys are a means of
providing information on specific issues at a particular point in time,
though without providing any information about the prevailing stability.
Limited information on change can be obtained by retrospective questioning,
but this is often impaired by “recall bias.” However, valid information on
change is essential for assessing whether phenomena such as poverty are
permanent or only temporary. Panel data analyses can address these problems
as well as provide an essential tool for effective policy design.
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