Essays on Microeconometrics and Immigrant Assimilation
Abstract
Paper I.
Asymptotic bias reduction for a conditional marginal effects estimator in sam-
ple selection models.
In this article we discuss the differences between the average marginal effect and the mar-
ginal effect of the average individual in sample selection models, estimated by the Heck-
man procedure. We show that the bias that emerges as a consequence of interchanging
the measures, could be very significant, even in the limit. We suggest a computationally
cheap approximation method, which corrects the bias to a large extent. We illustrate the
implications of our method with an empirical application of earnings assimilation and a
small Monte Carlo simulation.
Paper II.
Local Unemployment and the Earnings-Assimilation of Immigrant Men in
Sweden: Evidence from Longitudinal Data, 1990-2000.
The earnings-assimilation of first-generation immigrant men in Sweden was analyzed us-
ing eleven waves of panel-data, 1990-2000. Employment-probabilities and earnings were
estimated simultaneously in a random-effects model, using Mundlaks formulation to con-
trol for both individual effects and panel-selectivity due to missing earnings-information.
Assuming equal-period e¤ects produced bias which could distort the findings. To correct
the bias, local unemployment-rates were used to proxy for changing economy-wide con-
ditions. Labour-market outcomes differed considerably across immigrant arrival cohorts,
region and country of origin, and educational levels.
Paper III.
Monte Carlo Investigation of the Initial Values Problem in Censored Dynamic
Random-Effects Panel Data Models.
Three designs of Monte Carlo experiments are used to investigate the initial-value problem
in censored dynamic random-effects (Tobit type 1) models. We compared three widely
used solution methods: naive method based on exogenous initial values assumption; Heck-
mans approximation; and the simple method of Wooldridge. The results suggest that
the initial values problem is a serious issue: using a method which misspecifies the condi-
tional distribution of initial values can cause misleading results on the magnitude of true
(structural) and spurious state-dependence. The naive exogenous method is substantially
biased for panels of short duration. Heckmans approximation works well. The simple
method of Wooldridge works better than naive exogenous method in small panels, but
it is not as good as Heckmans approximation. It is also observed that these methods
performs equally well for panels of long duration.
Paper IV.
Dynamics of Employment- and Earnings-Assimilation of First-Generation Im-
migrant Men in Sweden,1990-2000.
The employment- and earnings-assimilation of first-generation immigrant men in Sweden
was estimated using a dynamic random-e¤ects sample-selection model with eleven waves
of unbalanced panel-data during 1990-2000. Endogenous initial values were controlled for
using the simple Wooldridge method. Local market unemployment-rates were used as a
proxy in order to control for the effect of changing macroeconomic conditions. Signifi-
cant structural (true) state-dependence was found both on the employment-probabilities
and on the earnings of both immigrants and native Swedes. The size of structural state-
dependence differed between immigrants and Swedes. Failure to control for the structural
state-dependence could have caused bias not only in the assimilation measures but also
in the cohort-effects. For example, standard (classic) assimilation model seriously over-
estimates short-run marginal assimilation-rates and underestimates long-run marginal
assimilation-rates. The model controlling for structural state-dependence shows that the
earnings of all immigrants in Sweden (except Iraqies) eventually converge to those of native
Swedes, but only Nordics and Westerners are able to reach the employment-probability
of native Swedes.
University
University of Gothenburg. School of Business, Economics and Law
Institution
Department of Economics
View/ Open
Date
2008-05-02Author
Akay, Alpaslan
Keywords
Average marginal effect
Marginal effect of the average individual
Employment and earnings assimilation
Quasi-fixed effects approach
Initial value problem
Dynamic censored random-effects model
Monte Carlo experiment
Heckmans approximation
Simple method of Wooldridge
Dynamic random-effects sample-selection model
wage-curve method
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-85169-29-0
91-85169-29-3
ISSN
1651-4297
Series/Report no.
Economic studies
170
Language
eng
Metadata
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