The Extent of Measurement Error in Longitudinal Earnings Data: Do Two Wrongs Make a Right?
42 Pages Posted: 9 Jul 2004 Last revised: 22 May 2022
Date Written: March 1989
Abstract
This paper examines the properties and prevalence of measurement error in longitudinal earnings data. The analysis compares Current Population Survey data to administrative Social Security payroll tax records for a sample of heads of households over two years. In contrast. to the typically assumed properties of measurement error, the results indicate that errors are serially correlated over two years and negatively correlated with true earnings (i.e., mean reverting). Moreover, reported earnings are more reliable for females than males. Overall, the ratio of the variance of the signal to the total variance is .82 for men and .92 for women. These ratios fall to .65 and .81 when the data are specified in first-differences. The estimates suggest that longitudinal earnings data may be more reliable than previously believed.
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Intertemporal Labor Supply and Long Term Employment Contracts
By John M. Abowd and David Card
-
Macroeconomic Analysis and Microeconomic Analyses of Labor Supply
-
Generating Equality and Eliminating Poverty, the Swedish Way
-
Are Earnings Inequality and Mobility Overstated? The Impact of Non-Classical Measurement Error
By Peter Gottschalk and Minh Huynh
-
Explaining the Recent Divergence in Payroll and Household Employment Growth
By Chinhui Juhn and Simon Potter
-
Measurement Error and Misclassification: A Comparison of Survey and Register Data
By Arie Kapteyn and Jelmer Ypma
-
Exploring Differences in Employment between Household and Establishment Data
By Katharine G. Abraham, John Haltiwanger, ...