1,711 research outputs found
Differential mortality in the UK
In this paper we use the two waves of the British Retirement
Survey (1988/89 and 1994) to quantify the relationship between
socio-economic status and health outcomes. We find that, even
after conditioning on the initial health status, wealth rankings
are important determinants of mortality and the evolution of
the health indicator in the survey. For men aged 65 moving
from the 40th percentile to the 60th percentile in the wealth
distribution increases the probability of survival by between 2.4
and 3.4 percentage points depending on the measure of wealth
used. A slightly smaller effect is found for women of between
1.5 and 1.9 percentage points. In the process of estimating
these effects we control for non-random attrition from our
sample
Education choices in Mexico: using a structural model and a randomised experiment to evaluate PROGRESA
In this paper we evaluate the effect of a large welfare program in rural Mexico. For such a purpose we use an evaluation sample that includes a number of villages where the program was not implemented for evaluation purposes. We estimate a structural model of education choices and argue that without such a framework it is impossible to evaluate the effect of the program and, especially, possible changes to its structure. We also argue that the randomized component of the data allows us to identify a more flexible model that is better suited to evaluate the program. We find that the program has a positive effect on the enrollment of children, especially after primary school. We also find that an approximately revenue neutral change in the program that would increase the grant for secondary school children while eliminating for the primary school children would have a substantially larger effect on enrollment of the latter, while having minor effects on the former
Baseline report on the evaluation of Familias en Acción
This report describes the survey that was carried out in 122 communities in rural Colombia by the consortium formed by the Institute for Fiscal Studies, Econometria and SEI as the baseline for the impact evaluation of Familias en Acción, a programme to foster the accumulation of human capital in rural Colombia, run by the Colombian government.
In this report, we will not describe in detail the programme or the methodology of the proposed evaluation, as this was done in IFS-Econometria-SEI (2003a). The main aim of the document is to discuss the first, baseline survey that was collected for this evaluation. While the baseline survey cannot, by definition, be used to perform impact evaluation, towards the end of the report we exploit the slightly peculiar way in which the programme was started and
have a first very preliminary glance at some of the impacts that the programme might have.
The methodological caveats on interpreting these results should be taken very seriously.
This report does not contain an extensive ‘fieldwork’ report. This is included in SEI (2003).
Analogously, we do not discuss extensively the operation of the programme and the evidence that emerged on related issues and on targeting. These issues are covered in IFS-Econometria- SEI (2003b, 2003c). We will be referring to some of the issues raised in those reports, however.
This report is divided into five chapters. In Chapter 1, we briefly summarise the main features of the programme and its proposed evaluation. A more detailed description of both of these aspects is contained in IFS-Econometria-SEI (2003a). Here, however, we give some details on the expansion of the programme and on the features of this expansion that allow a first and preliminary analysis of the impact of the programme. In Chapter 2, we describe the statistical methodology that will be used in the report. This includes the methodology for the data description that constitutes the largest part of the report and for the preliminary impact evaluation. Chapter 3 describes the baseline survey. This chapter is divided into several
sections, each referring to a particular module. In each section, we first describe the ‘treatment’ population – that is, the households eligible for the programme that were living in villages targeted by the programme. We then move on to the population living in ‘control’ villages –
that is, in villages that were not targeted by the programme and yet are, nonetheless, reasonably similar to the treatment villages. Chapter 4 presents the preliminary impact evaluation
IRAs and Household Saving Revisited: Some New Evidence
The effectiveness of tax-favored savings accounts in raising national savings depends crucially upon the willingness of households to reduce consumption in order to finance contributions to these accounts. The debate over the tax deductibility of IRA's has centered on whether IRA contributions represented new savings or reshuffled assets. We devise a test to distinguish between these two hypotheses where we compare the behavior of households which just opened an IRA account with that of households which already had an IRA account. Our test accounts for any unobservable heterogeneity across the two groups. We find evidence that supports the view that households financed their IRA contributions primarily through reductions in their stocks of other assets. Our results indicate that less than 20% of IRA contributions represented addition to national savings.
New aspects of microwave properties of Nb in the mixed state
We present a study of the frequency dependence of the vortex dynamics in a
conventional superconductor. We have employed a swept-frequency, Corbino-disk
technique to investigate the temperature (3.6K-Tc) and high-field (from Hc2/2
to Hc2) microwave complex resistivity in Nb thin (20-40 nm) films as a function
of the frequency (1-20 GHz). We have found several previously unnoticed
features: (i) a field-dependent depinning frequency in the GHz range; (ii)
deviations from the accepted frequency dependence, that can be ascribed to some
kind of vortex creep; (iii) the presence of switching phenomena, reminiscent of
vortex instabilities. We discuss the possible origin of the features here
reported.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, presented at VORTEX VI Conference, to appear on
Physica
Superconducting nanowire quantum interference device based on Nb ultrathin films deposited on self-assembled porous Si templates
Magnetoresistance oscillations were observed on networks of superconducting
ultrathin Nb nanowires presenting evidences of either thermal or quantum
activated phase slips. The magnetic transport data, discussed in the framework
of different scenarios, reveal that the system behaves coherently in the
temperature range where the contribution of the fluctuations is important.Comment: accepted for publication on Nanotechnolog
Interface Transparency of Nb/Pd Layered Systems
We have investigated, in the framework of proximity effect theory, the
interface transparency T of superconducting/normal metal layered systems which
consist of Nb and high paramagnetic Pd deposited by dc magnetron sputtering.
The obtained T value is relatively high, as expected by theoretical arguments.
This leads to a large value of the ratio although Pd does
not exhibit any magnetic ordering.Comment: To be published on Eur. Phys. J.
Child education and work choices in the presence of a conditional cash transfer programme in rural Colombia
This research is part of a large evaluation effort, undertaken by a consortium formed by IFS, Econometria and SEI, which has considered the effects of Familias en Accion on a variety of outcomes one year after its implementation. In early reports, we focussed on the effects of the programme on school enrolment. In this paper, we both expand those results, by carefully analysing anticipation effects along with other issues, and complement them with an analysis of child labour - both paid and unpaid (including domestic) work. The child labour analysis is made possible due to a rich time use module of the surveys that has not previously been analysed. We find that the programme increased the school participation rates of 14 to 17 year old children quite substantially, by between 5 and 7 percentage points, and had lower, but non-negligible effects on the enrolment of younger children of between 1.4 and 2.4 percentage points. In terms of work, the effects are generally largest for younger children whose participation in domestic work decreased by around 10 to 12 percentage points after the programme but whose participation in income-generating work remained largely unaffected by the programme. We also find evidence of school and work time not being fully substitutable, suggesting that some, but not all, of the increased time at school may be drawn from children's leisure time
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