User Generated Variables/Data Sets
This page provides links to programs and data sets that may be of interest to the PSID
user community. We provide no warranties and minimal support for these
programs. If you'd like to share your programs and/or data sets that use PSID data, please send us your link.
- The Cross-National Equivalent File 1980-2002 contains equivalently defined variables for the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID), the German Socio-Economic Panel (GSOEP), the British Household Panel Study (BHPS), and the Canadian Survey of Labour and Income Dynamics (SLID).
http://www.human.cornell.edu/pam/gsoep/equivfil.cfm
- Lee A. Lillard, director of the Retirement Research Center at the University of Michigan, senior research scientist at its Institute for Social Research, and professor of economics, developed a unique method for analyzing the rich compendium of data collected by the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID) since its inception in 1968. Lee created what he called "clean processes" to investigate a number of dynamic behaviors that are measured longitudinally in PSID, such as employment, marriage-divorce, and fertility.
http://webapp.icpsr.umich.edu/cocoon/ICPSR-STUDY/01239.xml
- A SAS Program which creates tax variables for
the 1991 family dataset.
ftp://ftp.isr.umich.edu/pub/src/psid/other/tax91.zip
- Boisjoly, Duncan, and Smeeding recoded "job loss" using 1968-1992 data into the categories of laid-off, fired, quit, company folded, and missing. They provide three files that include:
1) a STATA SE 8.0 file called mlisco.dta;
2) a WORD file called Job Loss File Description.doc describing the contents of the STATA file; and
3) a PDF file of their paper called Job Loss.pdf (citation below) which provides the definitions used, including the definition of "a job worth losing".
Boisjoly, Johanne, Duncan, Greg J., and Smeeding, Timothy. The Shifting Incidence of Involuntary Job Losses from 1968-1992. Industrial Relations. 1998; 37(2):207-231.
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