Arbeitspapier

Representative time use data and calibration of the American time use studies 1965 - 1999

Valid and reliable individual time use data in connection with an appriate set of socio-economic background variables are essential elements of an empirical foundation and evaluation of existing time use theories and for the search of new empirical-based hypotheses about individual behavior. Within the Yale project of Assessing American Heritage Time Use Studies (1965, 1975, 19895, 1992-94 and 1998/99), supported by the Glaser Foundation, and working with these time use studies, it is necessary to be sure about comparable representative data. As it will become evident, there is a serious bias in all of these files concerning demographic characteristics, characteristics which are important for substantive time use research analyses. Our study and new calibration solution will circumvent these biases by delivering a comprehensive demographic adjustment for all incorporated U.S. time use surveys, which is theoretically funded (here by information theory and the minimum information loss principle with its ADJUST program package), is consistent by a simultaneous weighting including hierarchical data, considers substantial requirements for time use research analyses and is similar and thus comparable in the demographic adjustment characteristics for all U.S. time use files to support substantial analyses and allows to disentangle demographic vs. time use behavioral changes and developments.

Language
Englisch

Bibliographic citation
Series: FFB Diskussionspapier ; No. 54

Classification
Wirtschaft
Time Allocation and Labor Supply
Time Allocation, Work Behavior, and Employment Determination: Other
Demographic Trends, Macroeconomic Effects, and Forecasts
Subject
time use
calibration (adjustment re-weighting) of microdata
information theory
minimum information loss principle
American Heritage Time Use Studies
ADJUST program package
Zeitverwendung
Hochrechung (Umgewichtung) von Mikrodaten
Informationstheorie
Minimum Information Loss Prinzip
American Heritage Time Use Studies
ADJUST Programmpaket
Zeitverwendung
Soziale Lage
USA

Event
Geistige Schöpfung
(who)
Merz, Joachim
Stolze, Henning
Event
Veröffentlichung
(who)
Universität Lüneburg, Forschungsinstitut Freie Berufe (FFB)
(where)
Lüneburg
(when)
2006

Handle
Last update
10.03.2025, 11:44 AM CET

Data provider

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Object type

  • Arbeitspapier

Associated

  • Merz, Joachim
  • Stolze, Henning
  • Universität Lüneburg, Forschungsinstitut Freie Berufe (FFB)

Time of origin

  • 2006

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