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The consequences of measurement error when estimating the impact of obesity on income
by
O'Neill, Donal
, Sweetman, Olive
in
Alternative approaches
/ auxiliary data
/ Bias
/ Body mass index
/ Body weight
/ Datasets
/ Economic impact
/ Economic models
/ Economic statistics
/ Economic theory
/ Economics
/ Economics and Finance
/ Errors
/ Expected values
/ Income
/ instrumental variables
/ Irland
/ Körpergewicht
/ Labor Economics
/ Labor market
/ Measurement
/ Measurement errors
/ non-classical measurement error
/ Obesity
/ Original Article
/ Population Economics
/ Self report
/ Socioeconomic factors
/ Statistischer Fehler
/ Studies
/ Women
/ Womens health
2013
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The consequences of measurement error when estimating the impact of obesity on income
by
O'Neill, Donal
, Sweetman, Olive
in
Alternative approaches
/ auxiliary data
/ Bias
/ Body mass index
/ Body weight
/ Datasets
/ Economic impact
/ Economic models
/ Economic statistics
/ Economic theory
/ Economics
/ Economics and Finance
/ Errors
/ Expected values
/ Income
/ instrumental variables
/ Irland
/ Körpergewicht
/ Labor Economics
/ Labor market
/ Measurement
/ Measurement errors
/ non-classical measurement error
/ Obesity
/ Original Article
/ Population Economics
/ Self report
/ Socioeconomic factors
/ Statistischer Fehler
/ Studies
/ Women
/ Womens health
2013
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
The consequences of measurement error when estimating the impact of obesity on income
by
O'Neill, Donal
, Sweetman, Olive
in
Alternative approaches
/ auxiliary data
/ Bias
/ Body mass index
/ Body weight
/ Datasets
/ Economic impact
/ Economic models
/ Economic statistics
/ Economic theory
/ Economics
/ Economics and Finance
/ Errors
/ Expected values
/ Income
/ instrumental variables
/ Irland
/ Körpergewicht
/ Labor Economics
/ Labor market
/ Measurement
/ Measurement errors
/ non-classical measurement error
/ Obesity
/ Original Article
/ Population Economics
/ Self report
/ Socioeconomic factors
/ Statistischer Fehler
/ Studies
/ Women
/ Womens health
2013
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The consequences of measurement error when estimating the impact of obesity on income
Journal Article
The consequences of measurement error when estimating the impact of obesity on income
2013
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Overview
This paper examines the consequences of using self-reported measures of BMI when estimating the effect of BMI on income for women using both Irish and US data. We find that self-reported BMI is subject to substantial measurement error and that this error deviates from classical measurement error. These errors cause the traditional least squares estimator to overestimate the relationship between BMI and income. We show that neither the conditional expectation estimator nor the instrumental variables approach adequately address the bias and briefly discuss alternative approaches that could be considered when faced with non-classical measurement error.
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