2 datasets found
  1. o

    PSID-SHELF, 1968–2021: The PSID's Social, Health, and Economic Longitudinal...

    • openicpsr.org
    Updated Oct 7, 2023
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    Fabian T. Pfeffer; Davis Daumler; Esther Friedman (2023). PSID-SHELF, 1968–2021: The PSID's Social, Health, and Economic Longitudinal File (PSID-SHELF), Beta Release [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.3886/E194322V2
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Oct 7, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    University of Michigan. Survey Research Center, Institute for Social Research.
    Ludwig Maximilian University (LMU) of Munich.
    Authors
    Fabian T. Pfeffer; Davis Daumler; Esther Friedman
    Time period covered
    1968 - 2021
    Area covered
    United States of America
    Description

    The Panel Study of Income Dynamics–Social, Health, and Economic Longitudinal File (PSID-SHELF) provides an easy-to-use and harmonized longitudinal file for the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID), the longest-running nationally representative household panel survey in the world.The first major benefit of PSID-SHELF is that it provides users with a longitudinal data file that features the complete sample of the PSID's multigenerational panel. The current version of PSID-SHELF includes 42 waves of survey data, ranging from 1968 to 2021. Every individual who has ever been observed in the PSID Main Study is included in PSID-SHELF. There are over 8,000 sample families, comprising more than 900,000 observations from roughly 53,000 sample members (and an additional 30,000 nonsample individuals who have ever lived in a PSID family unit). The second major benefit of PSID-SHELF is that it features a novel set of harmonized measures on a wide range of substantive topics, including: (1) social characteristics (e.g., demographics, family type, education, race and ethnicity); (2) health characteristics (e.g., chronic conditions, COVID-19, dementia, disability); (3) economic characteristics (e.g., earnings, family income, occupations, wealth)—as well as a list of the PSID's essential administrative variables (e.g., survey identifiers, panel status, sample weights, household relationship records). Consequently, PSID-SHELF covers some of the most central variables in the PSID that have been collected for up to five decades.PSID-SHELF can be used as a standalone data file, or it can easily be merged with other PSID data products to add additional public-use variables, by linking variables to a participant’s individual and family unit identifiers. The harmonized longitudinal file accentuates the PSID's strengths through its household panel structure that follows the same families over multiple decades and its multigenerational genealogical design that follows the descendants of PSID families that were originally sampled in 1968, with immigrant refresher samples in 1997–1999 and 2017–2019.Although the PSID strives to ensure longitudinally consistent measurement, there are a number of variables that have changed across waves (e.g., because of new code frames, top-codes, question splitting, or other changes to the survey interview). But data harmonization, by necessity, involves analytic decisions that users may or may not agree with. These decisions are described at a high level in the PSID-SHELF User Guide and Codebook, but only a close review of the construction files that were used to generate PSID-SHELF can fully reveal each analytic decision. The Stata code underlying PSID-SHELF is publicly available not only to allow for such review but also to encourage users, as they become more comfortable with PSID, to use and alter the full code or selected code snippets for their own analytic purposes.Despite multiple code reviews, it is possible that the files used to produce PSID-SHELF contain errors. As such, we encourage users to review the code carefully. If identified, please report any mistakes or errors to us (psidshelf.help@umich.edu). The authors wish to underscore that PSID-SHELF is currently being shared as a data product, in beta, and users are responsible for any errors arising from the provided code and files. Current Version 2025-01 (data release number).Permanent DOIDOI:10.3886/E194322 (data).DOI:10.7302/25205 (documentation).Recommended CitationsPlease cite PSID-SHELF in any product that makes use of the data or documentation. Anyone who uses PSID-SHELF should cite the data or the PSID-SHELF User Guide and Codebook—and, as required by the PSID user agreement, the PSID Main Study.PSID-SHELF data:Pfeffer, Fabian T., Davis Daumler, and Esther Friedman. PSID-SHELF, 1968–2021: The PSID’s Social, Health, and Economic Longitudinal File (PSID-SHELF), Beta Release. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor],

  2. o

    PSID-SHELF, 1968–2019: The PSID's Social, Health, and Economic Longitudinal...

    • openicpsr.org
    Updated Oct 7, 2023
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    The citation is currently not available for this dataset.
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Oct 7, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    University of Michigan. Institute for Social Research. Survey Research Center
    Ludwig Maximilian University (LMU) of Munich
    Authors
    Fabian Pfeffer; Davis Daumler; Esther Friedman
    Time period covered
    1968 - 2019
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    The Panel Study of Income Dynamics–Social, Health, and Economic Longitudinal File (PSID-SHELF) provides an easy-to-use and harmonized longitudinal file for the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID), the longest-running nationally representative household panel survey in the world.PSID-SHELF accentuates the PSID's strengths through (1) its household panel structure that follows the same families over multiple decades; and (2) its multigenerational genealogical design that follows the descendants of panel families that were originally sampled in 1968, with immigrant sample refreshers in 1997–1999 and 2017. Every individual who has ever been included in the PSID's main study is included in the PSID-SHELF data, with over 80,000 people observed, some of them across more than 40 survey waves (1968–present). The current version of PSID-SHELF includes 41 waves of survey data, ranging from 1968 to 2019.The file contains measures on a wide range of substantive topics from the PSID's individual and family files, including variables on demographics, family structure, educational attainment, family income, individual earnings, employment status, occupation, housing, and wealth—as well as the essential administrative variables pertaining to key survey identifiers, panel status, sample weights, and household relationship identifiers. PSID-SHELF thus covers some of the most central variables in PSID that have been collected for many years. PSID-SHELF can easily be merged with other PSID data products to add other public-use variables by linking variables based on a survey participant’s individual and family IDs.Despite a focus on longitudinally consistent measurement, many PSID variables change over waves, e.g., thanks to new code frames, topcodes, question splitting, or similar. PSID-SHELF provides harmonized measures to increase the ease of using PSID data, but by necessity this harmonization involves analytic decisions that users may or may not agree with. These decisions are described at a high level in the PSID-SHELF User Guide and Codebook, but only a close review of the Stata code used to construct variables in the data will fully reveal each analytic decision. The Stata code underlying PSID-SHELF is openly accessible not only to allow for such review but also to encourage users, as they become more comfortable with PSID, to use and alter the full code or selected code snippets for their own analytic purposes. PSID-SHELF is entirely based on publicly released data and therefore can be recreated by anyone who has registered for PSID data use.Despite careful and multiple code reviews, it is possible that the code used to produce PSID-SHELF contains errors. The authors therefore encourage users to review the codes carefully, to report any mistakes and errors to us (psidshelf.help@umich.edu), and take no responsibility for any errors arising from the provided codes and files. Current VersionPSID-SHELF, 1968–2019, Beta Release 2023.01Recommended CitationsPlease cite PSID-SHELF in any product that makes use of the data. Anyone who uses PSID-SHELF should cite the data or the PSID-SHELF User Guide and Codebook—and, as required by the PSID user agreement, the main PSID data.PSID-SHELF data:Pfeffer, Fabian T., Davis Daumler, and Esther M. Friedman. PSID-SHELF, 1968–2019: The PSID’s Social, Health, and Economic Longitudinal File (PSID-SHELF), Beta Release. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor],

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Fabian T. Pfeffer; Davis Daumler; Esther Friedman (2023). PSID-SHELF, 1968–2021: The PSID's Social, Health, and Economic Longitudinal File (PSID-SHELF), Beta Release [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.3886/E194322V2

PSID-SHELF, 1968–2021: The PSID's Social, Health, and Economic Longitudinal File (PSID-SHELF), Beta Release

Explore at:
Dataset updated
Oct 7, 2023
Dataset provided by
University of Michigan. Survey Research Center, Institute for Social Research.
Ludwig Maximilian University (LMU) of Munich.
Authors
Fabian T. Pfeffer; Davis Daumler; Esther Friedman
Time period covered
1968 - 2021
Area covered
United States of America
Description

The Panel Study of Income Dynamics–Social, Health, and Economic Longitudinal File (PSID-SHELF) provides an easy-to-use and harmonized longitudinal file for the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID), the longest-running nationally representative household panel survey in the world.The first major benefit of PSID-SHELF is that it provides users with a longitudinal data file that features the complete sample of the PSID's multigenerational panel. The current version of PSID-SHELF includes 42 waves of survey data, ranging from 1968 to 2021. Every individual who has ever been observed in the PSID Main Study is included in PSID-SHELF. There are over 8,000 sample families, comprising more than 900,000 observations from roughly 53,000 sample members (and an additional 30,000 nonsample individuals who have ever lived in a PSID family unit). The second major benefit of PSID-SHELF is that it features a novel set of harmonized measures on a wide range of substantive topics, including: (1) social characteristics (e.g., demographics, family type, education, race and ethnicity); (2) health characteristics (e.g., chronic conditions, COVID-19, dementia, disability); (3) economic characteristics (e.g., earnings, family income, occupations, wealth)—as well as a list of the PSID's essential administrative variables (e.g., survey identifiers, panel status, sample weights, household relationship records). Consequently, PSID-SHELF covers some of the most central variables in the PSID that have been collected for up to five decades.PSID-SHELF can be used as a standalone data file, or it can easily be merged with other PSID data products to add additional public-use variables, by linking variables to a participant’s individual and family unit identifiers. The harmonized longitudinal file accentuates the PSID's strengths through its household panel structure that follows the same families over multiple decades and its multigenerational genealogical design that follows the descendants of PSID families that were originally sampled in 1968, with immigrant refresher samples in 1997–1999 and 2017–2019.Although the PSID strives to ensure longitudinally consistent measurement, there are a number of variables that have changed across waves (e.g., because of new code frames, top-codes, question splitting, or other changes to the survey interview). But data harmonization, by necessity, involves analytic decisions that users may or may not agree with. These decisions are described at a high level in the PSID-SHELF User Guide and Codebook, but only a close review of the construction files that were used to generate PSID-SHELF can fully reveal each analytic decision. The Stata code underlying PSID-SHELF is publicly available not only to allow for such review but also to encourage users, as they become more comfortable with PSID, to use and alter the full code or selected code snippets for their own analytic purposes.Despite multiple code reviews, it is possible that the files used to produce PSID-SHELF contain errors. As such, we encourage users to review the code carefully. If identified, please report any mistakes or errors to us (psidshelf.help@umich.edu). The authors wish to underscore that PSID-SHELF is currently being shared as a data product, in beta, and users are responsible for any errors arising from the provided code and files. Current Version 2025-01 (data release number).Permanent DOIDOI:10.3886/E194322 (data).DOI:10.7302/25205 (documentation).Recommended CitationsPlease cite PSID-SHELF in any product that makes use of the data or documentation. Anyone who uses PSID-SHELF should cite the data or the PSID-SHELF User Guide and Codebook—and, as required by the PSID user agreement, the PSID Main Study.PSID-SHELF data:Pfeffer, Fabian T., Davis Daumler, and Esther Friedman. PSID-SHELF, 1968–2021: The PSID’s Social, Health, and Economic Longitudinal File (PSID-SHELF), Beta Release. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor],

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