Cannabis Use, Employment, and Income: Fixed-Effects Analysis of Panel Data

被引:0
|
作者
Ioana Popovici
Michael T. French
机构
[1] College of Pharmacy,Department of Sociobehavioral and Administrative Pharmacy
[2] Nova Southeastern University,Department of Sociology
[3] University of Miami,undefined
关键词
Illicit Drug; Personal Income; Labor Market Outcome; Wage Premium; Cannabis User;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Uncertainty exists regarding the direction and magnitude of the association between cannabis use and labor market outcomes. Using panel data from waves 1 and 2 of the National Epidemiological Survey of Alcohol and Related Conditions, the current paper estimates the associations between several patterns of cannabis use during the past year, current employment, and annual personal income. In the single-equation models (wave 2 data), nearly all patterns of cannabis use are significantly associated with worse labor market outcomes (p < 0.05). However, when using fixed-effects techniques to address unobserved and time-invariant individual heterogeneity, the estimates are generally smaller in magnitude and less likely to be statistically significant vis-à-vis the benchmark estimates. These findings suggest that unobserved individual heterogeneity is an important source of bias in models of cannabis use and labor market outcomes. Moreover, cannabis use may be less detrimental in the labor market than other studies have reported.
引用
收藏
页码:185 / 202
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Cannabis Use, Employment, and Income: Fixed-Effects Analysis of Panel Data
    Popovici, Ioana
    French, Michael T.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SERVICES & RESEARCH, 2014, 41 (02): : 185 - 202
  • [2] Limitations of Fixed-Effects Models for Panel Data
    Hill, Terrence D.
    Davis, Andrew P.
    Roos, J. Micah
    French, Michael T.
    [J]. SOCIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES, 2020, 63 (03) : 357 - 369
  • [3] Fixed-effects dynamic spatial panel data models and impulse response analysis
    Li, Kunpeng
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ECONOMETRICS, 2017, 198 (01) : 102 - 121
  • [4] Testing for Serial Correlation in Fixed-Effects Panel Data Models
    Born, Benjamin
    Breitung, Joerg
    [J]. ECONOMETRIC REVIEWS, 2016, 35 (07) : 1290 - 1316
  • [5] Robust estimation of dynamic fixed-effects panel data models
    Michele Aquaro
    Pavel Čížek
    [J]. Statistical Papers, 2014, 55 : 169 - 186
  • [6] Robust estimation of dynamic fixed-effects panel data models
    Aquaro, Michele
    Cizek, Pavel
    [J]. STATISTICAL PAPERS, 2014, 55 (01) : 169 - 186
  • [7] Modified Profile Likelihood for Fixed-Effects Panel Data Models
    Bartolucci, F.
    Bellio, R.
    Salvan, A.
    Sartori, N.
    [J]. ECONOMETRIC REVIEWS, 2016, 35 (07) : 1271 - 1289
  • [8] Estimation of partially specified spatial panel data models with fixed-effects
    Ai, Chunrong
    Zhang, Yuanqing
    [J]. ECONOMETRIC REVIEWS, 2017, 36 (1-3) : 6 - 22
  • [9] Would You Be Happier Living in a Greener Urban Area? A Fixed-Effects Analysis of Panel Data
    White, Mathew P.
    Alcock, Ian
    Wheeler, Benedict W.
    Depledge, Michael H.
    [J]. PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 2013, 24 (06) : 920 - 928
  • [10] USING THE FIXED-EFFECTS ESTIMATOR TO IDENTIFY AGE, PERIOD, AND COHORT EFFECTS IN PANEL DATA
    JASSO, G
    [J]. POPULATION INDEX, 1988, 54 (03) : 481 - 481