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Trends in the Relative Household Income of Working-Age Men With Work Limitations: Correcting the Record Using Internal Current Population Survey Data
Richard V. Burkhauser
and
Jeff Larrimore*
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: jhl42{at}cornell.edu.
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Abstract |
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Policy makers relying on public-use Current Population Survey (CPS) data to measure the success of government policies in overcoming the gap in economic well-being between working-age men with and without disabilities will understate the mean income of both and overstate the relative economic well-being of the former. This understatement results from topcoding in the public-use CPS, which suppresses top incomes in the data set. Using cell means with the public-use CPS, the authors better correct for these topcoding problems than alternate methods and provide a relative economic well-being series (1980–2006) based on the mean incomes of working-age men with and without disabilities.
First published on March 20, 2009, doi:10.1177/1044207309333430
Journal of Disability Policy Studies 2009;20:162.
A more recent version of this article appeared on December 1, 2009

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