000 02249cam  2200325za 4500
0019.837477
003CaOODSP
00520221107151140
007cr |||||||||||
008170531s1989    onc    |o    f|0| 0 eng d
040 |aCaOODSP|beng
041 |aeng|bfre
043 |an-cn---
0861 |aCS11-613/89-23E-PDF
1001 |aLee, Hyunshik,|d1947-
24510|aEstimation of panel correlations for the Canadian Labour Force Survey |h[electronic resource] / |cHyunshik Lee.
260 |aOttawa : |bStatistics Canada, |c1989.
300 |a20 p.
4901 |aWorking paper ; |v89-23
500 |aDigitized edition from print [produced by Statistics Canada].
500 |a"Working paper no. SSMD-89-023 E."
504 |aIncludes bibliographic references.
5203 |a"The Canadian Labour Force Survey uses the rotation panel design. Every month, one sixth of the sample rotates and five sixths remain. Hence, under this rotation scheme, once a rotation panel enters in the sample, it stays 6 months in the sample before it rotates out. Because of this design feature, the estimates based on the same panel in different months are highly correlated. Moreover, when a rotation panel rotates out, a neighbouring rotation panel usually rotates in. Since they are geographically close, estimates based on the neighbouring rotation panels are also correlated. These correlations are called panel correlations: their magnitudes are variable-specific and time-dependent. This paper describes a methodology for estimating the panel correlations and presents estimated correlations for selected variables using 1980-81 and 1985-87 data. The work was originated for the study of composite estimation technique. However, the results are useful in any situation in which the panel correlation plays a role"--Abstract.
546 |aPrefatory material in English and French.
69207|2gccst|aSurveys
69207|2gccst|aMethodology
7101 |aCanada. |bStatistics Canada.|bSocial Survey Methods Division.
830#0|aWorking paper (Statistics Canada. Methodology Branch)|v89-23|w(CaOODSP)9.834763
85640|qPDF|s4.08 MB|uhttps://publications.gc.ca/collections/collection_2017/statcan/11-613/CS11-613-89-23-eng.pdf