Sef-reported Work Disability in the US and the Netherlands

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Empirical Micro Seminar
University of Pennsylvania

3718 Locust Walk
395 McNeil

Philadelphia, PA

United States

Joint with: Arie Kapteyn and Arthur van Soest

Self-reported work disability is analyzed in the US and The Netherlands. The raw data show that Dutch respondents much more often report that they have a work limiting health problem than respondents in the US. The difference remains when controlling for demographic characteristics and observed onsets of health problems. Respondent evaluations of work limitations of hypothetical persons described in

vignettes are used to identify the extent to which the differences in self-reports between countries or

socio-economic groups are due to systematic variation in the response scales. A model that assumes the same response scales for different health domains is compared with a model that allows for domain specific response scales. Results of both models suggest that about half of the difference between the selfreported rates of work disability in the US and The Netherlands can be explained by response scale differences.

For more information, contact Petra Todd.

James Smith

RAND

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