Summary information

Study title

SWIP - Swedish Income Panel - SWIP - Interventions for children and young people 1968-2000 - children

Creator

Gustafsson, Björn (Department of Social Work, University of Gothenburg)

Study number / PID

snd0500-64-1.0 (SND)

https://doi.org/10.5878/cy90-4b87 (DOI)

Data access

Restricted

Series

Not available

Abstract

The Swedish income panel was originally set up in the beginning of the 90s to make studies of how immigrants assimilate in the Swedish labour market possible. It consists of large samples of foreign-born and Swedish-born persons. Income information from registers is added for nearly 40 years. In addition income information relating to spouses is also available as well as for a subset of mothers and fathers. This makes it possible to construct measures of household income based on a relatively narrow definition. However, starting in 1998 there is also more information making it possible to include children over 18 and their incomes in the family. By matching with some different additional registers information has been added for people who have been unemployed or involved in labour market programmes during the 90s, on causes of deaths for people who have deceased since 1978 and on recent arrived immigrants from various origins. It has turned out that the data-base is quite useful for analysing research-questions other than originally motivating construction of the panel. The panel has been used for cross country comparisons of immigrants in the labour market and to analyse income mobility for different breakdowns of the population, and analyses the development in cohort income. There have been analyses of social assistance receipt among immigrants as well as studies of intergeneration mobility of income, the labour market situation of young immigrants and the second generation of immigrants. On-going work includes evaluation of labour market training programmes and studies of early retirement among immigrants. Planned work includes studies of the economic transition from child to adulthood during the 80s and 90s as well as studies of how frequent immigrant children are subject to measures under the Social Service Act and the Care of Youth Persons Act. The potentials of the Swedish Income Panel can be understood if one compares it with better known income-panels...
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Methodology

Data collection period

01/01/1968 - 31/12/2003

Country

Sweden

Time dimension

Longitudinal: Panel

Analysis unit

Household
Individual

Universe

The Swedish population

Sampling procedure

Not available

Kind of data

Not available

Data collection mode

Not available

Access

Publisher

Swedish National Data Service

Publication year

2002

Terms of data access

Access to data through SND. Access to data is restricted.

Related publications

Not available