Comparing Hours per Job in the CPS and the ATUS

Springer Science and Business Media LLC - Tập 93 - Trang 191-195 - 2008
Harley Frazis1, Jay Stewart1
1U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Washington, USA

Tài liệu tham khảo

Frazis, H., & Stewart, J. (2004). What can time-use data tell us about hours of work? Monthly Labor Review, 127(12), 3–9. Frazis, H., & Stewart, J. (2007). Where does the time go? Concepts and measurement in the American Time Use Survey. In E. Berndt & C. Hulten (Eds.), Hard to measure goods and services: Essays in memory of Zvi Griliches (pp. 73–97). Chicago: NBER Studies in Income and Wealth, University of Chicago Press (Spring 2007). Frazis, H. & Stewart, J. (2008). Why do BLS hours series tell different stories about trends in hours worked? Paper for CRIW Conference on Labor in the New Economy, November 2007 (revised March 2008). Hamermesh, D. (1990). Shirking or productive schmoozing: Wages and the allocation of time at work. Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 43(3), 121S–133S. Hamermesh, D. S., Frazis, H., & Stewart, J. (2005). Data watch—the American Time Use Survey. Journal of Economic Perspectives, 19(1), 221–232 (Winter 2005).