IMA 2024

Contents:

  • Registration
  • Practical Information
  • Program
    • François Legendre - MSL, a library written in C++ and dedicated to microsimulation models
    • Graham Stark - Hands-on with Julia for Microsimulation
    • Matthew Warkentin - Hands-on with R and OpenM++ for Microsimulation
    • Gabriel Felbermayr - Opening Address
    • Ralf Münnich - Keynote: Synthetic data generation - what is the impact on microsimulation?
    • Pauline Pohl - Short Talk: Population Projections by Microsimulation at Statistics Austria
    • Deirdre Hennessy - Short Talk: Modelling dementia in populations
    • Sara Riscado - Short Talk: Inflation, fiscal policy and inequality across Europe
    • Wolfgang Lutz - Keynote: World Population Projections
    • Samuel Vézina - Twenty years of population projections using microsimulation at Statistics Canada
    • Pauline Pohl - A microsimulation model for official population projections
    • Guillaume Marois - Demographic and labor force impacts of future immigration flows into Europe: does the region of origin matter?
    • Ció Patxot - Measuring the Care Economy along the lifecycle
    • Ulrike Famira-Mühlberger - Care regimes and their relevance for projecting long-term care needs and impacts on caregivers
    • Matteo Richiardi - SimPaths: An open-source microsimulation model for life course analysis
    • Martin Spielauer - The microWELT platform and its application for care projections with a case-study for Austria
    • Zeynep Gizem Can - Modelling the Distributional Effects of the Cost-of-Living Crisis in Turkey and the South Caucasus: A Microsimulation Analysis
    • Chrysa Leventi - Indexing wages to inflation in the EU: fiscal drag and benefit erosion effects
    • Mattia Ricci - The Impact of the Inflationary Shock in the Eurozone through Consumption, Income and Wealth
    • Markus Riegler - Inflation and Government Response – Distributional Impact on Austrian Households
    • Sara Riscado - Inflation, fiscal policy and inequality: The distributional impact of fiscal measures to compensate for consumer inflation
    • Jana Valachyová - The impact of unexpected inflationary shock in 2022 and 2023 on the welfare of families: The case of Slovakia
    • De Bevere Audric - The Distributional Implications and Public Acceptability of the EU-ETS 2 in Belgium
    • Paola De Agostini - The distributional effects of energy price caps
    • Karina Doorley - How has gender income inequality in Ireland and the UK changed in the last decade and why?
    • Michael Fuchs - Simulation of an introduction of a basic security for children in Austria
    • Adrian Hernandez Martin - The extent and distribution of cash support to children in Spain for over a decade
    • Federica Lanterna - The erosion of the tax base and the loss of progressivity: evidence from the personal income tax in Italy
    • Jules Linden - The distributional impact of a €30 per ton of CO2 tax across six EU countries
    • Stefan Nabernegg - Balancing distributional equity and public budget constraints in the fossil fuel phase-out
    • Magnus Piirits - Simulation of progressivity of health care financing in Estonia – application of EUROMOD
    • Silvia Rocha-Akis - Redistribution by the state in Austria
    • Elise Aerts - The Impact of Universal Basic Income on Labour Supply: Measuring Financial Work Incentives at the Intensive and the Extensive Margin
    • Ana Agundez Garcia - The impact of alternative childcare policies on mothers’ employment for selected EU countries
    • Tjasa Bartolj - SI-MSM-LM: Slovenian microsimulation model of labor market
    • Maximilian Blömer - Recent Trends in Labour Supply Elasticities in Germany
    • Judith Herrmann - Income Tax Reforms as a Driver for Female Labor Supply?
    • Nizamul Islam - Universal basic income and the condition of not having a wealthy partner
    • Mara Rebaudo - Willingness to Care - Financial Incentives and Caregiving Decisions
    • David Sonnewald - Marginal Personal Income Tax Changes: Tax Revenues, Redistribution and Labour Supply Responses
    • Viktor Steiner - Microsimulation of a new Basic Income Scheme for Austria
    • Sine Tuc - The Impact of Social Policy on Female Labor Supply in Turkey
    • Stijn Van Houtven - Green Tax Reform: Labour supply impact of increased prices and revenue recycling.
    • Trine E. Vattø - Predicting behavioral effects of tax policy by external evidence
    • Kwabena Adu-Ababio - Microsimulation Approaches To Studying Shocks And Social Protection In Selected Developing Economies
    • Fabian Böhme - Effects of the German tax-benefit system on labour force participation of unemployed welfare benefit recipients
    • Lilly Fischer - How do political parties assess coalition agreements? An empirical evaluation of the German multiparty system
    • Marko Ledic - Tax-benefit revealed social preferences in Croatia
    • Philippe Liégeois - Dealing with Cross-borders in a Tax-benefit Model for Luxembourg
    • Manuel Pannier - Politically Feasible or Benefiting the Few? German Political Parties’ Tax Reform Proposals since 1987
    • Pierre Poulon - A statistical matching method based on the Random Forest algorithm – an application to the micro-simulation of health expenditures
    • Thor O. Thoresen - Evaluation of welfare effect of tax reform by compensating variation consistent with fairness
    • Melchior Vella - Analysis of benefit take-up using UKHLS and UKMOD
    • Gerlinde Verbist - The Drivers of Income Inequality in Belgium: 1985-2021
    • Tanja Kirn - SwissMod – a new tax-benefit model for Switzerland
    • Zuzana Siebertova - TATRASK: the microsimulation model for Slovakia based on administrative data
    • Raffael Speitmann - Corporate Tax Microsimulation for the EU
    • Graham Stark - Modelling Public Acceptability of Tax and Benefit Changes
    • Jussi Tervola - Examining alternatives to Finnish social security system
    • Eva Depenbrock - Selective out-migration and the labor market integration of immigrants: what can dynamic microsimulations contribute to explain origin-specific differences?
    • Gabriel Gomes - The importance of economic migration in long-term population projections : the case of Luxembourg
    • Xinyi Kou - Estimating international bilateral migrations: an agent-based model approach
    • Stefan Leknes - Moving beyond expectations: from cohort-component to microsimulation projections
    • Ingrid Schockaert - Bridging the backlog: the use of National Register data for monitoring the Ukrainian displaced persons in Flanders
    • Thomas Horvath - How can closing gaps in labor force participation at the intersection between race/ethnicity and gender mitigate population ageing in the United States?
    • Thomas Horvath - Projecting changes in the size and composition of the Austrian labor force based on the dynamic microsimulation model microDEMS
    • Tomas Miklosovic - Forecast of labor force replacement on the Slovak labor market
    • Matteo Richiardi - The Effects of Digital Transformation on Employment, Wages, Poverty and Inequality: A Microsimulation Study
    • Jean Rubin - Labor Force Projections in France by 2080
    • Leonardo Calcagno - A microsimulation model for social security in Argentina (MISSAR): pension projecting in a high inflation framework
    • Fabrizio Culotta - AGIT: a microsimulation model for health and pension policies in an ageing Italy
    • Yann Decarie - A New Canadian Retirement Income Microsimulation Model
    • Stuart Grant - Developing long-term pensioner microsimulation modelling in Great Britain
    • Romain Guirriec - Trajectoire: an empirical micro-simulated French pension system model
    • Elin Halvorsen - Pensions and wealth inequality
    • Tanja Kirn - Exploring redistributive elements of the Swiss Pension system: An unconditional quantile treatment analysis
    • Nataša Kump - DYPENSI – Dynamic Pension Microsimulation Model for Slovenia: Overview, Model Architecture and Recent Policy Implications of Model Use
    • Rui Nicola - The complex nature of pension adequacy: some insights from dynamic microsimulation for Portugal
    • Rui Nicola - Could we move forward to a dynamic microsimulation modelling setting following the footsteps of EUROMOD?
    • Miroslav Štefánik - Modelling the disability insurance claims in Slovakia
    • Heikki Tikanmäki - Higher education compensating for low fertility – A microsimulation approach
    • Karel van den Bosch - Dynamic microsimulation of income inequality and poverty risk for government
    • Miquel Bassart i Loré - Exploring Public Policies and Institutional Settings to Enhance Efficiency in Electric Markets: An Agent-based Analysis
    • Debmallya Chanda - Understanding Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) adoption through the lens of ABM
    • Bence Mérő - Size Does Matter – The Optimal Choice of Scaling in Economic Agent-Based Models
    • Asjad Naqvi - The spatial-temporal distribution of exposure to traffic-related Particulate Matter emissions in Vienna
    • Luca Riccetti - The relevance for market exchanges of local interaction, heterogeneity and model scale
    • Zhongli Wang - Heterogeneous Consumers and the Data Value Chain: An Agent-based Approach
    • Sarah Bohnensteffen - Analysing future regional housing demand using dynamic microsimulation
    • Morgane Dumont - A dynamic microsimulation model of individuals grouped into households for health projections purposes (for Belgium).
    • Julian Ernst - Below city-level population projections using microsimulations
    • Ulf Friedrich - Improving the household-dwelling allocation in a dynamic microsimulation model
    • Sturla Løkken - Flexible empirical Bayes estimation of local fertility schedules: reducing small area problems and preserving regional variation
    • Luke Archer - Projecting the impact of policy on income and wellbeing
    • Christoph Frohn - Dynamic Microsimulation of the interplay between Physical and Mental Health based on Autoregressive Latent Trajectory Models with Structured Residuals
    • Angelina Hammon - Exploring meta modeling techniques for the simulation of school transitions in Germany
    • Alison Heppenstall - Challenges of using microsimulation for simulating the impact of interventions on populations
    • Dave Pankhurst - Using ‘MultiStream’ to Control Uncertainty to Model Changes
    • Dave Pankhurst - The use of Gaussian process emulators for improving the performance of benefit forecasting models
    • Agnieszka Werpachowska - Applicability of Neural Networks in Microsimulations: A Case Study on Fertility Analysis
    • Alhassane Camara - Global Fertilizer Price Increase, Agricultural Market Participation, and Income Distribution
    • Michiel van Dijk - Long-run subnational projections of income and poverty for Ethiopia: A CGE-spatial microsimulation approach
    • François Legendre - MSL, a library written in C++ and dedicated to microsimulation models
    • Graham Stark - Julia for Microsimulation
    • Matthew Warkentin - R and OpenM++ for Microsimulation
    • Sabine Zinn - A generic microsimulation for modelling and projecting family structure and intergenerational relationships
    • Deirdre Hennessy - Panel Discussion: International perspectives on building and training microsimulation teams
    • Philippe Liégeois - “e-SearchM”, an e-Collaborative Resource Platform for Microsimulation
    • Simon Combes - Vaccine against flu, would mRNA vaccines benefit from a premium price
    • Deirdre Hennessy - Modelling dementia in populations: An important task with challenges
    • Douglas Manuel - New reporting guidelines for population health modelling studies for non-communicable diseases
    • Chris Schilling - An Australian microsimulation model of osteoarthritis
    • Jean Hai Ein Yong - OncoSim – a free cancer simulation tool to advance cancer control
    • Morgane Dumont - Creating a European microsimulation to assess the effects of socio-economic policies on health and health inequalities : challenges, solutions and limitations.
    • Srinivasa Vittal Katikireddi - Short-term impacts of Universal Basic Income on population mental health inequalities in the UK: A microsimulation modelling study
    • Daniel Kopasker - The effects of taxation and social security policies on psychological distress: a microsimulation study of UK policy responses to COVID-19
    • Evelyn Lee - Improving children’s life chances
    • Nik Lomax - Simulating the effects of income and housing policies on Quality Adjusted Life Expectancy
    • Adriana Castelo Taboada - The effects of familial intellectual disability on labour force participation and family income in Australia
    • Timothy Coker - Modelling the epidemiological and economic impacts of air pollution reduction in the English metropolitan borough of Sandwell
    • Joshua Kraindler - A microsimulation model to estimate the quality of life and cost of inherited retinal diseases
    • Joshua Kraindler - Quality of life for carers and spouses of those with familial intellectual disability
    • Evelyn Lee - Economic evaluation of population-based, expanded reproductive carrier screening for genetic diseases in Australia
    • Thomas Leoni - The impact of ageing, inequality and the evolution of morbidity on future health expenditure
    • Michele Bavaro - Simulating long run wealth distribution and transmission: The role of inter-generational transfers
    • Cathal O’Donoghue - Historical Microsimulation: Farm Incomes and the Income Distribution 1955-2017
    • Matteo Richiardi - Attenuation and reinforcement mechanisms of income and health inequalities
    • Johannes Gussenbauer - How to generate a synthetic population as input for microsimulation
    • Magdalena Muszynska-Spielauer - Cross-sectional estimates of population health from the Survey of Health and Retirement in Europe (SHARE) are biased due to health-related sample attrition
    • Martin Palm - Measuring statistical disclosure risks in synthetic data
    • Robert Tanton - Using a synthetic population to model access to health services and facilities in Australia
    • Kashif Zia - Towards Reproducible Open SIPHER’s Synthetic Population
    • Naveed Akhtar - Simulating individual and household responses to natural disasters and extreme weather events
    • Anthony Daykin - Modelling the future development of the choice of mode of transportation for everyday travel
    • Georg P. Mueller - The Impact of Social Homophily on the Virtual Encounter Simulation of Value Conflicts
    • Robert Tanton - IMA General Assembly
  • Book of Abstracts
  • Contact
IMA 2024
  • Program
  • Magdalena Muszynska-Spielauer - Cross-sectional estimates of population health from the Survey of Health and Retirement in Europe (SHARE) are biased due to health-related sample attrition
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Magdalena Muszynska-Spielauer - Cross-sectional estimates of population health from the Survey of Health and Retirement in Europe (SHARE) are biased due to health-related sample attrition

  • Presenting author: Magdalena Muszynska-Spielauer (Vienna Institute of Demography, ÖAW)

  • Authors: Magdalena Muszynska-Spielauer, Martin Spielauer

  • Topic: Missing data replacement with microsimulation

Cross-sectional data from the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe (SHARE) are a common source of information in comparative studies of population health in Europe. In the largest part, these data are based on longitudinal samples, which are subject to health-specific attrition. This implies that estimates of population health based on cross-sectional SHARE datasets are biased as the data are selected on the outcome variable of interest. We examine whether cross-sectional datasets are selected based on health status. We compare estimates of the prevalence of full health, healthy life years at age 50 (HLY), and rankings of 18 European countries by HLY based on the observed, cross-sectional SHARE wave 7 datasets and full samples. The full samples consist of SHARE observed and attrited respondents, whose health trajectories are imputed by microsimulation. Health status is operationalized across the global index of limitations in activities of daily living (GALI). HLY stands for life expectancy free of activity limitations. Cross-sectional datasets are selected based on health status, as health limitations increase the odds of attrition from the panel in older age groups and reduce them in younger ones. In older age groups, the prevalence of full health is higher in the observed cross-sectional data than in the full sample in most countries. In most countries, HLY is overestimated based on the cross-sectional data, and in some countries, the opposite effect is observed. While, due to the small sample sizes of national surveys, the confidence intervals are large, the direction of the effect is persistent across countries. We also observe shifts in the ranking of countries according to HLYs of the observed data versus the HLYs of the full sample. We conclude that estimates on population health based on cross-sectional datasets from longitudinal, attrited SHARE samples are over-optimistic.

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