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Navarro Ruiz, Carolina

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0000-0003-4052-4098
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Navarro Ruiz
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Carolina
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Mostrando 1 - 2 de 2
  • Publicación
    Has the Great Recession Changed the Deprivation Profile of Low Income Groups? Evidence from Spain
    (Instituto de Estudios Fiscales, 2016) Goig Martínez, Rosa María; Navarro Ruiz, Carolina
    This paper analyses how the economic crisis has modified the relationship between income and material deprivation in Spain, one of the European countries most affected by the crisis. We show that the degree of overlap between low income and material deprivation has increased by around 50% from 2008 to 2012, even despite the offsetting effect of the reduction in the (relative) income poverty threshold. We demonstrate that the Great Recession has produced a significant recomposition of the poverty profile in Spain. Our findings underline the increasing role played by long-term unemployment and by differences in tenure status of households in predicting this overlap, four years after the bursting of the property bubble.
  • Publicación
    Cross-country income mobility comparisons under panel attrition: the relevance of weighting schemes
    (Routledge. Taylor & Francis Group, 2011) Sastre, Mercedes; Ayala Cañón, Luis; Navarro Ruiz, Carolina
    This article aims to present an assessment of the effects of panel attrition on income mobility comparisons for some EU-countries by using the European Community Household Panel (ECHP). There are different possibilities of correcting the attrition problem by means of alternative longitudinal weighting schemes. The sensitivity of mobility estimates to these attrition correction procedures is tested in the paper. Our results show that ECHP attrition is characterised by a certain degree of selectivity but only affecting some variables and countries. Different probability models corroborate the existence of a certain non-random attrition. The model chosen to construct the longitudinal weights to correct attrition offers up rather different results than those obtained when Eurostat’s longitudinal weights are used. Although attrition does not seem to have a great effect on aggregated mobility indicators, it does have a decisive effect on decomposition exercises. Our tests reveal certain sensitivity of income mobility measures to the weighting system used.