NBER Publications by David Schkade
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Working Papers and Chapters
| October 2009 | National Time Accounting: The Currency of Life
with Alan B. Krueger, Daniel Kahneman, Norbert Schwarz, Arthur A. Stone
in Measuring the Subjective Well-Being of Nations: National Accounts of Time Use and Well-Being, Alan B. Krueger, editor
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| Rejoinder
with Alan B. Krueger, Daniel Kahneman, Norbert Schwarz, Arthur A. Stone
in Measuring the Subjective Well-Being of Nations: National Accounts of Time Use and Well-Being, Alan B. Krueger, editor
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| April 2007 | The Reliability of Subjective Well-Being Measures
with Alan B. Krueger: w13027
This paper studies the test-retest reliability of a standard self-reported life satisfaction measure and of affect measures collected from a diary method. The sample consists of 229 women who were interviewed on Thursdays, two weeks apart, in Spring 2005. The correlation of net affect (i.e., duration-weighted positive feelings less negative feelings) measured two weeks apart is 0.64, which is slightly higher than the correlation of life satisfaction (r=0.59). Correlations between income, net affect and life satisfaction are presented, and adjusted for attenuation bias due to measurement error. Life satisfaction is found to correlate much more strongly with income than does net affect. Components of affect that are more person-specific are found to have a higher test-retest reliability... |
| Sorting in the Labor Market: Do Gregarious Workers Flock to Interactive Jobs?
with Alan B. Krueger: w13032
This paper tests a central implication of the theory of equalizing differences, that workers sort into jobs with different attributes based on their preferences for those attributes. We present evidence from four new time-use data sets for the United States and France on whether workers who are more gregarious, as revealed by their behavior when they are not working, tend to be employed in jobs that involve more social interactions. In each data set we find a significant and sizable relationship between the tendency to interact with others off the job and while working. People's descriptions of their jobs and their personalities also accord reasonably well with their time use on and off the job. Furthermore, workers in occupations that require social interactions according to the O'Net ... |
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