11 Results

Panel Data Social Development

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  • Dataset

    By Department of Research and Chief Economist (VPS/RES/RES)
    This database for Revelation of Expectations in Latin America (REVELA) was updated to March 2009. It includes data on inflation, growth, fiscal deficit, interest rate and other variables for each country in Latin America and the Caribbean from 2006 to 2010.
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  • Dataset

    By Social Sector (VPS/SCL/SCL)
    This dataset contains statistics on a wide range of key indicators related to the living conditions of the population in Latin America and the Caribbean, organized by life cycle. This information is based on microdata from the Harmonized Household Surveys of 22 countries in the region and covers the period from 1999 to 2016.
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  • Dataset

    By Social Protection and Labor Markets Division (VPS/SCL/SPL)
    The Longitudinal Social Protection Survey harmonized database contains individual information from Chile, Colombia, El Salvador, Paraguay and Uruguay. It has 320 variables, and 120 of them can be compared in all countries.
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  • Dataset

    By Department of Research and Chief Economist (VPS/RES/RES)
    Data and code associated with the IDB Publication "Grandmothers and the Gender Gap in the Mexican Labor Market". ENESS data is available for 2009, 2013, and 2017. As an accompanying module of the ENOE, it covers all the households covered by the ENOE for two out of the three months in the quarter. Hence, the ENESS covers roughly two-thirds of the ENOE sample for the quarter. The ENESS data includes responses from 209,266 households. These households use public and private daycare providers for 3,991 and 1,177 children under seven years old.
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  • Dataset

    By Health, Nutrition and Population Division (VPS/SCL/HNP)
    Very few developing countries have long-term longitudinal surveys that have followed children from the early years throughout their adult life, with low attrition rates and large sample sizes. This type of survey is essential to understand what are critical times in the life cycle when gaps in different dimensions of human capital emerge and how they evolve over time and affect later outcomes. The Ecuador longitudinal survey started in 2003 and has had 5 subsequent follow-ups: 2005, 2008, 2011, 2014, and 2019. This data set contains the first five of them. A large number of papers has been written using this data (Paxson and Schady 2007; Paxson and Schady 2010 ; Schady 2006; Fernald and Hidrobo 2011 ; Schady 2011 ; Schady 2012; Schady, Behrman et al. 2015; Berlinsky and Schady, 2015; Araujo, Bosch, Maldonado and Schady 2017; Araujo, Bosch and Schady 2016, and others). All rounds of the survey administered tests to measure different areas of child development (cognition, language,...
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