Mexican Women's Labor-Force Participation
MexicanLabor.RdData from the National Survey of Household Income and Expenditures for 1977, Secretaria de Programacion y Presupuesto, Mexico.
Usage
data("MexicanLabor")Format
A data frame containing 16 observations on 6 variables.
- total
integer. Number of women older than 12 years.
- laborforce
integer. Number of women in labor force.
- locality
factor with levels
"rural"/"urban".- age
factor with levels
"<= 24"and"> 24"(in years).- income
factor with levels
"low"/"high"(household income less or more than $2626.8).- schooling
factor with levels
"primary"(primary school or less) and"further"(more than primary school).
Details
The data were first analyzed by Guerrero and Johnson (1982) as an example of a highly asymmetric data set, i.e., the observed proportions are rather low.
Source
Guerrero V, Johnson R (1982). “Use of the Box-Cox Transformation with Binary Response Models.” Biometrika, 69, 309–314.
Examples
## data
data("MexicanLabor", package = "glmx")
## visualizations
plot(I(laborforce/total) ~ interaction(income, age), data = MexicanLabor)
plot(I(laborforce/total) ~ interaction(schooling, locality), data = MexicanLabor)
## simple logit model
m <- glm(cbind(laborforce, total - laborforce) ~ ., data = MexicanLabor, family = binomial)
m
#>
#> Call: glm(formula = cbind(laborforce, total - laborforce) ~ ., family = binomial,
#> data = MexicanLabor)
#>
#> Coefficients:
#> (Intercept) localityurban age> 24 incomehigh
#> -2.58575 0.38931 0.29212 -0.01521
#> schoolingfurther
#> 0.54814
#>
#> Degrees of Freedom: 15 Total (i.e. Null); 11 Residual
#> Null Deviance: 73.89
#> Residual Deviance: 15.96 AIC: 95.61