Dynamic Models of Transitions in the Indonesian Labour and Marriage Markets
Project's Details
Title: Dynamic Models of Transitions in the Indonesian Labour and Marriage Markets
PI: Professor Wei-Jun Jean Yeung, Provost's Chair Professor, Department of Sociology; and Founding Director of CFPR, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, NUS; and Asia Research Institute's Research Leader of Changing Family in Asia Cluster, NUS
Co-PI: Associate Professor Jussi Keppo, Dean's Chair and Research Director of Institute of Operations Research and Analytics, NUS Business School
International Collaborators: Professor John Ham, Global Network Professor of Economics, NYU Wagner and Professor of Economics, NYU Abu Dhabi; Professor John Strauss, Department of Economics and Davis School of Gerontology, University of Southern California; and Dr Firman Witoelar, Director of Research, SurveyMeter
Amount: S$652,237
Completed: 31 August 2020
Abstract
This project will estimate dynamic models of the labour and marriage markets for Indonesia. Using the Indonesian Family Life Survey (IFLS), the study proposes to estimate empirical models describing:
1) transitions between employment in the formal and informal sectors;
2) transitions between being married and not being married;
3) transitions into retirement; and,
4) transitions between living in one’s own home town and another area.
Project's Team
Principal Investigator
Professor Jean Yeung Wei-Jun
Provost's Chair Professor of Sociology, Founding Director of CFPR, Research Leader of the Changing Family in Asia cluster in the Asia Research Institute
National University of Singapore
Co-Principal Investigator
Associate Professor and Dean's Chair
Research Director, Institute of Operations Research and Analytics, Business School
National University of Singapore
Collaborator
Professor John Ham
New York University, Abu Dhabi
Collaborator
Professor John Strauss
School of Gerontology
University of Southern California
Collaborator
Dr. Firman Witoelar
College of Asia & the Pacific
Australian National University