R
Ross Finnie
Researcher at University of Ottawa
Publications - 168
Citations - 2187
Ross Finnie is an academic researcher from University of Ottawa. The author has contributed to research in topics: Earnings & Graduation. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 167 publications receiving 2114 citations. Previous affiliations of Ross Finnie include Statistics Canada & University of Windsor.
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Earning differences by major field of study: evidence from three cohorts of recent Canadian graduates
TL;DR: In this paper, the results of an empirical analysis of earnings differences by major field of study for three cohorts of recent Canadian Bachelor's level university (‘college’) graduates are reported.
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Poverty dynamics: empirical evidence for Canada
Ross Finnie,Arthur Sweetman +1 more
TL;DR: The authors explored the relationship between poverty transitions and sex, family status and other personal and situational attributes using tax filer data covering the period 1992 to 1996 and found that duration effects on exiting and re-entering poverty are important, and models including past poverty experiences point to strong occurrence dependence for poverty entry and incidence.
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Who moves? A logit model analysis of inter-provincial migration in Canada
TL;DR: In this article, the authors address the topic of inter-provincial migration in terms of the basic question: "Who moves?" and find that moving is inversely related to the home province's population size.
Posted Content
Who Goes? The Direct and Indirect Effects of Family Background on Access to Post-secondary Education
TL;DR: This paper found that family background (parental education level, family type, ethnicity, location) has important direct and indirect effects on post-secondary participation, and that the indirect effects of background operate through a set of intermediate variables representing high school outcomes and related attitudes and behaviours.
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Women, men, and the economic consequences of divorce: Evidence from Canadian longitudinal data
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present the results of an empirical investigation of the economic consequences of divorce using the recently developed Longitudinal Administrative Database (lad) constructed from Canadian tax files to track individuals leading up to, at the point of, and following marital breakup.