Lundborg Petter
Lund University Centre for Health Economics (LUCHE), P.O. Box 705, 220 07 Lund, Sweden.
J Health Econ. 2006 Mar;25(2):214-33. doi: 10.1016/j.jhealeco.2005.02.001. Epub 2005 Jun 16.
Swedish cross-sectional survey data on young individuals aged 12-18-year-old was used to analyse school-class based peer effects in binge drinking, smoking and illicit-drug use. Significant and positive peer effects were found for all three activities. By introducing school/grade fixed effects, the estimated peer effects were identified by variation in peer behaviour across school-classes within schools and grades, implying that estimates were not biased due to endogenous sorting of students across schools. Further, endogeneity bias due to bi-directionality of peer effects was found for binge drinking and smoking. Controlling for this source of endogeneity resulted in even stronger peer effects.
瑞典针对12至18岁青少年的横断面调查数据被用于分析以班级为单位的同龄人对酗酒、吸烟和非法药物使用的影响。研究发现,同龄人对这三种行为均有显著的正向影响。通过引入学校/年级固定效应,同龄人影响的估计值是由学校和年级内不同班级间同龄人的行为差异确定的,这意味着估计值不会因学生跨学校的内生性分类而产生偏差。此外,研究发现酗酒和吸烟存在同龄人影响双向性导致的内生性偏差。控制这一内生性来源后,同龄人影响甚至更强。