De facto anonymised microdata file on income tax statistics 1998

Research output: Working paperWorking papers

Standard

De facto anonymised microdata file on income tax statistics 1998. / Merz, Joachim; Vorgrimler, Daniel; Zwick, Markus.
Lüneburg: Forschungsinstitut Freie Berufe, 2006. (Diskussionspapier; No. 58).

Research output: Working paperWorking papers

Harvard

Merz, J, Vorgrimler, D & Zwick, M 2006 'De facto anonymised microdata file on income tax statistics 1998' Diskussionspapier, no. 58, Forschungsinstitut Freie Berufe, Lüneburg.

APA

Merz, J., Vorgrimler, D., & Zwick, M. (2006). De facto anonymised microdata file on income tax statistics 1998. (Diskussionspapier; No. 58). Forschungsinstitut Freie Berufe.

Vancouver

Merz J, Vorgrimler D, Zwick M. De facto anonymised microdata file on income tax statistics 1998. Lüneburg: Forschungsinstitut Freie Berufe. 2006. (Diskussionspapier; 58).

Bibtex

@techreport{5895549cc65145579453005107c18a51,
title = "De facto anonymised microdata file on income tax statistics 1998",
abstract = "With the data of the de facto anonymised Income Tax Statistics 1998 (FAST 98), the German official statistics are for the first time publishing microdata from the field of fiscal statistics. The scientific community can use these data to analyse politically-relevant questions on the fiscal and transfer system at their own workplace, subject to the premises of article 16 subsection 6 of the Law on Statistics for Federal Purposes, on the basis of {"}real{"} assessment data. Passing on individual data to the scientific community is only possible in a de facto anonymised form. This form may impair possibilities for scientific analysis possibilities. So that anonymised data can nevertheless be used by the scientific community, anonymisation must meet two equal challenges: It must firstly guarantee adequate protection of theindividual items of data, and secondly it must optimally conserve the possibilities for analysis of the anonymised data. In order to achieve the right balance between these two goals, the Statistical Offices have involved potential scientific users in the anonymisation work in a research project.In the article entitled {"}De facto anonymised microdata file on income tax statistics 1998{"}, in addition to the anonymisation concept the framework conditions of the project are explained and the analysis possibilities of income tax statistics demonstrated. ",
keywords = "Economics, microdata, de facto anonymization, income tax statistic, Gender and Diversity",
author = "Joachim Merz and Daniel Vorgrimler and Markus Zwick",
note = "Zsfassung in dt. Sprache",
year = "2006",
language = "English",
series = "Diskussionspapier",
publisher = "Forschungsinstitut Freie Berufe",
number = "58",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "Forschungsinstitut Freie Berufe",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - De facto anonymised microdata file on income tax statistics 1998

AU - Merz, Joachim

AU - Vorgrimler, Daniel

AU - Zwick, Markus

N1 - Zsfassung in dt. Sprache

PY - 2006

Y1 - 2006

N2 - With the data of the de facto anonymised Income Tax Statistics 1998 (FAST 98), the German official statistics are for the first time publishing microdata from the field of fiscal statistics. The scientific community can use these data to analyse politically-relevant questions on the fiscal and transfer system at their own workplace, subject to the premises of article 16 subsection 6 of the Law on Statistics for Federal Purposes, on the basis of "real" assessment data. Passing on individual data to the scientific community is only possible in a de facto anonymised form. This form may impair possibilities for scientific analysis possibilities. So that anonymised data can nevertheless be used by the scientific community, anonymisation must meet two equal challenges: It must firstly guarantee adequate protection of theindividual items of data, and secondly it must optimally conserve the possibilities for analysis of the anonymised data. In order to achieve the right balance between these two goals, the Statistical Offices have involved potential scientific users in the anonymisation work in a research project.In the article entitled "De facto anonymised microdata file on income tax statistics 1998", in addition to the anonymisation concept the framework conditions of the project are explained and the analysis possibilities of income tax statistics demonstrated.

AB - With the data of the de facto anonymised Income Tax Statistics 1998 (FAST 98), the German official statistics are for the first time publishing microdata from the field of fiscal statistics. The scientific community can use these data to analyse politically-relevant questions on the fiscal and transfer system at their own workplace, subject to the premises of article 16 subsection 6 of the Law on Statistics for Federal Purposes, on the basis of "real" assessment data. Passing on individual data to the scientific community is only possible in a de facto anonymised form. This form may impair possibilities for scientific analysis possibilities. So that anonymised data can nevertheless be used by the scientific community, anonymisation must meet two equal challenges: It must firstly guarantee adequate protection of theindividual items of data, and secondly it must optimally conserve the possibilities for analysis of the anonymised data. In order to achieve the right balance between these two goals, the Statistical Offices have involved potential scientific users in the anonymisation work in a research project.In the article entitled "De facto anonymised microdata file on income tax statistics 1998", in addition to the anonymisation concept the framework conditions of the project are explained and the analysis possibilities of income tax statistics demonstrated.

KW - Economics

KW - microdata

KW - de facto anonymization

KW - income tax statistic

KW - Gender and Diversity

M3 - Working papers

T3 - Diskussionspapier

BT - De facto anonymised microdata file on income tax statistics 1998

PB - Forschungsinstitut Freie Berufe

CY - Lüneburg

ER -

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