Hello Mr Nengroo, You use the term econometric therefore you must have monetary values included along with your categorical data. Can you create categories with the economic data such as extremely wealthy, very wealthy, moderately wealthy etc and then also create categories with your other data such as gender, and then do a chi squared analysis. Can you explain your question more fully ? Thankyou, Deborah
At the outset i am very thankful for your kind response. Madam i have dummy dependent variable (child labour) and my explanatory variables are Age,Gender, Education, Household Income, parental education, family size etc.
Hope your Good self will understand my question
I am sorry for late response as your reply was not visible in my profile because of some technical reasons.
Hello Aasif Nengroo, Thankyou for your reply and I'm sorry to take some time to reply. I am not sure whether you are interested in these, but I can access full text articles from the Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health and these are somewhat related in terms of the topic, while not directly so if you want me to send you the full text I would be delighted to assist. Some examples are below. Kind Regards,
Deborah Hilton Statistics Online
http://sites.google.com/site/deborahhilton/
Socio-economic differentials in the health-related quality of life of Australian children: results of a national study
Nicola J. Spurrier1,*,
Michael G. Sawyer2,
Jennifer J. Clark3,
Peter Baghurst4
Article first published online: 25 SEP 2007
The health of children in immigration detention: how does Australia compare?