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Calculating Comparable Statistics from Incomparable Surveys, with an Application to Poverty in India

dc.contributor.author Tarozzi, Alessandro
dc.date.accessioned 2010-03-09T15:28:10Z
dc.date.available 2010-03-09T15:28:10Z
dc.date.issued 2006
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/10161/1888
dc.description.abstract Applied economists are often interested in studying trends in important economic indicators, such as inequality or poverty, but comparisons over time can be made impossible by changes in data collection methodology. We describe an easily implemented procedure, based on inverse probability weighting, that allows to recover comparability of estimated parameters identified implicitly by a moment condition. The validity of the procedure requires the existence of a set of auxiliary variables whose reports are not affected by the different survey design, and whose relation with the main variable of interest is stable over time. We analyze the asymptotic properties of the estimator taking into account the presence of clustering, stratification and sampling weights which characterize most household surveys. The main empirical motivation of the paper is provided by a recent controversy on the extent of poverty reduction in India in the 1990s. Due to important changes in the expenditure questionnaire adopted for data collection in the 1999-2000 round of the Indian National Sample Survey, the resulting poverty numbers are likely to understate poverty relative to the previous rounds. We use previous waves of the same survey to provide evidence supporting the plausibility of the identifying assumptions and conclude that most, but not all, of the very large reduction in poverty implied by the official figures appears to be real, and not a statistical artifact.
dc.format.extent 498891 bytes
dc.format.mimetype application/pdf
dc.language.iso en_US
dc.publisher Journal of Business and Economic Statistics
dc.subject India
dc.subject Inequality
dc.subject Survey Methods
dc.subject method of moments
dc.subject poverty
dc.title Calculating Comparable Statistics from Incomparable Surveys, with an Application to Poverty in India
dc.type Journal article


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