Call Me Maybe: Experimental Evidence on Using Mobile Phones to Survey Microenterprises

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Garlick, RJ

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Orkin, K

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Quinn, S

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2016-12-07T15:51:31Z

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2016-12-07T15:51:31Z

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2016-07-27

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High-frequency data is useful to measure volatility, reduce recall bias, and measure dynamic treatment effects. We conduct the first experimental evaluation of high-frequency phone surveys in a developing country or with microenterprises. We randomly assign microenterprise owners to monthly in-person, weekly in-person, or weekly phone interviews. We find high-frequency phone surveys are useful and accurate. Phone and in-person surveys yield similar measurements, with few large or significant differences in reported outcome means or distributions. Neither interview frequency nor medium affects reported outcomes in a common in-person endline. Phone surveys reduce costs without increasing permanent attrition from the panel.

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49 pages

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/13250

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Economic Research Initiatives at Duke (ERID)

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Call Me Maybe: Experimental Evidence on Using Mobile Phones to Survey Microenterprises

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Journal article

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224

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Duke

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Duke Population Research Center

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Duke Population Research Institute

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Economics

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Sanford School of Public Policy

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Trinity College of Arts & Sciences

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