Sample attrition is an inherent challenge faced by longitudinal household surveys. Attrition in household surveys can occur as a result of migration, respondents’ refusal to participate, as well as death. In countries where mobility is high, research findings suggest that longitudinal household surveys should seriously consider tracking respondents who move, particularly those who move outside the baseline locality.
Details
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Author
Witoelar,Firman
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Document Date
2015/12/31
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Document Type
Brief
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Report Number
147752
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Volume No
1
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Total Volume(s)
1
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Country
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Region
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Disclosure Date
2020/04/17
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Disclosure Status
Disclosed
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Doc Name
Tracking in Panel Household Surveys
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Keywords
longitudinal household survey; living standard measurement; Computer-Assisted Personal Interviewing; baseline survey; longitudinal survey; unobserved characteristic; financial cost; household and individual; collection of information; sole responsibility; recent studies; attrition rates; innovative technologies; constrained environment; survey methods; phone number; panel data; informed consent; return migrant
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Citation
Witoelar,Firman
Tracking in Panel Household Surveys (English). LSMS Integrated Surveys on Agriculture Washington, D.C. : World Bank Group. http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/979901587135664962/Tracking-in-Panel-Household-Surveys