失而不忘:印度尼西亚家庭生活调查中的样本流失与追踪

Lost but Not Forgotten: Attrition and Follow-up in the Indonesia Family Life Survey

Journal of Human Resources · 2001
被引 205
人大 AABS 3

中文导读

基于印尼家庭生活调查数据,分析低收入国家大规模面板调查中的样本流失与追踪情况,发现追踪迁移者能有效降低流失率,且成本相对较低,对类似调查有参考价值。

Abstract

Data from three waves of the Indonesia Family Life Survey (IFLS) are used to examine follow-up and attrition in the context of a large scale panel survey conducted in a low income setting.Household-level attrition between the baseline and first follow-up four years later is 6%; the cumulative attrition between the baseline and second follow-up after a five year hiatus is 5%.Attrition is low in the IFLS because movers are followed: around 12% of households that were interviewed had moved from their location at baseline.About half of those households were "local movers."The other half, many of whom had moved to a new province, were interviewed during a second sweep through the study areas ("2 nd tracking").Regression analyses indicate that in terms of household-level characteristics at baseline, households interviewed during 2 nd tracking are very similar to those not interviewed in the follow-up surveys.Local movers are more similar to the households found in the baseline location in the follow-ups.The results suggest that the information content of households interviewed during 2 nd tracking is probably high.The costs of following those respondents is relatively modest in the IFLS.While the analytical value of re-interviewing movers will vary depending on the specifics of the research, we conclude that, in general, tracking movers is a worthwhile investment in longitudinal household surveys conducted in settings where communication infrastructure is limited.

印度尼西亚家庭生活调查追踪调查样本损耗移动家庭追踪