Litcius/Paper detail

Measuring consumption over the phone: Evidence from a survey experiment in urban Ethiopia

Gashaw Tadesse Abate, Alan de Brauw, Kalle Hirvonen, Abdulazize Wolle

2022Journal of Development Economics33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The paucity of reliable, timely household consumption data in many low- and middle-income countries have made it difficult to assess how global poverty has evolved during the COVID-19 pandemic. Standard poverty measurement requires collecting household consumption data, which is rarely collected by phone. To test the feasibility of collecting consumption data over the phone, we conducted a survey experiment in urban Ethiopia, randomly assigning households to either phone or in-person interviews. In the phone survey, average per capita consumption is 23 percent lower and the estimated poverty headcount is twice as high than in the in-person survey. We observe evidence of survey fatigue occurring early in phone interviews but not in in-person interviews; the bias is correlated with household characteristics. While the phone survey mode provides comparable estimates when measuring diet-based food security, it is not amenable to measuring consumption using the 'best practice' approach originally devised for in-person surveys.

Topics & Concepts

PhoneConsumption (sociology)PovertyPer capitaSurvey data collectionSurvey methodologyHousehold incomeBusinessSocioeconomicsDemographic economicsEconomicsGeographyEconomic growthEnvironmental healthStatisticsMedicineSociologyLinguisticsPopulationSocial sciencePhilosophyArchaeologyMathematicsCOVID-19 epidemiological studiesCOVID-19 Pandemic ImpactsUrban, Neighborhood, and Segregation Studies