The Analysis of Household Surveys
—A Microeconometric Approach to Development Policy
469页 3.56M pdf
Angus Deaton
Published for the World Bank: The Johns Hopkins University Press Baltimore and London
Contents
Introduction link
Purpose and intended audience link
Policy and data: methodological issues link
Structure and outline link
1. The design and content of household surveys link
1.1
Survey design
link
Survey frames and coverage link
Strata and clusters link
Unequal selection probabilities, weights, and inflation factors link
Sample design in theory and practice link
Panel data link
1.2
The content and quality of survey data
link
Individuals and households link
Reporting periods link
Measuring consumption link
Measuring income link
1.3 The Living Standards Surveys link
A brief history link
Design features of LSMS surveys link
What have we learned? link
1.4
Descriptive statistics from survey data
link
Finite populations and superpopulations link
The sampling variance of the mean link
Using weights and inflation factors link
Sampling variation of probability−weighted estimators link
Stratification link
Two−stage sampling and clusters link
A superpopulation approach to clustering link