journal article

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

by Gashaw Tadesse Abate,
Alan de Brauw,
Kalle Hirvonen and
Abdulazize Wolle
Open Access | CC BY-4.0
Citation
Abate, Gashaw Tadesse; de Brauw, Alan; Hirvonen, Kalle; and Wolle, Abdulazize. Measuring consumption over the phone: Evidence from a survey experiment in urban Ethiopia. Journal of Development Economics 161(March 2023): 103026. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jdeveco.2022.103026

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.