cover image: Frontiers in Small Area Estimation Research: Application to Welfare Indicators (English)

20.500.12592/hqbzsp8

Frontiers in Small Area Estimation Research: Application to Welfare Indicators (English)

26 Jun 2024

This paper reviews the main methods for small area estimation of welfare indicators. It begins by discussing the importance of small area estimation methods for producing reliable disaggregated estimates. It mentions the baseline papers and describes the contents of the different sections. Basic direct estimators obtained from area-specific survey data are described first, followed by simple indirect methods, which include synthetic procedures that do not account for the area effects and composite estimators obtained as a composition (or weighted average) of a synthetic and a direct estimator. The previous estimators are design-based, meaning that their properties are assessed under the sampling replication mechanism, without assuming any model to be true. The paper then turns to proper model-based estimators that assume an explicit model. These models allow obtaining optimal small area estimators when the assumed model holds. The first type of models, referred to as area-level models, use only aggregated data at the area level to fit the model. However, unit-level survey data were previously used to calculate the direct estimators, which act as response variables in the most common area-level models. The paper then switches to unit-level models, describing first the usual estimators for area means, and then moving to general area indicators. Semi-parametric, non-parametric, and machine learning procedures are described in a separate section, although many of the procedures are applicable only to area means. Based on the previous material, the paper identifies gaps or potential limitations in existing procedures from a practitioner's perspective, which could potentially be addressed through research over the next three to five years.
poverty income inequality other world statistical surveys spatial inequality central government central agencies

Authors

Peralta,Isabel Molina

DOI
https://dx.doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1596/1813-9450-10828
Disclosure Date
2024/06/26
Disclosure Status
Disclosed
Doc Name
Frontiers in Small Area Estimation Research: Application to Welfare Indicators
Originating Unit
Off of Sr VP Dev Econ/Chief Econ (DECVP)
Product Line
Advisory Services & Analytics
Published in
United States of America
Rel Proj ID
1W-Gsg1 Data For Policy Analysis (Iii) -- P179301
Sector
Central Government (Central Agencies)
Series Name
Policy Research working paper ; no. WPS 10828; PROSPERITY;
Theme
Inclusive Growth,Mitigation,Gender,Human Development and Gender,Data Development and Capacity Building,Economic Policy,Rural Development,Social Development and Protection,Economic Growth and Planning,Environment and Natural Resource Management,Disease Control,Pandemic Response,Fragility, Conflict and Violence,Public Sector Management,Climate change,Urban and Rural Development,Adaptation,Geospatial Services,Data production, accessibility and use
Unit Owning
EFI-Poverty and Equity-GE (EPVGE),EFI-AFR2-POV-Poverty and Equity (EAWPV)
Version Type
Final
Volume No
1

Table of Contents

Related Topics

All