Does the Effect of Incentives on Survey Response Rates Differ by Income Support History?

Juan D. Baron, Robert V. Breunig, D. Cobb-Clark, Tue Gørgens, A. Sartbayeva
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

This paper asks which sub-groups of the population are affected by the payment of a small cash incentive to respond to a telephone survey. We find that an incentive improves response rates primarily amongst those individuals with the longest history of income support receipt. Importantly, these individuals are least likely to respond to the survey in the absence of an incentive. The incentive thus improves both average response rates and acts to equalize response rates across different socio-economic groups, potentially reducing non-response bias. Interestingly, the main channel through which the incentive appears to increase response rates is in improving the probability of making contact with individuals in the group with heavy exposure to the income support system.
激励对调查回复率的影响是否因收入支持历史而异?
这篇论文询问了人口中的哪些子群体会受到支付小额现金激励来回应电话调查的影响。我们发现,激励措施主要提高了那些收入支持收据历史最长的个人的回复率。重要的是,在缺乏激励的情况下,这些人最不可能对调查做出回应。因此,激励措施既提高了平均回复率,又使不同社会经济群体的回复率趋于平衡,从而潜在地减少了无反应偏见。有趣的是,增加回复率的主要途径似乎是提高与收入支持系统中大量接触的群体中的个人接触的可能性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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