Partisanship and Survey Refusal

Mark Borgschulte, Heepyung Cho, Darren Lubotsky
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Abstract

Survey refusal in the Current Population Survey (CPS) has tripled over the last decade. This rise coincides with the emergence of rhetoric, largely from the political right, questioning the accuracy and integrity of government statistics. We examine how support for the Tea Party and the Republican party have affected CPS refusal rates and whether households are more likely to participate in the survey when their preferred political party holds the White House. Using state and metro vote shares or an individual-level model based on the longitudinal structure of the CPS, we find no evidence that Republican or Tea Party supporters drive the long-term upward trend in refusals. We do find evidence of a political cycle in response rates. Refusal rates since 2015 exhibit polarization, with the fastest growth in refusals among those least likely to support Trump and the Tea Party. Evidence from an analysis which generates exogenous variation in Tea Party support using rain on the day of the first Tea Party rally indicates that exposure to anti-survey rhetoric decreases refusal rates, consistent with the findings from our other analyses.
党派之争和拒绝调查
在过去十年中,当前人口调查(CPS)的调查拒绝率增加了两倍。与此同时,也出现了质疑政府统计数据准确性和完整性的言论,这些言论主要来自政治右翼。我们研究了对茶党和共和党的支持如何影响CPS拒签率,以及当他们喜欢的政党入主白宫时,家庭是否更有可能参与调查。使用州和地铁投票份额或基于CPS纵向结构的个人层面模型,我们发现没有证据表明共和党或茶党支持者推动了拒绝的长期上升趋势。我们确实在回应率中发现了政治周期的证据。自2015年以来,拒签率呈现两极分化,拒签率增长最快的是那些最不可能支持特朗普和茶党(Tea Party)的人。利用第一次茶党集会当天的降雨对茶党支持率产生外生变化的分析证据表明,接触反调查言论会降低拒绝率,这与我们其他分析的结果一致。
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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