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Design of the Millennium Villages Project Sampling Plan: a simulation study for a multi-module survey

Authors :
Mitchell, Shira
Ross, Rebecca
Makela, Susanna
Stuart, Elizabeth A.
Feller, Avi
Zaslavsky, Alan M.
Gelman, Andrew
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

The Millennium Villages Project (MVP) is a ten-year integrated rural development project implemented in ten sub-Saharan African sites. At its conclusion we will conduct an evaluation of its causal effect on a variety of development outcomes, measured via household surveys in treatment and comparison areas. Outcomes are measured by six survey modules, with sample sizes for each demographic group determined by budget, logistics, and the group's vulnerability. We design a sampling plan that aims to reduce effort for survey enumerators and maximize precision for all outcomes. We propose two-stage sampling designs, sampling households at the first stage, followed by a second stage sample that differs across demographic groups. Two-stage designs are usually constructed by simple random sampling (SRS) of households and proportional within-household sampling, or probability proportional to size sampling (PPS) of households with fixed sampling within each. No measure of household size is proportional for all demographic groups, putting PPS schemes at a disadvantage. The SRS schemes have the disadvantage that multiple individuals sampled per household decreases efficiency due to intra-household correlation. We conduct a simulation study (using both design- and model-based survey inference) to understand these tradeoffs and recommend a sampling plan for the Millennium Villages Project. Similar design issues arise in other studies with surveys that target different demographic groups.

Subjects

Subjects :
Statistics - Applications

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1507.02739
Document Type :
Working Paper