The implementation of cross-sectional weights in household panel surveys
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While household panel surveys are longitudinal in nature cross-sectional sampling weights are also of interest. The computation of cross-sectional weights is challenging because household compositions change over time. Sampling probabilities of household entrants after wave 1 are generally not known and assigning them zero weight is not satisfying. Two common approaches to cross-sectional weighting address this issue: (1) “shared weights” and (2) modeling or estimating unobserved sampling probabilities based on person-level characteristics. We survey how several well-known national household panels address cross-sectional weights for different groups of respondents (including immigrants and births) and in different situations (including household mergers and splits). When a new person moves into a household, both “shared weights” and “modeling” lead to reduced individual weights of pre-existing household members, but differences due to the approach arise elsewhere. The implementation of “shared weights” is problematic when the panel contains households without a household member already present in wave 1. Panels also differ in the treatment of immigrants, household merges, and sometimes on how weights are assigned to children born to wave 1 panel members.
JOUR
Schonlau, Matthias
Kroh, Martin
Watson, Nicole
2013
Statistics Surveys
7
37-57
1935-7516
2253