Challenges and Opportunities of Mobile Phone-Based Data Collection : Evidence from South Sudan
The proliferation of mobile phones in developing countries has generated a wave of interest in collecting high-frequency socioeconomic surveys using this technology. This paper considers lessons from one such survey effort in a difficult environmen...
Main Authors: | , , |
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Format: | Policy Research Working Paper |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2013
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/01/17186643/challenges-opportunities-mobile-phone-based-data-collection-evidence-south-sudan http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12169 |
Summary: | The proliferation of mobile phones in
developing countries has generated a wave of interest in
collecting high-frequency socioeconomic surveys using this
technology. This paper considers lessons from one such
survey effort in a difficult environment -- the South Sudan
Experimental Phone Survey, which gathered data on living
conditions, access to services, and citizen attitudes via
monthly interviews by phones provided to respondents.
Non-response, particularly in later rounds of the survey,
was a substantial problem, largely due to erratic
functioning of the mobile network. However, selection due to
non-response does not appear to have markedly affected
survey results. Response rates were much higher for
respondents who owned their own phones. Both compensation
provided to respondents in the form of airtime and the type
of phone (solar-charged or traditional) were varied
experimentally. The type of phone was uncorrelated with
response rates and, contrary to expectation, attrition was
slightly higher for those receiving the higher level of
compensation. The South Sudan Experimental Phone Survey
experience suggests that mobile phones can be a viable means
of data collection for some purposes, that calling people on
their own phones is preferred to handing out phones, and
that careful attention should be given to the potential for
selective non-response. |
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