Using Global Positioning Systems in Household Surveys for Better Economics and Better Policy

Using Global Positioning Systems in Household Surveys for Better Economics and Better Policy John Gibson David McKenzie Distance and location are the important determinants of many choices that economists study. This article reviews four ways that GPS can lead to better economics and better policy b...

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Main Authors: Gibson, John, McKenzie, David
Format: Journal Article
Published: World Bank 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/4411
id okr-10986-4411
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-44112021-04-23T14:02:17Z Using Global Positioning Systems in Household Surveys for Better Economics and Better Policy Gibson, John McKenzie, David accessibility air air pollution aircraft externalities journeys road road network roads route routes streets tax transport travel distance travel distances travel time travel times true urban sprawl Using Global Positioning Systems in Household Surveys for Better Economics and Better Policy John Gibson David McKenzie Distance and location are the important determinants of many choices that economists study. This article reviews four ways that GPS can lead to better economics and better policy by clarifying policy externalities and spillovers, by improving the understanding of access to services, by improving the collection of household survey data, and by providing data for econometric modeling of the causal impact of policies. 6 This article reviews four ways that GPS can lead to better economics and better policy by clarifying policy externalities and spillovers, by improving the understanding of access to services, by improving the collection of household survey data, and by providing data for econometric modeling of the causal impact of policies. They also find evidence of positive spatial correlation in unobserved shocks to the productivity of fertilizer, highlighting the importance of controlling for geographic effects when examining learning. They find that naive estimates that fail to take externalities into account would underestimate the program treatment effects, leading to the mistaken conclusion that deworming is not cost-effective. Using GPS Can Improve the Collection of Household Survey Data GPS is also being used to improve the quality and cost-effectiveness of household survey data. More accurate and cost-effective surveying enables researchers to carry out better analysis and provide better evidence-based advice to policy-makers. GPS Can Be Used to Provide Data for Econometric Modeling of the Causal Impacts of Policies Most empirical work in development economics aims to identify the effect of a particular variable of interest, X, on a particular outcome, Y. A standard concern is that there are other variables that are correlated with X and that also affect Y. John Gibson and David McKenzie 225 Failure to control for these variables gives biased results. Uncertainty about how to proceed may mean that spatially explicit data are underutilized, undermining the role of data sharing and data preservation in advancing science or that researchers inadvertently disclose information that can identify survey respondents. Human-subject panels (which review the benefits and risks to subjects of research projects) can play an important role in protecting confidentiality, but researchers need to be aware of the costs of the different approaches. 2012-03-30T07:12:33Z 2012-03-30T07:12:33Z 2007-09-30 Journal Article World Bank Research Observer 1564-6971 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/4411 CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank Journal Article Tonga Tuvalu New Zealand Indonesia Bolivia
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
topic accessibility
air
air pollution
aircraft
externalities
journeys
road
road network
roads
route
routes
streets
tax
transport
travel distance
travel distances
travel time
travel times
true
urban sprawl
spellingShingle accessibility
air
air pollution
aircraft
externalities
journeys
road
road network
roads
route
routes
streets
tax
transport
travel distance
travel distances
travel time
travel times
true
urban sprawl
Gibson, John
McKenzie, David
Using Global Positioning Systems in Household Surveys for Better Economics and Better Policy
geographic_facet Tonga
Tuvalu
New Zealand
Indonesia
Bolivia
description Using Global Positioning Systems in Household Surveys for Better Economics and Better Policy John Gibson David McKenzie Distance and location are the important determinants of many choices that economists study. This article reviews four ways that GPS can lead to better economics and better policy by clarifying policy externalities and spillovers, by improving the understanding of access to services, by improving the collection of household survey data, and by providing data for econometric modeling of the causal impact of policies. 6 This article reviews four ways that GPS can lead to better economics and better policy by clarifying policy externalities and spillovers, by improving the understanding of access to services, by improving the collection of household survey data, and by providing data for econometric modeling of the causal impact of policies. They also find evidence of positive spatial correlation in unobserved shocks to the productivity of fertilizer, highlighting the importance of controlling for geographic effects when examining learning. They find that naive estimates that fail to take externalities into account would underestimate the program treatment effects, leading to the mistaken conclusion that deworming is not cost-effective. Using GPS Can Improve the Collection of Household Survey Data GPS is also being used to improve the quality and cost-effectiveness of household survey data. More accurate and cost-effective surveying enables researchers to carry out better analysis and provide better evidence-based advice to policy-makers. GPS Can Be Used to Provide Data for Econometric Modeling of the Causal Impacts of Policies Most empirical work in development economics aims to identify the effect of a particular variable of interest, X, on a particular outcome, Y. A standard concern is that there are other variables that are correlated with X and that also affect Y. John Gibson and David McKenzie 225 Failure to control for these variables gives biased results. Uncertainty about how to proceed may mean that spatially explicit data are underutilized, undermining the role of data sharing and data preservation in advancing science or that researchers inadvertently disclose information that can identify survey respondents. Human-subject panels (which review the benefits and risks to subjects of research projects) can play an important role in protecting confidentiality, but researchers need to be aware of the costs of the different approaches.
format Journal Article
author Gibson, John
McKenzie, David
author_facet Gibson, John
McKenzie, David
author_sort Gibson, John
title Using Global Positioning Systems in Household Surveys for Better Economics and Better Policy
title_short Using Global Positioning Systems in Household Surveys for Better Economics and Better Policy
title_full Using Global Positioning Systems in Household Surveys for Better Economics and Better Policy
title_fullStr Using Global Positioning Systems in Household Surveys for Better Economics and Better Policy
title_full_unstemmed Using Global Positioning Systems in Household Surveys for Better Economics and Better Policy
title_sort using global positioning systems in household surveys for better economics and better policy
publisher World Bank
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10986/4411
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