National Accounts and Household Survey Estimates of Household Expenditures: Why Do They Differ and Why Should We Be Concerned?
Albert, Jose Ramon G. | June 2017
Abstract
Estimates of household expenditures directly obtained from the Family Income and Expenditure Survey (FIES), and household final consumption expenditures from national accounts have discrepancies, with their divergence generally g rowing across time. Such discrepancies have consequences to policy: poverty can be overestimated and income inequality can be underestimated if survey-based estimates are biased downward. There is no assurance that national accounts estimates, which also have measurement errors (just like survey-based estimates), are more accurate. In this paper, we consider how estimates are derived from both surveys and national accounts, and other related measurement issues such as the undercoverage of wealthy households as well as the underestimation of their expenditures. The study recommends that an acceptable protocol be used for triangulating estimates of national accounts and survey-based estimates of household expenditure. Further, it also encourages the conduct of other data collection protocols, including special surveys for tracking and monitoring income and expenditure patterns of the missing wealthy, splitting the FIES into a family income survey, and household expenditure survey, as well asking field enumerators of the Philippine Statistics Authority to directly observe electricity meter readings of households targeted for interview that will help researchers model adequately the expenditures (or incomes) of all households.
Citation
Albert, Jose Ramon G.. 2017. National Accounts and Household Survey Estimates of Household Expenditures: Why Do They Differ and Why Should We Be Concerned?. © Philippine Institute for Development Studies. http://hdl.handle.net/11540/7150.Keywords
Crisis
Unemployment
Economic cooperation
Gross domestic product
Employment
Economic forecast
Economic indicators
Growth models
Gross domestic product
Macroeconomics
Economic forecast
Economic Crisis
Economic Efficiency
Economic Policies
Regional Economic Development
Job Evaluation
Evaluation
Macroeconomic
Macroeconomic Analysis
Performance Evaluation
Impact Evaluation
Economic Welfare
Economic Incentives
Financial crisis
Labor economics
Regional economics
Turnover
Economic survey
Job analysis
Labor turnover
International relief
Exports
Economic development projects
Economic policy
Economic forecasting
Show allCollapse
Citable URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11540/7150Metadata
Show full item recordRelated items
-
Are Households with Returnee Migrants More Likely to be Entrepreneurial than Households With non-Migrants? A Study from Household Survey in Nepal
Bhandari, Dhruba; Pant, Bishnu Dev (Institute for Integrated Development Studies, 2019-04-30)Are households with returnee migrants more entrepreneurial relative to household with non-migrants? We explore this question using household survey data from 31 districts in Nepal. Overall effect of returnee migrants on household’s business ownership/entrepreneurship depends on result of two opposing forces at work: on one hand returnee migrants can bring savings, experience and skills needed to set ...Are households with returnee migrants more entrepreneurial relative to household with non-migrants? We explore this question using household survey data from 31 districts in Nepal. Overall effect of returnee migrants on household’s business ... -
Household Consumption Risk and Coping Strategies in Tajikistan: Evidence from Household Surveys
Murakami, Enerelt (Asian Development Bank Institute, 2017-05-30)Forward-looking poverty analyses are essential for targeting and implementing poverty prevention interventions. In the presence of uncertainty and risk, the current poverty status of households is not a good indicator of whether they will be poor in the future. This paper examines consumption risk and risk-coping strategies in the case of Tajikistan, a country where frequent negative risks and adverse ...Forward-looking poverty analyses are essential for targeting and implementing poverty prevention interventions. In the presence of uncertainty and risk, the current poverty status of households is not a good indicator of whether they will be poor in ... -
Princelings and Paupers? State Employment and the Distribution of Human Capital Investments Among Households in Viet Nam. Asian Development Review. Vol. 30(2), pp. 26–48
Coxhead, Ian; Phan, Diep (Asian Development Bank and Asian Development Bank Institute, 2013-08-30)Inequality in access to education is known to be a key driver of income inequality in developing countries. Viet Nam, a transitional economy, exhibits significant segmentation in the market for skilled labor based on more remunerative employment in government and state firms. We ask whether this segmentation is also reflected in human capital investments at the household level. We find that households ...Inequality in access to education is known to be a key driver of income inequality in developing countries. Viet Nam, a transitional economy, exhibits significant segmentation in the market for skilled labor based on more remunerative employment in ...