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How reliable are income data collected with a single question?

How reliable are income data collected with a single question?
How reliable are income data collected with a single question?
Income is an important correlate for numerous phenomena in the social sciences. But many surveys collect data with just a single question covering all forms of income. This raises questions over the reliability of the data that are collected. Issues of reliability are heightened when individuals are asked about the household total rather than own income alone. We argue that the large literature on measuring incomes has not devoted enough attention to 'single-question' surveys. We investigate the reliability of single-question data by using the UK Office for National Statistics's Omnibus survey and the British Social Attitudes survey as examples. We compare the distributions of income in these surveys—individual income in the Omnibus and household income in the British Social Attitudes survey—with those in two larger UK surveys that measure income in much greater detail. Distributions compare less well for household income than for individual income. Disaggregation by gender proves fruitful in much of the analysis. We also establish levels of item non-response to the income question in single-question surveys from a wide range of countries.
income data, measurement, quality, social survey
0964-1998
409-429
Micklewright, John
744a4bca-41f2-4cbb-9a4e-3e0effdaa739
Schnepf, Sylke V.
c987c810-d33c-4675-9764-b5e15c581dbc
Micklewright, John
744a4bca-41f2-4cbb-9a4e-3e0effdaa739
Schnepf, Sylke V.
c987c810-d33c-4675-9764-b5e15c581dbc

Micklewright, John and Schnepf, Sylke V. (2010) How reliable are income data collected with a single question? Journal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series A (Statistics in Society), 173 (2), 409-429. (doi:10.1111/j.1467-985X.2009.00632.x).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Income is an important correlate for numerous phenomena in the social sciences. But many surveys collect data with just a single question covering all forms of income. This raises questions over the reliability of the data that are collected. Issues of reliability are heightened when individuals are asked about the household total rather than own income alone. We argue that the large literature on measuring incomes has not devoted enough attention to 'single-question' surveys. We investigate the reliability of single-question data by using the UK Office for National Statistics's Omnibus survey and the British Social Attitudes survey as examples. We compare the distributions of income in these surveys—individual income in the Omnibus and household income in the British Social Attitudes survey—with those in two larger UK surveys that measure income in much greater detail. Distributions compare less well for household income than for individual income. Disaggregation by gender proves fruitful in much of the analysis. We also establish levels of item non-response to the income question in single-question surveys from a wide range of countries.

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Published date: 1 March 2010
Keywords: income data, measurement, quality, social survey

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Local EPrints ID: 157447
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/157447
ISSN: 0964-1998
PURE UUID: 0339b89b-1195-457e-a370-756db9bd1205

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Date deposited: 10 Jun 2010 13:12
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 01:47

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Contributors

Author: John Micklewright
Author: Sylke V. Schnepf

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