Discussion paper

DP10575 The Missing Transfers: Estimating Mis-reporting in Dyadic Data

Many studies have used self-reported dyadic data without exploiting the pattern of discordant answers. In this paper we propose a maximum likelihood estimator that deals with mis-reporting in a systematic way. We illustrate the methodology using dyadic data on inter-household transfers from the village of Nyakatoke in Tanzania, investigating the role of wealth in link formation. Our results suggest that observed transfers are grounded in mutual self-interest, and we show that not taking reporting bias into account leads to incorrect inference and serious underestimation of the total amount of transfers between villagers. The method introduced here is applicable whenever the researcher has two discordant measurements of the same dependent variable.

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Citation

Fafchamps, M and M Comola (2015), ‘DP10575 The Missing Transfers: Estimating Mis-reporting in Dyadic Data‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 10575. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp10575