Measuring Subjective Expectations in Developing Countries : A Critical Review and New Evidence

The majority of economic decisions taken by individuals are forward looking and thus involve their expectations of future outcomes. Understanding the expectations that individuals have is thus of crucial importance to designing and evaluating policies in health, education, finance, migration, social protection, and many other areas. However, the majority of developing country surveys are static in nature and do not contain information on the subjective expectations of individuals. Possible reasons given for not collecting this information include fears that poor, illiterate individuals do not understand probability concepts, that it takes far too much time to ask such questions, or that the answers add little value. This paper provides a critical review and new analysis of subjective expectations data from developing countries and refutes each of these concerns. The authors find that people in developing countries can generally understand and answer probabilistic questions, such questions are not prohibitive in time to ask, and the expectations are useful predictors of future behavior and economic decisions. The paper discusses the different methods being tried for eliciting such information, the key methodological issues involved, and the open research questions. The available evidence suggests that collecting expectations data is both feasible and valuable, suggesting that it should be incorporated into more developing country surveys.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Delavande, Adeline, Giné, Xavier, McKenzie, David
Language:English
Published: 2009-01-01
Subjects:AGRICULTURE, AMOUNT OF CREDIT, AMOUNT OF DEBT, AVERAGE EARNINGS, BANK POLICY, CALCULATION, CALCULATIONS, CREDIT CONSTRAINTS, CURRENT INCOME, DEBT, DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, DEVELOPING COUNTRY, DISCOUNT RATES, DROUGHT, EARNINGS, ECONOMIC MODELS, ECONOMIC STATISTICS, ECONOMIC THEORY, EXPECTED RETURN, EXPECTED RETURNS, EXPERIMENTAL ECONOMICS, EXPORTER, EXPROPRIATION, FAMILY MEMBER, FAMILY MEMBERS, FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE, FIXED COST, FORECASTS, FORMAL EDUCATION, FUTURE INCOME, FUTURE RESEARCH, FUTURE STUDIES, GDP, HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS, HOUSEHOLD INCOME, HOUSEHOLD INCOMES, INCOME, INCOME LEVEL, INCOME VOLATILITY, INCOMES, INFLATION, INSURANCE, INTERNATIONAL BANK, INVESTMENT DECISIONS, LIFE EXPECTANCY, LIKERT SCALE, LIVING STANDARDS, LOW EARNINGS, LOW INCOME, MARKETING, MATHEMATICS, MICROENTERPRISES, MONETARY INCENTIVES, MORTALITY, ORDERING, OUTLIERS, POLITICAL ECONOMY, PRECISION, PREDICTION, PREDICTIONS, PRICE CHANGES, PRICE RISK, PROBABILITIES, PROBABILITY, PRODUCTION INPUTS, QUESTIONNAIRES, RESEARCHER, RESEARCHERS, RISK AVERSE, RISK AVERSION, RISK FACTORS, SALES, SAMPLE SIZE, SAVINGS, SKEWNESS, SOCIAL NETWORKS, SOCIAL PROTECTION, SOCIAL SECURITY, SOCIOECONOMIC STATUS, SOURCE OF INFORMATION, STANDARD DEVIATION, STANDARD DEVIATIONS, STANDARD ERRORS, STATISTICAL ANALYSIS, TAX, UNEMPLOYMENT, VALUABLE, VARIABILITY, WAGE, WEALTH, WEB, YOUNG ADULTS,
Online Access:http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/main?menuPK=64187510&pagePK=64193027&piPK=64187937&theSitePK=523679&menuPK=64187510&searchMenuPK=64187283&siteName=WDS&entityID=000158349_20090129100701
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/4021
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