Pull Your Small Area Estimates Up by the Bootstraps

This paper presents a methodological update to the World Bank's toolkit for small area estimation. The paper reviews the computational procedures of the current methods used by the institution: the traditional ELL approach and the Empirical Best (EB) addition introduced to imitate the original EB procedure of Molina and Rao [Small area estimation of poverty indicators. Canadian J Stat. 2010;38(3):369–385], including heteroskedasticity and survey weights, but using a different bootstrap approach, here referred to as clustered bootstrap. Simulation experiments provide empirical evidence of the shortcomings of the clustered bootstrap approach, which yields biased and noisier point estimates. The document presents an update to the World Bank’s EB implementation by considering the original EB procedures for point and noise estimation, extended for complex designs and heteroscedasticity. Simulation experiments illustrate that the revised methods yield considerably less biased and more efficient estimators than those obtained from the clustered bootstrap approach.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Corral, Paul, Molina, Isabel, Nguyen, Minh
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Published: Taylor and Francis 2021-05-08
Subjects:SMALL AREA ESTIMATION, POVERTY MAPPING, PARAMETRIC BOOTSTRAP, EMPIRICAL BEST, ELL APPROACH, SIMULATION,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36821
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spelling dig-okr-10986368212022-01-28T16:12:07Z Pull Your Small Area Estimates Up by the Bootstraps Corral, Paul Molina, Isabel Nguyen, Minh SMALL AREA ESTIMATION POVERTY MAPPING PARAMETRIC BOOTSTRAP EMPIRICAL BEST ELL APPROACH SIMULATION This paper presents a methodological update to the World Bank's toolkit for small area estimation. The paper reviews the computational procedures of the current methods used by the institution: the traditional ELL approach and the Empirical Best (EB) addition introduced to imitate the original EB procedure of Molina and Rao [Small area estimation of poverty indicators. Canadian J Stat. 2010;38(3):369–385], including heteroskedasticity and survey weights, but using a different bootstrap approach, here referred to as clustered bootstrap. Simulation experiments provide empirical evidence of the shortcomings of the clustered bootstrap approach, which yields biased and noisier point estimates. The document presents an update to the World Bank’s EB implementation by considering the original EB procedures for point and noise estimation, extended for complex designs and heteroscedasticity. Simulation experiments illustrate that the revised methods yield considerably less biased and more efficient estimators than those obtained from the clustered bootstrap approach. 2022-01-14T19:55:47Z 2022-01-14T19:55:47Z 2021-05-08 Journal Article Journal of Statistical Computation and Simulation 0094-9655 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36821 CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/igo World Bank Taylor and Francis Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Journal Article
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
topic SMALL AREA ESTIMATION
POVERTY MAPPING
PARAMETRIC BOOTSTRAP
EMPIRICAL BEST
ELL APPROACH
SIMULATION
SMALL AREA ESTIMATION
POVERTY MAPPING
PARAMETRIC BOOTSTRAP
EMPIRICAL BEST
ELL APPROACH
SIMULATION
spellingShingle SMALL AREA ESTIMATION
POVERTY MAPPING
PARAMETRIC BOOTSTRAP
EMPIRICAL BEST
ELL APPROACH
SIMULATION
SMALL AREA ESTIMATION
POVERTY MAPPING
PARAMETRIC BOOTSTRAP
EMPIRICAL BEST
ELL APPROACH
SIMULATION
Corral, Paul
Molina, Isabel
Nguyen, Minh
Pull Your Small Area Estimates Up by the Bootstraps
description This paper presents a methodological update to the World Bank's toolkit for small area estimation. The paper reviews the computational procedures of the current methods used by the institution: the traditional ELL approach and the Empirical Best (EB) addition introduced to imitate the original EB procedure of Molina and Rao [Small area estimation of poverty indicators. Canadian J Stat. 2010;38(3):369–385], including heteroskedasticity and survey weights, but using a different bootstrap approach, here referred to as clustered bootstrap. Simulation experiments provide empirical evidence of the shortcomings of the clustered bootstrap approach, which yields biased and noisier point estimates. The document presents an update to the World Bank’s EB implementation by considering the original EB procedures for point and noise estimation, extended for complex designs and heteroscedasticity. Simulation experiments illustrate that the revised methods yield considerably less biased and more efficient estimators than those obtained from the clustered bootstrap approach.
format Journal Article
topic_facet SMALL AREA ESTIMATION
POVERTY MAPPING
PARAMETRIC BOOTSTRAP
EMPIRICAL BEST
ELL APPROACH
SIMULATION
author Corral, Paul
Molina, Isabel
Nguyen, Minh
author_facet Corral, Paul
Molina, Isabel
Nguyen, Minh
author_sort Corral, Paul
title Pull Your Small Area Estimates Up by the Bootstraps
title_short Pull Your Small Area Estimates Up by the Bootstraps
title_full Pull Your Small Area Estimates Up by the Bootstraps
title_fullStr Pull Your Small Area Estimates Up by the Bootstraps
title_full_unstemmed Pull Your Small Area Estimates Up by the Bootstraps
title_sort pull your small area estimates up by the bootstraps
publisher Taylor and Francis
publishDate 2021-05-08
url http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36821
work_keys_str_mv AT corralpaul pullyoursmallareaestimatesupbythebootstraps
AT molinaisabel pullyoursmallareaestimatesupbythebootstraps
AT nguyenminh pullyoursmallareaestimatesupbythebootstraps
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