The Influence of an Up-Front Experiment on Respondents’ Recording Behaviour in Payment Diaries: Evidence from Germany

In this article, we analyse the effect of an incentive experiment on German consumers’ recording behaviour on the basis of a one-week diary of their point-of-sale expenditure. Part of the experiment, which was carried out shortly before the consumers began filling in their payment diaries, involved...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Schmidt Tobias, Sieber Susann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2017-06-01
Series:Journal of Official Statistics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/jos-2017-0021
id doaj-f448bb8340024b5f8dba822b3c14b64d
record_format Article
spelling doaj-f448bb8340024b5f8dba822b3c14b64d2021-09-06T19:40:52ZengSciendoJournal of Official Statistics2001-73672017-06-0133242745410.1515/jos-2017-0021jos-2017-0021The Influence of an Up-Front Experiment on Respondents’ Recording Behaviour in Payment Diaries: Evidence from GermanySchmidt Tobias0Sieber Susann1Deutsche Bundesbank – Research Centre, Wilhelm-Epstein-Straße 14, 60431Frankfurt am Main, Germany.Deutsche Bundesbank – Research Centre, Wilhelm-Epstein-Straße 14, 60431Frankfurt am Main, Germany.In this article, we analyse the effect of an incentive experiment on German consumers’ recording behaviour on the basis of a one-week diary of their point-of-sale expenditure. Part of the experiment, which was carried out shortly before the consumers began filling in their payment diaries, involved consumers rolling a die with a chance of winning either EUR 20 or nothing, that is, they were randomly assigned an incentive. We ask whether respondents’ recording behaviour differs depending on whether individuals win or lose. We argue that winners attach a more positive feeling to the survey than losers and therefore show a stronger commitment to the diary. As the incentive experiment is part of a larger experiment to elicit respondents’ risk preferences, we also provide evidence on the effect of conducting up-front behavioural experiments in representative surveys. Our results indicate that the outcome of the lottery (rolling of the die) has an impact on the quantity of transactions recorded, but does not affect other aspects of respondents’ recording behaviour, such as item nonresponse or rounding. It also has a negligible impact on substantive measures, such as the cash share.https://doi.org/10.1515/jos-2017-0021incentivesrisk experimentsdata quality
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Schmidt Tobias
Sieber Susann
spellingShingle Schmidt Tobias
Sieber Susann
The Influence of an Up-Front Experiment on Respondents’ Recording Behaviour in Payment Diaries: Evidence from Germany
Journal of Official Statistics
incentives
risk experiments
data quality
author_facet Schmidt Tobias
Sieber Susann
author_sort Schmidt Tobias
title The Influence of an Up-Front Experiment on Respondents’ Recording Behaviour in Payment Diaries: Evidence from Germany
title_short The Influence of an Up-Front Experiment on Respondents’ Recording Behaviour in Payment Diaries: Evidence from Germany
title_full The Influence of an Up-Front Experiment on Respondents’ Recording Behaviour in Payment Diaries: Evidence from Germany
title_fullStr The Influence of an Up-Front Experiment on Respondents’ Recording Behaviour in Payment Diaries: Evidence from Germany
title_full_unstemmed The Influence of an Up-Front Experiment on Respondents’ Recording Behaviour in Payment Diaries: Evidence from Germany
title_sort influence of an up-front experiment on respondents’ recording behaviour in payment diaries: evidence from germany
publisher Sciendo
series Journal of Official Statistics
issn 2001-7367
publishDate 2017-06-01
description In this article, we analyse the effect of an incentive experiment on German consumers’ recording behaviour on the basis of a one-week diary of their point-of-sale expenditure. Part of the experiment, which was carried out shortly before the consumers began filling in their payment diaries, involved consumers rolling a die with a chance of winning either EUR 20 or nothing, that is, they were randomly assigned an incentive. We ask whether respondents’ recording behaviour differs depending on whether individuals win or lose. We argue that winners attach a more positive feeling to the survey than losers and therefore show a stronger commitment to the diary. As the incentive experiment is part of a larger experiment to elicit respondents’ risk preferences, we also provide evidence on the effect of conducting up-front behavioural experiments in representative surveys. Our results indicate that the outcome of the lottery (rolling of the die) has an impact on the quantity of transactions recorded, but does not affect other aspects of respondents’ recording behaviour, such as item nonresponse or rounding. It also has a negligible impact on substantive measures, such as the cash share.
topic incentives
risk experiments
data quality
url https://doi.org/10.1515/jos-2017-0021
work_keys_str_mv AT schmidttobias theinfluenceofanupfrontexperimentonrespondentsrecordingbehaviourinpaymentdiariesevidencefromgermany
AT siebersusann theinfluenceofanupfrontexperimentonrespondentsrecordingbehaviourinpaymentdiariesevidencefromgermany
AT schmidttobias influenceofanupfrontexperimentonrespondentsrecordingbehaviourinpaymentdiariesevidencefromgermany
AT siebersusann influenceofanupfrontexperimentonrespondentsrecordingbehaviourinpaymentdiariesevidencefromgermany
_version_ 1717767620860575744