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@article{ Giusti2012,
 title = {Robust small area estimation and oversampling in the estimation of poverty indicators},
 author = {Giusti, Caterina and Marchetti, Stefano and Pratesi, Monica and Salvati, Nicola},
 journal = {Survey Research Methods},
 number = {3},
 pages = {155-163},
 volume = {6},
 year = {2012},
 issn = {1864-3361},
 doi = {https://doi.org/10.18148/srm/2012.v6i3.5131},
 abstract = {"There has been rising interest in research on poverty mapping over the last decade, with the European Union proposing a core of statistical indicators on poverty commonly known as Laeken Indicators. They include the incidence and the intensity of poverty for a set of domains (e.g. young people, unemployed people). The EU-SILC (European Union - Statistics on Income and Living Conditions) survey represents the most important source of information to estimate these poverty indicators at national or regional level (NUTS 1-2 level). However, local policy makers also require statistics on poverty and living conditions at lower geographical/domain levels, but estimating poverty indicators directly from EU-SILC for these domains often leads to inaccurate estimates. To overcome this problem there are two main strategies: i. increasing the sample size of EU-SILC so that direct estimates become reliable and ii. resort to small area estimation techniques. In this paper the authors compare these two alternatives: with the availability of an oversampling of the EU-SILC survey for the province of Pisa, obtained as a side result of the SAMPLE project (Small Area Methods for Poverty and Living Conditions, http://www.sample-project.eu/ ), they can compute reliable direct estimates that can be compared to small area estimates computed under the M-quantile approach. Results show that the M-quantile small area estimates are comparable in terms of efficiency and precision to direct estimates using oversample data. Moreover, considering the oversample estimates as a benchmark, they show how direct estimates computed without the oversample have larger errors as well as larger estimated mean squared errors than corresponding M-quantile estimates." (author's abstract)},
 keywords = {Methode; method; Messung; measurement; Armut; poverty; Indikator; indicator; Indikatorenforschung; indicator research; Indikatorenbildung; construction of indicators; Daten; data; Datenorganisation; data organization; Datenqualität; data quality}}