/ Articles & Journals

Can survey design reduce anchoring bias in recall data? Evidence from smallholder farmers in Malawi

Abstract

Recall biases in retrospective self-reported survey data have important implications for empirical research. Authors leverage the survey design literature and test three strategies to attenuate mental anchoring in retrospective data collection: question ordering, retrieval cues and aggregate (community) anchoring. They focus on maize production and happiness reports among smallholder farmers in Malawi. Asking for retrospective before concurrent data on average reduces recall bias (i.e. the deviation of the recalled versus the concurrent outcome reported in the previous period) by 34 per cent for maize production, a meaningful improvement with no increase in data collection costs. Retrieval cues are less successful and community anchors can exacerbate the bias. None of the strategies help to ease the recall bias for happiness reports.

Published 
Nov 2024
Author(s)
Susan Godlonton, Manuel A. Hernandez, and Cynthia Paz
Langues(s)
English
Focus topic
  • Information Technologies
Focus region
Sub-Saharan Africa
Focus country
Malawi
responsible-investment-agriculture-screening
Books

Due diligence tools which help assess the alignment of proposed investment projects...

Jan 2025
Annotation 2025-02-28 121031
Studies

Improving and maintaining agricultural productivity, which is pivotal to deliver private and...

Feb 2025
Annotation 2025-02-28 113017
Books

The objective of this Handbook is to summarize global coverage of recent...

Dec 2024
Annotation 2025-02-27 111028
Studies

Agri-food systems are transforming quickly in Africa. An important issue in the...

Jan 2025