Adeline Delavande
;
Xavier Gine
;
David McKenzie

eliciting probabilistic expectations with visual aids in developing countries: how sensitive are answers to variations in elicitation design? (replication data)

Eliciting subjective probability distributions in developing countries is often based on visual aids such as beans to represent probabilities and intervals on a sheet of paper to represent the support. We conduct an experiment in India which tests the sensitivity of elicited expectations to variations in three facets of the elicitation methodology: the number of beans, the design of the support (predetermined or self-anchored), and the ordering of questions. Our results show remarkable robustness to variations in elicitation design. Nevertheless, the added precision offered by using more beans and a larger number of intervals with a predetermined support improves accuracy.

Data and Resources

Suggested Citation

Delavande, Adeline; Gine, Xavier; McKenzie, David (2011): Eliciting probabilistic expectations with visual aids in developing countries: how sensitive are answers to variations in elicitation design? (replication data). Version: 1. Journal of Applied Econometrics. Dataset. http://dx.doi.org/10.15456/jae.2022320.0721854078