Myths of Official Measurement:Auditing and Improving Administrative Data in Developing Countries

Author(s):  
Abhijeet Singh
Author(s):  
Tom Parks ◽  
Joseph Kado ◽  
Isimeli Tukana ◽  
Andrew Steer

ABSTRACT ObjectivesRheumatic heart disease remains a major public health concern in developing countries. Motivated by the lack of up-to-date epidemiologic data from endemic settings, we sought to quantity morbidity and mortality attributable the condition in Fiji, a middle-income country where a high prevalence has consistently been reported. Having resolved to undertake the analysis using the existing routine clinical and administrative data at our disposal, we first set out to develop a data linkage procedure robust to the inherent limitations of data from low resource settings. ApproachRecords were available from four sources: an electronic patient information system, a database of death certificates, a disease control register, and echocardiography clinic registers. All referred to 2008-2012. Throughout the design and calibration process we used 1,406 known duplications in the patient information system from which we calculated the sensitivity and specificity. After cleaning, standardisation and preliminary blocking, we categorised identifiers including names, dates and demographics into agreement, partial agreement, disagreement or missing, accounting for issues such as out of order or misspelt names. After concentrating true matches by further blocking, we estimated match and nonmatch probabilities using expectation maximisation under the Fellegi-Sunter model of record linkage. We then derived the posterior match probability taking into consideration the size of block and prior information about the probability a match be present given the demographics of the individual concerned. In its final configuration, with record pairs considered a match if they achieved a posterior probability of over 50%, our procedure identified the known duplications with sensitivity of 91.4% and specificity of 99.9%. ResultsHaving identified 2,619 cases from the 1,773,999 records available, we used the linked data to make population-based estimates of prevalence using capture-recapture analyses and cause-specific mortality using relative survival methods, the first such estimates for a developing country. Moreover, in sensitivity analyses, we found that changing posterior probability threshold above which record pairs were considered a match had limited impact on the results. ConclusionAlthough data linkage is widely used for epidemiologic research in high-income settings, its application to developing countries has been limited. We developed and validated a data linkage procedure that can be used to turn largely unstudied routine clinical and administrative data into robust estimates of disease burden. With the growing availability of computerized data, we propose our approach has strong potential to assist the production of disease burden statistics in developing countries where civil registration systems are weak.


2018 ◽  
Vol 108 ◽  
pp. 449-452
Author(s):  
Niklas Buehren ◽  
Virginia Ceretti ◽  
Ervin Dervisevic ◽  
Markus Goldstein ◽  
Leora Klapper ◽  
...  

Checking overdrafts are an expensive yet common way for bank account holders to obtain short-term credit when faced with unexpected shocks. In developing countries, one common shock that many salaried workers face is late or erratic payment from their employer. We use administrative data from a rural bank in Ghana to show that receiving a late salary payment increases the likelihood of taking an overdraft by 10 percent. Past overdrafts are also associated with future overdrafts, suggesting that late payment exacerbates the risk of trapping workers in a costly debt cycle.


2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 131-148
Author(s):  
Juliana Londoño-Vélez ◽  
Javier Ávila-Mahecha

This paper investigates the feasibility of wealth taxation in developing countries. It uses rich administrative data from Colombia and leverages a government-designed program for voluntary disclosures of hidden wealth as well as the threat of detection triggered by the Panama Papers leak. There are two key findings. First, there is substantial (primarily offshore) evasion: two-fifths of the wealthiest 0.01 percent evade taxes, with these evaders concealing one-third of their wealth offshore. Second, strengthening enforcement can have a significant impact on wealth tax compliance, tax revenue, and progressivity. These results highlight both challenges and opportunities for wealth taxation in the developing world. (JEL D31, G51, H24, H26, K34, O15)


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