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Consequences of Data Error in Aggregate Indicators: Evidence from the Human Development Index
Hendrik Wolff, University of Washington
Howard Chong, University of California, Berkeley
Maximilian Auffhammer, University of Californi, Berkeley
ABSTRACT: This paper examines the consequences of data error in data series used to construct aggregate indicators. Using the most popular indicator of country level economic development, the Human Development Index (HDI), we identify three separate sources of data error. We propose a simple statistical framework to
investigate how data error may bias rank assignments and identify two striking consequences for the HDI. First, using the cutoff values used by the United Nations to assign a country as ‘low’, ‘medium’, or ‘high’ developed, we find that currently up to 45% of developing countries are misclassified. Moreover, by
replicating prior development/macroeconomic studies, we find that key estimated parameters such as Gini coefficients and speed of convergence measures vary by up to 100% due to data error.
SUGGESTED CITATION: Hendrik Wolff, Howard Chong, and Maximilian Auffhammer,
"Consequences of Data Error in Aggregate Indicators: Evidence from the Human Development Index"
(January 1, 2008).
Department of Agricultural & Resource Economics, UCB.
CUDARE Working Paper 1051.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/are_ucb/1051
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