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Nonresponse in the American Time Use Survey: Who Is Missing from the Data and How Much Does It Matter?
Authors:Abraham, Katharine G.   Maitland, Aaron   Bianchi, Suzanne M.
Affiliation:KATHARINE G. ABRAHAM is professor of survey methodology, AARON MAITLAND is a survey methodology graduate student, and SUZANNE M. BIANCHI is professor of sociology, all at the University of Maryland, College Park.
Abstract:This article examines nonresponse in a large government survey,the American Time Use Survey (ATUS), which interviews personsin households previously interviewed in the Current PopulationSurvey. The response rate for the ATUS has been below 60 percentfor the first two years of its existence, raising questionsabout whether the results can be generalized to the target population.The article begins with an analysis of the types of nonresponseencountered in the ATUS. Noncontact accounts for roughly 60percent of ATUS nonresponse, with refusals accounting for roughly40 percent. We find little support for the hypothesis that busypeople are less likely to respond to the ATUS but find considerablesupport for the hypothesis that people who are weakly integratedinto their communities are less likely to respond, mostly becausethey are less likely to be contacted. When we compare aggregateestimates of time use calculated using the ATUS base weightswithout any adjustment for nonresponse, estimates calculatedusing the ATUS final weights with a nonresponse adjustment,and estimates calculated using weights that incorporate ourown nonresponse adjustment based on a propensity model, we findsome modest differences, but the three sets of estimates arebroadly similar. The article ends with suggestions for furtherresearch and analysis.
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