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A Study of Missing Value Imputation in Business Surveys: The Case of the Short-Term Economic Survey of Enterprises in Japan (Tankan)

Takahiro Hirakawa and Junichiro Hatogai
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Takahiro Hirakawa: Bank of Japan
Junichiro Hatogai: Bank of Japan

No 13-E-9, Bank of Japan Working Paper Series from Bank of Japan

Abstract: In business surveys, how to treat the data on which no responses are obtained (missing values) is an important theme in maintaining and improving the accuracy and reliability of statistics. The Short-Term Economic Survey of Enterprises in Japan (Tankan) enjoys a high response rate thanks to the cooperation of the enterprises it covers. Nevertheless, each survey inevitably includes items with missing values. When there are incidences of missing values in quantitative data items, such as sales and fixed investment, the current practice is to compile the survey result by imputing the missing value with the "previous fiscal year's value obtained from the non-responding enterprise." This imputation method is thought to be appropriate when the economic environment is stable, as the change in the values between the previous term and the current term is relatively small. On the other hand, during a phase of sharp changes in the economic environment, the result of the compilation may diverge somewhat from the real perception of business conditions, as the previous term's value, which does not appropriately reflect the change during the period, is used without modification. Given the fact that in recent years, there has been a dramatic economic change, such as the one brought about by the Lehman shock, it is worth examining if there are imputation methods which produce a higher degree of accuracy. Against this backdrop, this paper has compared the degrees of statistical accuracy of the current method of missing value imputation of the Tankan and its alternative methods, conducting simulations based on the data for the period from 2004 to 2010. As a result, it was found that for all of the major survey items (i.e., fixed investment, sales and current profits), "there are alternative methods whose degree of accuracy is higher than or about the same as the imputation method now in use."

Date: 2013-05-16
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-mac
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (1)

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