Open Access
February 2013 New Important Developments in Small Area Estimation
Danny Pfeffermann
Statist. Sci. 28(1): 40-68 (February 2013). DOI: 10.1214/12-STS395

Abstract

The problem of small area estimation (SAE) is how to produce reliable estimates of characteristics of interest such as means, counts, quantiles, etc., for areas or domains for which only small samples or no samples are available, and how to assess their precision. The purpose of this paper is to review and discuss some of the new important developments in small area estimation methods. Rao [Small Area Estimation (2003)] wrote a very comprehensive book, which covers all the main developments in this topic until that time. A few review papers have been written after 2003, but they are limited in scope. Hence, the focus of this review is on new developments in the last 7–8 years, but to make the review more self-contained, I also mention shortly some of the older developments. The review covers both design-based and model-dependent methods, with the latter methods further classified into frequentist and Bayesian methods. The style of the paper is similar to the style of my previous review on SAE published in 2002, explaining the new problems investigated and describing the proposed solutions, but without dwelling on theoretical details, which can be found in the original articles. I hope that this paper will be useful both to researchers who like to learn more on the research carried out in SAE and to practitioners who might be interested in the application of the new methods.

Citation

Download Citation

Danny Pfeffermann. "New Important Developments in Small Area Estimation." Statist. Sci. 28 (1) 40 - 68, February 2013. https://doi.org/10.1214/12-STS395

Information

Published: February 2013
First available in Project Euclid: 29 January 2013

zbMATH: 1332.62038
MathSciNet: MR3075338
Digital Object Identifier: 10.1214/12-STS395

Keywords: benchmarking , Calibration , design-based methods , empirical likelihood , informative sampling , matching priors , Measurement errors , model checking , M-quantile , ordered means , Outliers , poverty mapping , prediction intervals , prediction MSE , spline regression , two-part model

Rights: Copyright © 2013 Institute of Mathematical Statistics

Vol.28 • No. 1 • February 2013
Back to Top