Adjusting for Heterogeneous Response Thresholds in Cross-Country Comparisons of Self-Reported Health

Publication date: Available online 1 September 2017 Source:The Journal of the Economics of Ageing Author(s): Teresa Molina Comparisons of subjective scale measures across countries can be distorted by the use of different response thresholds in different countries. Anchoring vignettes are a survey tool designed to address this problem, and are becoming widely used to adjust comparisons of subjective measures across groups, primarily within countries or across relatively similar high-income countries. This paper expands the existing literature by comparing six domains of self-reported health across the United States, England, and two countries with very different income levels, cultures, and geographic locations – Indonesia and China. In the raw data, respondents from the U.S. and England appear to be in worse health than their Indonesian and Chinese counterparts, but across the majority of health domains, this relationship completely reverses once I account for threshold differences.
Source: The Journal of the Economics of Ageing - Category: Health Management Source Type: research