Support #823
closedBHPS Weights
100%
Description
Ispoke briefly on the phone to one of your IESR colleagues about getting some information about weights in the BHPS. I was then directed to this page.
The issue I am having, is that having inspected the longitudinal weights (wLRWGHT), I am a little confused over how to use it properly!
So I notice in volume A of the documentation, it states the means of these weights as having a value of 1.00 – except for wave R, where the individual respondent longitudinal weight has a value of 2. When I tried to replicate these means, I found that the weights had a mean value of ~0.85 at wave B, down to ~0.35 at wave R – however when excluding values with a 0 weight, the mean for the weights aligned themselves to the value stated in Volume A – So, 1.00.
The documentation also states that “The longitudinal respondent weights (wLRWGHT) selects out cases who gave a full interview at all waves in the BHPS files.” And then “At each wave these cases are re-weighted to take account of previous wave respondents lost through refusal at the current wave or through some other form of sample attrition.”
The issue the weight values pose is that when analysing later waves, e.g. merging wave Q to wave R (and only merging those who have responded in both waves), and doing some longitudinal analysis, because the weight at wave R is close to 0.35, we only get roughly 35% of the sample as usable. This seemed strange to me and hence wanted to know why this was the case.
I mean I understand if one is engaging in longitudinal analysis from Wave A to Wave R, where you indeed might expect 35% of original respondents at Wave A, to still be on the survey at Wave R. However when doing two wave analysis and merging just those who have stayed on in both waves, I don’t see why my sample is still being restricted.
Hope my confusion is clear enough, but don’t hesitate to contact me for clarification.