Inference for two-stage sampling designs with application to a panel for urban policy

Abstract

Two-stage sampling designs are commonly used for household and health surveys. To produce reliable estimators with assorted confidence intervals, some basic statistical properties like consistency and asymptotic normality of the Horvitz-Thompson estimator are desirable, along with the consistency of assorted variance estimators. These properties have been mainly studied for single-stage sampling designs. In this work, we prove the consistency of the Horvitz-Thompson estimator and of associated variance estimators for a general class of two-stage sampling designs, under mild assumptions. We also study two-stage sampling with a large entropy sampling design at the first stage, and prove that the Horvitz-Thompson estimator is asymptotically normally distributed through a coupling argument. When the first-stage sampling fraction is negligible, simplified variance estimators which do not require estimating the variance within the Primary Sampling Units are proposed, and shown to be consistent. An application to a panel for urban policy, which is the initial motivation for this work, is also presented.

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