Using repeated measures data to analyse reciprocal effects: the case of Economic Perceptions and Economic Values Patrick Sturgis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey Peter Smith, Ann Berrington, Yongjian Hu, Department of Social Statistics, University of Southampton
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Using repeated measures data to analyse reciprocal effects: the case of Economic Perceptions and Economic Values Patrick Sturgis, Department of Sociology,
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Using repeated measures data to analyse reciprocal effects:
the case of Economic Perceptions and Economic Values
Patrick Sturgis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey
Peter Smith, Ann Berrington, Yongjian Hu, Department of Social Statistics, University of
Southampton
Reciprocal Causality
Often viewed as a ‘nuisance’ to be removed (simultaneity bias).
But can be of substantive and policy interest.Achievement/self-esteem
Anti-social behaviour/depression
Problematic to estimate with observational data.
Overview
Approaches to estimating reciprocal effects.General Linear ModelInstrumental variable approachesCross-lagged panel models
Errors of MeasurementUnobserved variables and error covarianceExample: economic values and perceptionsConclusions
‘True’ Model
X Y
a
b
Standard Approach X-Sectional Data
Y X
e
Y X
e
c
(Ignore the problem)
c = f(a + b)
Instrumental Variables Approach
d1
X Y
d2
Instruments Instruments
cross-lagged panel model
cross-lagged panel model (Campbell 1960; Campbell and Kenny 1999; Finkel 1995; Marsh and Yeung 1997).
Particularly useful for examining questions of reciprocal causality.Each Y variable is regressed onto its lagged measure and the lagged measure of the other Y variable(s) of interest.Can the history of X predict Y, net of the history of Y (Granger causality)?Problematic for correlational designs (Rogossa 1995).But with SEM it is much more powerful (Marsh 1993; 1997).
Cross-lagged Panel Model
Yt1Yt0
Xt1Xt0
d11
d21
Problems with this model
2 waves = limited information about causal relationship.
Concepts are assumed to be measured with zero error.
No account taken of correlations between disturbances of endogenous variables.
Consequences of Measurement Error
All measurements of abstract concepts will contain error.
Error can be stochastic ( ) or systematic ( ) .Systematic error biases descriptive and causal
inferences.Stochastic error in dependents leaves
estimates unbiased but less efficient.Stochastic error in independents attenuates
effect sizes.Both problematic for hypothesis testing and
causal inference.
Correction for Measurement Error
Specify each concept of interest as a latent variable with multiple indicators:
Xt1
e1 e2 e3
item1t1 item2t1 item3t1
Xt2
e4 e5 e6
item1t2 item2t2 item3t2
Specify error covariance structure:
d1
Correlated Disturbances 1
The disturbance terms for the same endogenous variable over time are likely to be correlated.
Similarly, the disturbance term for the 2 endogenous variables are likely to be correlated at the same time point.
Caused by unobserved variable bias; a third variable, Z, may be causing both Y variables simultaneously.
Failing to consider these parameters can bias stability and cross-lagged estimates (Williams & Posakoff 1989; Anderson & Williams 1992).
Y11Y10
Y21Y20
Y12
Y22
d21 d22
d11 d21
Correlated Disturbances 2
Example: Economic Perceptions & Values
Left-right economic value posited as fundamental explanatory variable for political preferences & vote (Feldman 1989; Bartle 2000).
Similarly, perceptions of economic performance are seen as crucial determinants of electoral outcomes (Lewis-Beck & Stagmaier 2000).
What is the relationship between them? Different macro-economic conditions require
different approaches to economic policy.People’s left-right leanings are likely to influence
their perceptions of economic performance (Evans and Andersen 1997).
Data and Measures
Data come from the 1992-1997 British Election Panel Study.
Analytical sample = those interviews at all five waves (n=1640).
Left-right value measured by 6 item scale (Heath et al 1993).