Tilburg Consumer Outlook Monitor
General Information
Title
Tilburg Consumer Outlook Monitor
Project Number
30
Abstract
The Tilburg Consumer Outlook Monitor (TILCOM) is a longitudinal monitor of consumer emotions and behavior. TILCOM systematically tracks economic expectations, emotional responses to economic developments, and consumption coping in response to economic developments. TILCOM furthermore relates this to specific topical themes.
The TILCOM survey is conducted each quarter among members of the LISS panel. The panel is divided into three groups, and for every measurement, two of these groups are interviewed. This means that each panel member will be presented a maximum of three TILCOM questionnaires per year.
The TILCOM survey is conducted each quarter among members of the LISS panel. The panel is divided into three groups, and for every measurement, two of these groups are interviewed. This means that each panel member will be presented a maximum of three TILCOM questionnaires per year.
Longitudinal Type
Longitudinal Study
Begin date
07-09-2009
End date
31-12-2018
Note
Changes regarding to the previous measurement are also specified in the Introduction of the codebook
Topics
Researcher
Rik Pieters (Tilburg University); Roxanne van Giesen (CentERdata)
Publisher
CentERdata
Copyright
© 2010 CentERdata
DOI
https://doi.org/10.17026/dans-z66-nm43
List of Measures
Please select a wave to access the metadata and download datasets for that wave.
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Publications
Can Well-Established National Indices be Replicated in the Online LISS Panel? Research report; Elsen, M.
et al.
Mobile Response in Web Panels Social Science Computer Review, 32(6), 728-742; De Bruijne, M.
et al.
Wait, bond, and buy: Consumer responses to economic crisis PhD thesis, CentER Dissertation Series, Tilburg University, No. 335; Yabar, J.
Langdurige werkloosheid onder 50-plussers: feiten en mogelijke oplossingen? GerĂ³n (2018), 20(1), 63-67; Cuelenaere, B.,
et al.
Climbing out of the crisis: Reciprocal relationships between consumer sentiment and personal stress over time Journal of Economic Psychology, available online 6 December 2018 (accepted manuscript); Giesen, R.I. van,
et al.
The Progressing Appreciation of Possessing Less: Evolvement of consumerist and materialist values by gender over recent years University of Groningen; Voorintholt, L.
Climbing out of an economic crisis: A cycle of consumer sentiment and personal stress Journal of Economic Psychology, 70, 109-124; van Giesen, R. I.,
et al.
When paying is (even more) painful: Personality-based heterogeneity in consumption responses to economic hardship Social Psychological and Personality Science, first published online April 24, 2023; Gladstone, J. J.,
et al.
Financial uncertainty and health insurance choices: The effect of job and income uncertainty on the uptake of voluntary deductibles and supplemental health insurance Tilburg University; Schoppenhauer, K. J. M.
Consumer confidence in the age of investment services Erasmus University Rotterdam; Ivanciuc, A.