Falling Coverage Rates: One Reason Government Surveys May Not Show a Rise in Poverty
By: Dean Baker Sunday April 8, 2012 7:39 am
In a NYT Economic blogpost
Jason DeParle ponders the fact that government surveys are not showing
much increase in poverty, even though we know there are many people
experiencing long periods of unemployment and many forms of government
assistance have been cut back. One possible explanation is that people
in poverty and extreme poverty are less likely to be covered by the
survey.
My colleague, John Schmitt, found clear evidence of a coverage problem in comparing employment rates as
shown in the 2000 Census and the overlapping months of the Current
Population Survey (CPS). This is a useful check on the accuracy of the
CPS, the main survey for measuring both unemployment and poverty, since
the Census has near universal reach with a response rate of close to 99
percent. By comparison, the coverage rate for the CPS is close to 88
percent.
Monday, April 9, 2012
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