Panel Paper: The Role of CPS Nonresponse on the Level and Trend in Poverty

Friday, November 7, 2014 : 10:55 AM
Isleta (Convention Center)

*Names in bold indicate Presenter

James P. Ziliak, University of Kentucky, Charles Hokayem, U.S. Census Bureau and Christopher R. Bollinger, Food and Drug Administration
The Current Population Survey Annual Social and Economic Supplement (ASEC) serves as the data source for official income, poverty, and inequality statistics in the United States.  There is a concern that the rise in nonresponse to earnings questions could deteriorate data quality and distort estimates of these important metrics.  We use a dataset of internal ASEC records matched to Social Security Detailed Earnings Records (DER) to study the impact of earnings nonresponse on estimates of poverty from 1997-2008.  Our analysis does not treat the administrative data as the "truth"; instead, we rely on information from both administrative and survey data.  We compare a "full response" poverty rate that assumes all ASEC respondents provided earnings data to the official poverty rate to gauge the nonresponse bias. On average, we find the nonresponse bias is about 1.0 percentage point.

Full Paper: