1 / 20

An Introduction to the U.S. Demographic System

An Introduction to the U.S. Demographic System. John F. Long www.usademography.com. Introduction. U.S. demographic system evolved over time: Rough guesswork in colonial times Decennial censuses since 1790 Birth and death registration in the early 1900’s

braden
Download Presentation

An Introduction to the U.S. Demographic System

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. An Introduction to the U.S. Demographic System John F. Long www.usademography.com

  2. Introduction • U.S. demographic system evolved over time: • Rough guesswork in colonial times • Decennial censuses since 1790 • Birth and death registration in the early 1900’s • Estimates and projections in the last half of the 20th century • “Integrated” Accounting system implicit in the American Community Survey

  3. Inventory vs. Accounting • Inventory Approach • Population Stocks • Decennial Census Enumeration • Independent Counts • Mechanism of Population Change Ignored • Accounting Approach • Population Flows • Tracking of Components of Population Change • Estimates and Projections • Demographic Analysis • Combined Approach

  4. Decennial Census Counts An Inventory Approach

  5. U.S. Population: Census Counts from 1790 and Projections for 1860-1930 Source: U.S Census Bureau, Decennial Censuses 1790-1930 ; Abraham Lincoln, “Annual Message to Congress: December 1, 1862”.

  6. Need for an Accounting System • To estimate population change between censuses • To explain population change • To aid government and business policy and planning • To project future population • To plan and evaluate censuses

  7. Births Migration Migration Deaths

  8. Basic Demographic Accounting Px+1t+1 = Pxt + B (if x<0) - Dx + Ix - Ox where, Pxt is the population age x in a given place at time t B is the number of births in a given place between t and t+1 Dx is then number of deaths age x in a given place between t and t+1 Ix is the number of in-migrants age x to a given place between t and t+1 Ox is the number of out-migrants age x from a given place between t and t+1.

  9. Development of Demographic Accounting Approach • Nationwide birth and death registration began in the early 1900’s • Estimates and projections for states, counties, and places developed in the last half of the 20th century • Demographic Analysis became a key tool to evaluate decennial census quality • “Integrated” accounting system implicit in the American Community Survey for the 21st century

  10. Elements of US Demographic Accounting System • Master Address Files • Decennial Censuses • Birth and Death Registers (NCHS) • Immigration Data (INS & ACS) • Domestic Migration Data (IRS) • Adjustments and Corrections • American Community Survey

  11. Master Address Files • Importance of tying population to geography • Address canvassing prior to census year • Corrections during census operation • Updates between censuses • Provides “frame” for census and survey operations • Issues with permits, construction, demolitions, and conversions • Addresses vs. physical location.

  12. Decennial Census Counts • Base on which all of system is built • Provides ground truth check of accounting system • Key demographic data collected: location, relationship, sex, age, race, Hispanic origin

  13. Measure Death and Birth Components • Birth Registration • Ties birth to place of residence of mother • Race data is for parents not child – and uses older classification system • Completeness of registration is assumed • Death registration • Ties death to place of residence or last address? • Race is not self reported • Completeness and speed of tabulation is an issue

  14. Estimating International Migration Flows • Legal immigration • Difference between residence change and legal status change • Problems with place of intended residence • Completeness issues • Legal Emigration • Lack of data collection when leaving the country • Problems of using other countries data • Illegal immigration • Methods are often indirect • Question of census coverage • Alternative data from the American Community Survey

  15. Measuring Domestic Migration • Use of matched IRS returns to provide county in and out migration • Coverage of IRS data • Assigning age, race, hispanic origin, and sex data • Timing of data collection and tabulation

  16. Develop Yearly Population Estimates and Controls • Develop annual national, state, county, and place data for funding and other administrative uses • Provide county age, race, sex, Hispanic origin controls for the American Community Survey • Issues of timeliness and accuracy of input data

  17. Problems with an Accounting System • Errors in specifying the system can multiply over time • Errors in data input can cause faulty results • Structure of the system may change over time

  18. Factory Extra Inventories Shipping Fired Boss More Overtime Pay !

  19. Reconcile with new decennial census data • Need to recalibrate estimates from demographic accounting with decennial census results • Census coverage error vs. population estimation error • Incorporating “error of closure” corrections into new estimates.

  20. Reconciling Inventory and Accounting Systems • Audit of the current demographic accounts • Differences with a Population Register • Potential inconsistencies in the system • Future Hazards and Opportunities

More Related