U.S. Department of Commerce
U.S. Census Bureau
Annual Social and Economic Supplement
to the Current Population Survey
OMB Control Number 0607-0354
Part A - Justification
Question 1. Necessity of the Information Collection
The purpose of this request for review is to obtain clearance for the Annual Social and Economic Supplement (ASEC), which we will conduct in conjunction with the February, March, and April Current Population Survey (CPS). Congressional passage of the State Children’s Health Insurance Program, or Title XXI, led to a mandate from Congress in 1999 that the sample size for the CPS, and specifically the Annual Social and Economic Supplement (ASEC), be increased to a level whereby more reliable estimates can be derived for the number of individuals participating in this program at the state level. By administering the ASEC in February, March, and April, we have been able to achieve this goal.
The U.S. Census Bureau has conducted this supplement annually for over 60 years. It is authorized by Title 13, United States Code, Section 182, and Title 29, United States Code, Sections 1-9. The Census Bureau and the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) sponsor this supplement.
The proposed supplement, as it will appear in the CPS instrument, is shown in Attachment A. The instrument questionnaire contains the same items that were in the 2012 ASEC instrument, with the exception described here:
Questions on current public assistance (Q96 – Q97) are no longer included.
This request also asks for clearance for the forms that are used in conjunction with the ASEC supplement. These forms include:
Form No. |
Description |
Attachment |
CPS-580 (ASEC)(L) |
Advance letter sent to each household in sample. |
F |
CPS-580 (L)SP |
Same letter as above translated into Spanish. |
G |
CPS-676 |
Pamphlet with information from the ASEC. |
H |
CPS-676(SP) |
Same pamphlet as above but in Spanish. |
I |
These forms are made available so that the respondents will have a clear understanding of the purpose and uses of the CPS ASEC supplement.
Question 2. Needs and Uses
The ASEC can be divided into five logical series of questions as follows:
a. Work Experience (See Attachment A: Items Q29A-Q4788)
The work experience items provide a unique measure of the dynamic nature of the labor force as viewed over a 1-year period. These items produce statistics that show movements in and out of the labor force by measuring the number of periods of unemployment experienced by people, the number of different employers worked for during the year, the principal reasons for unemployment, and part-/full-time attachment to the labor force. We can make indirect measurements of discouraged workers and others with a casual attachment to the labor market.
b. Personal Income and Noncash Benefits (See Attachment A: Items Q48A-Q52C4, Q56a-Q7324, Q74a, Q74b, SHI2-SHI25)
The ASEC supplement collects data on a number of personal income and noncash benefit sources as listed below:
Sources of Income
Earned Income
Unemployment and Workers' Compensation
Social Security and Supplemental Security Income
Public Assistance and Veterans Payments
Survivor Benefits and Disability Income
Retirement and Pensions
Interest, Dividends, and Property Income
Education Assistance
Child Support and Alimony
Regular Financial Assistance and Other Income
Health Insurance and Employer Pension Plan
The income data from the ASEC are used by social planners, economists, government officials, and market researchers to gauge the economic well being of the country as a whole and selected population groups of interest. Government planners and researchers use these data to monitor and evaluate the effectiveness of various assistance programs. Market researchers use these data to identify and isolate potential customers. Social planners use these data to forecast economic conditions and to identify special groups that seem to be especially sensitive to economic fluctuations. Economists use ASEC data to determine the effects of various economic forces, such as inflation, recession, recovery, and so on, and their differential effects on various population groups. A prime statistic of interest is the classification of people in poverty and how this measurement has changed over time for various groups. Researchers evaluate ASEC income data not only to determine poverty levels but also to determine whether government programs are reaching eligible households.
The 2013 health insurance items (as seen in Attachment A) are described below:
Item Numbers Type of Health Coverage
SHI2-SHI6 Health insurance plans provided through current or former employer.
SHI7-SHI10 Coverage of a private health insurance plan purchased directly.
SHI11-SHI12 Coverage on any health insurance plan, including that of a nonhousehold member.
SHI13-SHI20a Government-sponsored coverage, including medicare, medicaid, and State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP).
SHIC1-SHIC3 State-specific coverage for low-income uninsured individuals.
SHI24-SHI25 Current health status of family members.
c. Household Noncash Benefits (See Attachment A: Items Q80-Q94)
These items collect data on participation in the school lunch, public housing, food stamp, and fuel assistance programs.
The questions (Q80 and Q83) concerning school lunches identify households with children who participated in the Federal School Lunch Program during the previous year. These data allow for more effective analyses of the program and, along with the food stamp data, show where the client groups of the two food nutrition programs overlap.
The questions (Q85 and Q86) on public housing identify households that are owned by a housing authority or other public agency and households where a government agency is paying for part of the rent. These data allow for more effective analysis of public housing programs and measure the extent of participation among eligible families. The question (SPHS8) determines the specific source of housing assistance.
The questions (Q87 through Q94) on food stamps identify which household members received food stamps during the previous year. These data, along with the detailed supplemental income data, allow for a more comprehensive evaluation of the food stamp program and measure the extent of participation among eligible families.
Items Q93-Q94 provide a measurement of the number of households that have received government fuel assistance since October 1 of the previous year, and the amount of such assistance. State agencies provide the only other available data relevant to the fuel assistance program in the form of summary counts of households receiving this type of assistance, cross-classified by their annual income levels. The ASEC is the only current data set capable of cross-tabulating fuel assistance recipients/nonrecipients with their socioeconomic characteristics. This allows analysts to determine whether funds are reaching eligible households.
d. Supplemental Poverty Measures
Beginning with the 2010 ASEC, questions appeared to implement the modernized poverty measure, and can be divided into four parts: 1) Property value and presence of mortgage; 2) Medical expenditures; 3) Child support paid; and 4) Child care expenses paid. The new items are identified on the questionnaire by their names listed below:
Medical expenditures - HIPREM, OTCMEDAMT, MEDAMT, COTCAMT, CMEDAMT
Property value/presence of mortgage - VALPROP, MORTYN, SMORTYN
Child Care Expenses Paid - CCFREQ, CCAMT, CCNUMPAY, CCTOT, CCEST
Child Support Paid - CSPCHILD, CSPWHO, CSPREQ, CSPAMT
This information is used to produce a modernized poverty measure. Many agencies use poverty data from the Census Bureau, including the Department of Health and Human Services, the Department of Housing and Urban Development, and the Department of Agriculture. Each of these agencies, and many more, are anxious for the Census Bureau to start releasing improved poverty measures so they can ascertain how such a measure can enhance their ability to provide assistance and services to those in need. Proposed Congressional legislation specifically directs agencies, which publish documents based on the traditional (current) poverty measure, to also produce information based on this modernized poverty measure to the fullest extent possible.
e. Migration (See Attachment A: Items MIGSAM-NX1OTH)
The migration questions refer to one year ago and collect information on residency including state, county, and city. Private and government analysts use migration statistics from this supplement to determine the mobility of the country's population. Specifically, it is important to determine which areas are losing/gaining in population over the decade and to monitor the population shifts between regions and between cities, suburbs, and nonmetropolitan areas of the country. These migration patterns provide researchers the ability to predict future population decline/growth and general socioeconomic conditions for these areas.
Information quality is an integral part of the pre-dissemination review of the information disseminated by the Census Bureau (fully described in the Census Bureau’s Information Quality Guidelines). Information quality is also integral to the information collections conducted by the Census Bureau and is incorporated into the clearance process required by the Paperwork Reduction Act.
Question 3. Use of Information Technology
We deem the use of personal visits and telephone interviews, using computer-assisted
telephone interviewing and computer-assisted personal interviewing, the most appropriate collection methodology given existing available information technology. We are examining the Internet as a reporting option, but have not yet determined whether the Internet is feasible for a complex demographic survey such as the CPS.
Question 4. Efforts to Identify Duplication
The ASEC and the Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP) contain similar content, but the ASEC remains a vital data source. It provides a database for measuring economic activity dating back to 1947. The ASEC is often matched to the other CPS supplements conducted in adjacent months, thereby greatly enhancing the utility of those datasets at minimal cost to the sponsors without increasing respondent burden. ASEC provides a higher level of statistical reliability than SIPP because the SIPP sample size is smaller than the CPS. However, SIPP collects considerably more
detail on program benefits and assets, which enables measurements of wealth and well-being. The ASEC focuses on accurate cross-sectional data (providing a clear snapshot), while SIPP focuses on accurate longitudinal data (providing a moving picture).
A number of independent surveys and supplements to the CPS have contained selected income and noncash benefit items. Until the implementation of the SIPP, however, no other data source was available that provided the depth and scope of information of the kind described in Section 2.
Question 5. Minimizing Burden
This collection does not involve small businesses or other small entities.
Question 6. Consequences of Less Frequent Collection
We collect the ASEC annually to detect shifts in household composition, labor force activity, migration patterns, and income levels. These measurements are very sensitive to the general economic climate, and to collect these data less frequently would mask some trends and disrupt time series analyses.
Question 7. Special Circumstances
There are no special circumstances. We collect the CPS data in a manner that is consistent with the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) guidelines.
Question 8. Consultations Outside the Agency
We have consulted the following persons concerning the development of the ASEC supplement:
Kathy Porter Joseph Piacentini
Center on Budget and Policy Priorities Aetna
(202) 408-1080 (203) 273-2966
Katherine Furlong Joan Turek
Council of Economic Department of Health and Human
Advisors Services
(202) 395-5062 (202) 690-5965
Mike Horrigan Anne Polivka
Bureau of Labor Statistics Department of Labor
Department of Labor (202) 691-7395
(202) 691-5907
Howard Hayghe Phil Rones
Bureau of Labor Statistics Bureau of Labor Statistics
Department of Labor Department of Labor
(202) 691-6378 (202) 691-7802
Gordon Fisher Robert Patton
Department of Health and Human Services Western Washington University
(202) 690-6143 (206) 733-8400
Jack Schmoulowitz Howard Iams
Social Security Administration Social Security Administration
(410) 965-0179 (202) 358-6217
The result of these consultations is the final set of questions. In addition, a statement soliciting comments for improving this supplement is prominently placed in all Census Bureau publications that cite ASEC data and a similar statement is included in the technical documentation that accompanies the ASEC microdata files.
We also published a notice of our intent to ask the ASEC supplement questions in the September 21, 2012, edition of the Federal Register (77FR, pg 58510-58511). The notice invited comments on the necessity and practicality of the data collection and comments on various other aspects of the proposed collection. We received no comments in response to the post.
Finally, the advance letters (see Attachments D and F) provide respondents with an address at the Census Bureau and at the OMB to which they can submit general comments on the survey, specifically those regarding respondent burden.
Question 9. Paying Respondents
We do not pay the CPS respondents or provide them with gifts.
Question 10. Assurance of Confidentiality
We will collect these supplemental data in compliance with the Privacy Act of 1974. Each sample household will receive an advance letter approximately one week before the start of the initial CPS interview (see Attachment D). The letter includes the information required by the Privacy Act of 1974, informs each respondent of the
voluntary nature of the survey, and states the estimated time required for participating in the survey.
Additionally, interviewers must ask each respondent if he/she received the advance letter and, if not, will provide a copy of the letter to each respondent and allow sufficient time for him/her to read its contents. Upon request, interviewers also provide households with the pamphlet on "How the Census Bureau Keeps Your Information Strictly Confidential," which reaffirms the confidentiality assurances and mentions the Census Bureau's past performance in assuring confidentiality (see Attachment E). All information given by respondents to Census Bureau employees is held in strict confidence under Title 13, United States Code, Section 9. Each Census Bureau employee has taken an oath to that effect and is subject to a jail penalty and/or a substantial fine if he/she discloses any information given to him/her.
Question 11. Justification for Sensitive Questions
The ASEC supplement does not include questions of a sensitive nature.
Question 12. Estimate of Hour Burden
The total estimated respondent burden is 36,400 hours for fiscal year 2013. We base this estimate on previously conducted ASEC supplements and previous use of automated interviewing procedures in the CPS. The actual interview time is dependent upon the size of the household.
For the ASEC, there will be approximately 78,000 households interviewed with one respondent per household. Each interview will take approximately 28 minutes; therefore, the total estimated respondent burden is 36,400 hours for fiscal year 2013. See Section B for a size breakdown of the various segments of the sample.
Question 13. Estimate of Cost Burden
There are no costs to the respondents other than that of their time to respond.
Question 14. Cost to Federal Government
We estimate the cost to the government of the CPS program to be $94 million in fiscal year 2013. The costs are to be borne by the Census Bureau, the BLS, and other government agencies, if involved. The estimated cost of including the ASEC questions is $2 million in fiscal year 2013 and is borne by the Census Bureau and the BLS.
Question 15. Reason for Change in Burden
There is no change in burden.
Question 16. Project Schedule
We will conduct the CPS, of which this supplement is a part, during the months of February, March and April. Processing of this supplement will commence in May. The Public Use file will be released in September. We will publish advance reports based on the CPS data in September. Final reports will follow through the middle of the following year.
March ASEC Publications
The following publications are released annually based on the ASEC data:
Income, Poverty, and Health Insurance Coverage in the United States
Alternative Income Estimates in the United States
c) America’s Families and Living Arrangements
d) Geographic Mobility
e) Educational Attainment (since 1947).
f) In addition to the Census Bureau publications listed above, the BLS has published yearly results from the ASEC supplement (educational attainment, marital history, and work experience) in news releases, articles in the Monthly Labor Review, and special bulletins.
Question 17. Request to Not Display Expiration Date
The ASEC Supplement is administered as part of the CPS monthly interview. However, this supplement (as well as all the CPS supplements) bears an OMB control number and expiration date which is different from the basic CPS interview. The OMB control number and expiration date for the CPS basic interview is included in the advance letter we give respondents (see Attachment F). Because of these difficulties and anticipated respondent confusion involved with expressing a separate control number and expiration date to respondents for the supplement questions, we do not wish to display the OMB control number and expiration date for the CPS ASEC Supplement.
Question 18. Exceptions to the Certification
There are no exceptions to the certification.
File Type | application/msword |
File Title | Annual Demographic Survey - March 97 |
Author | Bureau of the Census |
Last Modified By | Thomas J Smith |
File Modified | 2012-11-02 |
File Created | 2012-11-02 |