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TRANSCRIPT
What's Available
from the
Survey of Income
and
Program Participation
March 1997
SIPP
Survey of Income and Program Participation
March 1997
WHAT'S AVAILABLE from the Survey of Income and Program Participation?
"WHAT'S AVAILABLE" is a document prepared annually updating the availability of SIPP products in printed andelectronic media.
The following papers and reports are now available:
SIPP Working Papers Nos. 1-224.
Compilation of Papers presented in the SIPP sessions at the American Statistical Association Meetings in August1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, and 1990.
Published reports in Current Population Reports Series P-70, P-23, and H-121.
"Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP) Quality Profile," a summary of what is known about thesources and magnitudes of errors, both sampling and nonsampling, in estimates based on SIPP.
Individual and Families in Transition: Understanding Change Through Longitudinal Data. Papers presented atthe Social Science Research Council Conference in Annapolis, MD, March 16-18, 1988.
A special issue of the "Journal of Economic and Social Measurement" containing the proceedings of a conferencesponsored by the National Science Foundation, the Social Science Research Council and the Census Bureau.
"Food Stamp Research: Results from the Income Survey Development Program and the Promise of the Surveyof Income and Program Participation."
SIPP USERS GUIDE, a description of the survey and how to use the electronic files.
SIPP PUBLIC USE MICRODATA FILES - 1984-1993 PANELS.
Data files are available through Customer Services Branch, Administrative and Customer Services Division(301-457-4100). Reports and working papers are available through Microdata Access Branch, Administrative andCustomer Services Division, (301) 457-1139. Ordering information is found on the last page.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
SIPP Working Papers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
List of Working Papers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Author Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Subject Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
Compilation of ASA Papers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
1984 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
1985 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
1986 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
1987 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
1988 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
1989 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
1990 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
SIPP Quality Profile . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
Journal of Economic and Social Measurement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
Food Stamp Research . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
Individuals and Families in Transition:Understanding Change Through Longitudinal Data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
SIPP Public-Use Files . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58
SIPP-On-Call . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69
Topical Modules . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70
SIPP User Notes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75
Current Population Reports, Series P-70 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 98Current Population Reports, Series P-23 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101Current Population Reports: Consumer Income P-60 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102Current Housing Reports Series H-121 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103
Customer Service (Census Bureau) Order Form . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104
GPO Order Form . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110
WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
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SIPP Working PapersList of Working Papers
(Old #’s) New #’s
(8401) 1 (Update No. 1, Revised 12/85) "An Overview of the Survey of Income andProgram Participation," D. NELSON, D. B. MCMILLEN, and D. KASPRZYK (Census Bureau)
(8501) 2 "The Survey of Income and Program Participation: Uses andApplications," K. S. SHORT (Census Bureau)
(8502) 3 "Applications of a Matched File Linking the Bureau of the Census Surveyof Income and Program Participation and Economic Data," S. HABER(The George Washington University)
(8503) 4 "Using the Survey of Income and Program Participation for Research onthe Older Population," D. B. MCMILLEN, C. M. TAEUBER, and J. MARKS (Census Bureau)
(8504) 5 "Summary of the Content of the 1984 Panel of the Survey of Income andProgram Participation," D. T. FRANKEL (Census Bureau)
(8505) 6 "Enhancing Data from the Survey of Income and Program Participationwith Data from Economic Censuses and Surveys," D. K. SATER(Census Bureau)
(8506) 7 "Methodologies for Imputing Longitudinal Survey Items," V. J. HUGGINS, L. WEIDMAN, and M. E. SAMUHEL(Census Bureau)
(8507) 8 "New Household Survey and the CPS: A Look at Labor ForceDifferences," P. M. RYSCAVAGE (Census Bureau) and J. E. BREGGER (Bureau of Labor Statistics)
(8601) 9 "Some Aspects of SIPP," compiled and edited by R. A. HERRIOT and D. KASPRZYK (Census Bureau)
(8602) 10 "Nonsampling Error Issues in the SIPP," G. KALTON (University ofMichigan), D. B. MCMILLEN, and D. KASPRZYK (Census Bureau)
(8603) 11 "An Investigation of Model-Based Imputation Procedures Using Data fromthe Income Survey Development Program," V. J. HUGGINS and L. WEIDMAN (Census Bureau)
SIPP Working Paper List Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
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(Old #’s) New #’s
(8604) 12 "Food Stamp Participation: A Comparison of SIPP with AdministrativeRecords, S. CARLSON and R. DALRYMPLE (Food and NutritionService)
(8605) 13 "SIPP Longitudinal Household Estimation for the Proposed LongitudinalDefinition," L. R. ERNST (Census Bureau)
(8606) 14 "A Comparison of Seven Imputation Procedures for the 1979 Panel of theIncome Survey Development Program," V. J. HUGGINS (CensusBureau)
(8607) 15 "An Investigation of the Imputation of Monthly Earnings for the Survey ofIncome and Program Participation Using Regression Models," V. J. HUGGINS and L. WEIDMAN (Census Bureau)
(8608) 16 "Evaluation of Training Materials and Methods for the Survey of Incomeand Program Participation," M. HOLT (Survey Research Consultant)
(8609) 17 "Patterns of Household Composition and Family Status Change," C. F. CITRO (ASA/Census Research Fellow), and H. W. WATTS(Department of Economics, Columbia University)
(8610) 18 "Composite Estimation for SIPP:A Preliminary Report," R. P. CHAKRABARTY (Census Bureau)
(8611) 19 "Longitudinal Household Concepts in SIPP: Preliminary Results," C. F. CITRO (ASA/Census Research Fellow), D. J. HERNANDEZ, andR. A. HERRIOT (Census Bureau)
(8612) 20 "Following Children in the Survey of Income and Program Participation," E. K. MCARTHUR, and K. S. SHORT (Census Bureau)
(8613) 21 "SIPP Labor Force Transitions: Problems and Promises," P. RYSCAVAGE and K. S. SHORT (Census Bureau)
(8614) 22 "Augmenting Data Reported in the Survey of Income and ProgramParticipation with Administrative Record Data--A Brief Discussion," D. K. SATER (Census Bureau)
(8701) 23 "Tracking Persons Over Time," A. C. JEAN and E. K. MCARTHUR(Census Bureau)
SIPP Working Paper List Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
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(Old #’s) New #’s
(8702) 24 "Preliminary Data from the SIPP 1983-84 Longitudinal Research File," J. F. CODER, D. BURKHEAD, A. FELDMAN-HARKINS, and J. MCNEIL (Census Bureau)
(8703) 25 "Work Experience Data from SIPP," P. RYSCAVAGE and A. FELDMAN-HARKINS (Census Bureau)
(8704) 26 "The Treatment of Person-Wave Nonresponse in Longitudinal Surveys,"G. KALTON, J. LEPKOWSKI, S. HEERINGA, TING-KWONGLIN, and M. E. MILLER (Survey Research Center, University ofMichigan)
(8705) 27 "SIPP: Filling Data Gaps on the Poverty and Social Welfare Fronts," P. RYSCAVAGE (Census Bureau)
(8706) 28 "Response Errors in Labor Surveys: Comparisons of Self and Proxy," D. HILL (University of Michigan)
(8707) 29 "Differences Between SIPP and Food and Nutrition Service Program Dataon Child Nutrition and WIC Program Participation," L. KU and R. DALRYMPLE (Food and Nutrition Service, U.S. Department ofAgriculture)
(8708) 30 "Quality Profile for the Survey of Income and Program Participation," K. KING, R. PETRONI, and R. SINGH (Census Bureau)
(8709) 31 "Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP) Sample Loss and theEfforts to Reduce It," D. NELSON, C. BOWIE, and A. WALKER(Census Bureau)
(8710) 32 "The Impact of Imputation Procedures on Distributional Characteristics ofthe Low Income Population," P. DOYLE (Mathematica Policy Research),and R. DALRYMPLE (Food and Nutrition Service, U.S. Department ofAgriculture)
(8711) 33 "Job Tenure, Lifetime Work Interruptions and Wage Differentials," J. MCNEIL, E. LAMAS (Census Bureau), and S. HABER (The GeorgeWashington University)
(8712) 34 "Measuring the Bias in Gross Flows in the Presence of Auto-CorrelatedResponse Errors," D. HUBBLE (Census Bureau), and D. JUDKINS(Westat, Inc.)
SIPP Working Paper List Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
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(Old #’s) New #’s
(8713) 35 "Investigation of Possible Causes of Transition Patterns from SIPP," L. WEIDMAN (Census Bureau)
(8714) 36 "Household and Income Sources: Monthly Averages for 1984," J. MOORMAN (Census Bureau)
(8715) 37 "Creating SIPP Longitudinal Files Using OSIRIS IV," M. SERVAIS(University of Michigan)
(8716) 38 "Transition In and Out of Poverty: New Data from the Survey of Incomeand Program Participation," P. RUGGLES (The Urban Institute), and R. WILLIAMS (Congressional Budget Office)
(8717) 39 "On Their Own: The Self-Employed and Others in Private Business," S. HABER (The George Washington University), E. LAMAS (CensusBureau), and J. LICHTENSTEIN (U.S. Small Business Administration)
(8718) 40 "Factors Associated with Household Net Worth," E. LAMAS and J. MCNEIL (Census Bureau)
(8719) 41 "Exploring Changes in Health Care Coverage Using the SIPP LongitudinalResearch File," D. BURKHEAD and A. FELDMAN and HARKINS(Census Bureau)
(8720) 42 "The Analysis of Geographical Mobility and Life Events with the SIPP," D.DAHMANN and E. MCARTHUR (Census Bureau)
(8721) 43 "A Review of the Use of Administrative Records in the Survey of Incomeand Program Participation," C. BOWIE and D. KASPRZYK (CensusBureau)
(8722) 44 "Survey of Income and Program Participation Update," D. KASPRZYK(Census Bureau)
(8723) 45 "Measuring Poverty with the SIPP and the CPS," R. WILLIAMS(Congressional Budget Office)
(8724) 46 "The Statistical Invisible Minority Aged," C. TAEUBER (Census Bureau),and E. ATTAH (Atlanta University)
(8725) 47 "An Analysis of the SIPP Asset and Liability Feedback Experiment," E. LAMAS and J. MCNEIL (Census Bureau)
SIPP Working Paper List Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
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(Old #’s) New #’s
(8801) 48 "The Impact of the Unit of Analysis on Measures of Serial MultipleProgram Participation," P. DOYLE and S. K. LONG (MathematicaPolicy Research, Inc.)
(8802) 49 "Short-Term Fluctuations in Income and Their Impacts on theCharacteristics of the Low-Income Population: New Data from the Surveyof Income and Program Participation," P. RUGGLES (The UrbanInstitute)
(8803) 50 "Residential Mobility of One-Person Households," J. WITTE and H. LAHMANN (German Institute for Economic Research)
(8804) 51 "Year-Apart Estimates of Household Net Worth from the Survey ofIncome and Program Participation," J. MCNEIL and E. LAMAS (CensusBureau)
(8805) 52 "Measuring Poverty and Crises: A Comparison of Annual and SubannualAccounting Periods Using the Survey of Income and ProgramParticipation," M. DAVID and J. FITZGERALD (Institute for Researchon Poverty)
(8806) 53 "Using Administrative Record Data to Evaluate the Quality of SurveyEstimates," J. MOORE and K. MARQUIS (Census Bureau)
(8807) 54 "The Wealth of the Aged and Nonaged, 1984," D. RADNER (SocialSecurity Administration)
(8808) 55 "Examining the Dynamics of Health Insurance Loss: A Tale of TwoCohorts, A. C. MONHEIT and C. L. SCHUR (National Center forHealth Services Research)
(8809) 56 "The Dynamics of Medicaid Enrollment," P. FARLEY-SHORT, J. A. CANTOR and A. C. MONHEIT (National Center for HealthServices Research)
(8810) 57 "The Discouraged Worker Effect: A Reappraisal Using Spell DurationData, A. MARTINI (University of Wisconsin-Madison)
(8811) 58 "Income as a Proxy for the Economic Status of the Elderly," D. J. CHOLLET and R. B. FRIEDLAND (Employee Benefit ResearchInstitute)
SIPP Working Paper List Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
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(Old #’s) New #’s
(8812) 59 "The SIPP: Data from the Social Security Administration's 1987 AnnualStatistical Supplement."
(8813) 60 "Participation in Industrial Training Programs," S. HABER (The GeorgeWashington University)
(8814) 61 "A Methodological Study Using Administrative Records: The SpecialFrames Study of the Income Survey Development Program," W. J. LOGAN (Social Security Administration), D. KASPRZYK andR. CAVANAUGH (Census Bureau)
(8815) 62 "The Effect of Income Taxation on Labor Supply When Deductions areEndogenous, R. K. TRIEST (The Johns Hopkins University)
(8816) 63 "A Comparison of Gross Changes in Labor Force Status from SIPP andCPS," P. RYSCAVAGE and A. FELDMAN-HARKINS (CensusBureau)
(8817) 64 "How are the Elderly Housed? New Data from the 1984 Survey of Incomeand Program Participation," A. GOLDSTEIN (Census Bureau)
(8818) 65 "Welfare Recipient as Observed in the SIPP," J. CODER (Census Bureau)and P. RUGGLES (The Urban Institute)
(8819) 66 "Reservation Wages and Subsequent Acceptance Wages of UnemployedPersons, P. RYSCAVAGE (Census Bureau)
(8820) 67 "Selected References from the Income Survey Development Program(ISDP) and Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP)."
(8821) 68 "Training, Wage Growth, Firm Size," S. HABER (The GeorgeWashington University) and E. LAMAS (Census Bureau)
(8822) 69 "Defining and Measuring Nonmetro Poverty: Results from the Survey ofIncome and Program Participation," R. HOPPE (Economic ResearchService, U.S. Department of Agriculture)
(8823) 70 "Nonresponse Adjustment Methods for Demographic Surveys at the U.S.Bureau of the Census," R. SINGH and R. PETRONI (Census Bureau)
SIPP Working Paper List Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
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(Old #’s) New #’s
(8824) 71 "Testing Telephone Interviewing in the Survey of Income and ProgramParticipation and Some Early Results," S. DURANT and P. GBUR(Census Bureau)
(8825) 72 "Excluding Sample that Misses Some Interviews from SIPP LongitudinalEstimates," L. R. ERNST and D. GILLMAN (Census Bureau)
(8826) 73 "The Employment of Mothers and the Prevention of Poverty," M. HILL(University of Michigan) and H. HARTMANN (Rutgers University)
(8827) 74 "Using Administrative Record Data to Describe SIPP Response Errors," J. MOORE and K. MARQUIS (Census Bureau)
(8828) 75 "A Look at Welfare Dependency Using the 1984 SIPP Panel File," J. CODER, D. BURKHEAD, and A. FELDMAN-HARKINS (CensusBureau)
(8829) 76 "Census Bureau Microdata: Providing Useful Research Data WhileProtecting the Anonymity of Respondents," G. GATES (Census Bureau)
(8830) 77 "The Survey of Income and Program Participation: An Overview andDiscussion of Research Issues," D. KASPRZYK (Census Bureau)
(8901) 78 "Quality of SIPP Estimates," R. P. SINGH, L. WEIDMAN, and G. SHAPIRO (Census Bureau)
(8902) 79 "Two Notes on Sampling Variance Estimates from the 1984 SIPPPublic-Use Files," B. BYE and S. J. GALLICCHIO (Social SecurityAdministration)
(8903) 80 "Longitudinal vs. Retrospective Measures of Work Experience," P. RYSCAVAGE and J. CODER (Census Bureau)
(8904) 81 "Analyzing the Characteristics of Blacks: A Comparison of Data fromSIPP and CPS," R. FARLEY and L. J. NEIDERT (University ofMichigan)
(8905) 82 "Enhanced Demographic-Economic Data Sets,"R. HERRIOT, C. BOWIE, D. KASPRZYK, and S. HABER (Census Bureau)
SIPP Working Paper List Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
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(Old #’s) New #’s
(8906) 83 "Reflections on the Income Estimates from the Initial Panel of the Surveyof Income and Program Participation (SIPP)," D. VAUGHAN (SocialSecurity Administration)
(8907) 84 "Measuring Spells of Unemployment and Their Outcomes," P. RYSCAVAGE (Census Bureau)
(8908) 85 "Welfare Dependency and its Causes: Determinants of the Duration ofWelfare Spells," P. RUGGLES (The Urban Institute)
(8909) 86 "Measuring the Duration of Poverty Spells," P. RUGGLES (The UrbanInstitute) and R. WILLIAMS (Congressional Budget Office)
(8910) 87 "Methods of Processing Unit Data Longitudinally on the SIPP," K. SMITH (Congressional Budget Office)
(8911) 88 "Composite Estimation for SIPP Annual Estimates," R. P. CHAKRABARTY (Census Bureau)
(8912) 89 "Research and Evaluation Conducted on the Survey of Income andProgram Participation," R. PETRONI, T. CARMODY, and V. HUGGINS (Census Bureau)
(8913) 90 "A Poisson Model of Response and Procedural Error Analysis of SIPPReinterview Data," D. HILL (University of Michigan)
(8914) 91 "The Economic Resources of the Elderly," S. CRYSTAL and D. SHEA(Rutgers University)
(8915) 92 "Multivariate Analysis by Users of SIPP Micro-Data Files" R. P. CHAKRABARTY (Census Bureau)
(8916) 93 "A Resource-Based Model of Living Arrangements among the UnmarriedElderly," J. E. MUTCHLER and J. A. BURR (University of Buffalo)
(8917) 94 "Measuring Household Change at the Individual Level Using Data fromSIPP, " A. SPEARE, JR. and R. AVERY (Brown University)
(8918) 95 "The Effect of Child Care Costs on Married Women's Labor ForceParticipation, R. CONNELLY (Bowdoin College)
SIPP Working Paper List Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
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(Old #’s) New #’s
(8919) 96 "Income and Assets of Social Security Beneficiaries by Type of Benefit," S.GRAD (Social Security Administration)
(8920) 97 "Development and Evaluation of a Survey-Based Type of BenefitClassification for the Social Security Program," D. VAUGHAN (SocialSecurity Administration)
(8921) 98 "Wave Seam Effects in the SIPP," N. YOUNG (The Urban Institute)
(8922) 99 "Components of Longitudinal Household Change for 1984-1985: AnEvaluation of National Estimates from the SIPP," D. J. HERNANDEZ(Census Bureau)
(8923) 100 "Database Design for Large-Scale, Complex Data," M. H. DAVID and A. ROBBIN (University of Wisconsin)
(8924) 101 "Measuring the Frequency and Consequences of Job Separations: Datafrom the Survey of Income and Program Participation," J. MCNEIL andE. LAMAS (Census Bureau)
(8925) 102 "The Regular Receipt of Child Support: A Multi-Step Process," J. PETERSON and C. NORD (Child Trends, Inc.)
(8926) 103 "The Potential for Comparative Panel Research Using Data from theSurvey of Income and Program Participation and the GermanSocio-Economic Panel, J. C. WITTE (Harvard University)
(8927) 104 "Offer Arrivals Versus Acceptance: Interpreting DemographicReemployment Patterns in the Search Framework," T. J. DEVINE (ThePennsylvania State University)
(8928) 105 "Findings from the SIPP Fringe Benefits Feasibility Study: Response Ratesand Data Quality," S. HABER (The George Washington University)
(9001) 106 "Recent Developments in the Survey of Income and Program Participation,C. BOWIE (Census Bureau)
(9002) 107 "An Analysis of Leaving Home Using Data from the 1984 Panel of theSIPP, A. SPEARE, JR., R. AVERY, and F. GOLDSCHEIDER(Brown University)
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(Old #’s) New #’s
(9003) 108 "The Effect of the Marriage Market on First Marriages: Evidence fromSIPP, J. FITZGERALD (Bowdoin College)
(9004) 109 "Counting Spells of Unemployment," P. RYSCAVAGE and K. SHORT(Census Bureau)
(9005) 110 "The Elderly and Their Sources of Income: Implications for RuralDevelopment," R. HOPPE (Economic Research Service, U.S.Department of Agriculture)
(9006) 111 "Alternative Estimates of Economic Well-Being by Age Using Data onWealth and Income," D. RADNER (Social Security Administration)
(9007) 112 "Longitudinal Analysis of Federal Survey Data," P. RUGGLES (JointEconomic Committee)
(9008) 113 "Measurement Errors in SIPP Program Reports," K. H. MARQUIS and J. C. MOORE (Census Bureau)
(9009) 114 "Handling Single Wave Nonresponse in Panel Surveys," R. SINGH, V. HUGGINS, and D. KASPRZYK (Census Bureau)
(9010) 115 "Nonresponse Research for the SIPP," R. PETRONI (Census Bureau)
(9011) 116 "The Seam Effect in Panel Surveys," G. KALTON, D. HILL, and M. MILLER (University of Michigan)
(9012) 117 "The Effects of Being Uninsured on Health Care Service Use: Estimatesfrom the SIPP," S. H. LONG and J. RODGERS (Congressional BudgetOffice)
(9013) 118 "Wage Differential and Job Changes," S. SENINGER and D. GREENBERG (University of Maryland)
(9014) 119 "Wages and Employment Among the Working Poor: New Evidence FromSIPP, S. K. LONG (The Urban Institute) and A. MARTINI(Mathematica Policy Research)
(9015) 120 "Pension Portability & Labor Mobility: Evidence from SIPP," A. GUSTMAN (Dartmouth College) and T. STEINMEIER (Texas TechUniversity)
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(Old #’s) New #’s
(9016) 121 "Response & Procedural Error Variance in Surveys: An Application ofPoisson and Newman Type A Regression," D. HILL (University ofToledo)
(9017) 122 "Aging and the Income Value of Housing Wealth," S. F. VENTI(Dartmouth College) and D. A. WISE (Harvard University)
(9018) 123 "Welfare Participation and Welfare Recidivism: The Role of FamilyEvents, S. K. LONG (The Urban Institute)
(9019) 124 "Racial Differences in Health and Health Care Service Utilization: TheEffect of Socioeconomic Status," J. E. MUTCHLER and J. A. BURR(State University of New York at Buffalo)
(9020) 125 "Living Benefits: Closing the Gap for LTC Financing," D. G. SHEA(Pennsylvania State University)
(9021) 126 "SIPP Record Check Results: Implications for Measurement Principlesand Practice, K. H. MARQUIS and J. C. MOORE (Census Bureau)
(9022) 127 "Workers with Disabilities in Large and Small Firms: Profiles from theSIPP," D. DRURY (Berkeley Planning Associates)
(9023) 128 "Entry into Marriage and the Transition to Adulthood Among Recent FirthCohorts of Young Adults in the United States and the Federal Republic ofGermany," J. WITTE (Harvard University)
(9024) 129 "The Saving Effect of Tax-Deferred Retirement Accounts: Evidence fromthe SIPP, S. VENTI (Dartmouth College) and D. A. WISE (HarvardUniversity)
(9025) 130 "Children and Welfare: Patterns of Multiple Program Participation," S. K. LONG (The Urban Institute)
(9026) 131 "Household and Nonhousehold Living Arrangements in Later Life: ALongitudinal Analysis of A Social Process," J. E. MUTCHLER and J. A. BURR (University of Buffalo)
(9027) 132 "The SIPP Event History Calendar: Aiding Respondents in the Dating ofLongitudinal Process," R. KOMINSKI (Census Bureau)
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13
(Old #’s) New #’s
(9028) 133 "Estimates of Employer Contributions for Health Insurance by WorkerCharacteristics," S. HABER (George Washington University)
(9029) 134 "Two Notes on Relating the Risk of Disclosure for Microdata andGeographic Area Size," B. GREENBERG and L. VOSHELL (CensusBureau)
(9030) 135 "Childcare Effects on Social Security Benefits (91 ARC)," H. M. IAMS(Social Security Administration)
(9031) 136 "The Effect of the Medicaid Program on Welfare Participation & LaborSupply," R. MOFFIT (Brown University) and B. WOLFE (University ofWisconsin)
(9032) 137 "Proxy Reports: Results from a Record Check Study," J. C. MOORE(Census Bureau)
(9033) 138 "Spells Without Health Insurance: What Affects Spell Durations and Whoare the Chronically Uninsured?," T. MCBRIDE and K. SWARTZ (TheUrban Institute)
(9034) 139 "Spells without Health Insurance: Distributions of Durations and theirLink to Point-in-Time Estimates of the Uninsured," K. SWARTZ and T. MCBRIDE (The Urban Institute)
(9035) 140 "Discrete Time Models of Entry into Marriage Based on RetrospectiveMarital Histories of Young Adults in the U.S. and the Federal Republic ofGermany," J. WITTE (Harvard University)
(9101) 141 "Trends in Income and Wealth of the Elderly in the 1980's," P. RYSCAVAGE (Census Bureau)
(9102) 142 "The Impact of Survey and Questionnaire Design on Longitudinal LaborForce Measures," A. MARTINI (Mathematica Policy Research) and P. RYSCAVAGE (Census Bureau)
(9103) 143 "Using SIPP to Analyze Black-White Differences in Youth Employment,"G. C. CAIN and P. M. GLEASON (University of Wisconsin)
(9104) 144 "A Random-Effects Approach to Attrition Bias in the SIPP HealthInsurance Data," J. A. KLERMAN (The Rand Corporation)
SIPP Working Paper List Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
14
(Old #’s) New #’s
(9105) 145 "Alternative Samples for Welfare Duration in SIPP: Does AttritionMatter?," J. FITZGERALD (Census Bureau/Bowdoin College) X. ZUO(Census Bureau/Shanghai Academy of Social Science)
(9106) 146 "Job-Exits and Job-to-Job Transitions in the United States: An EmpiricalAnalysis Using SIPP," T. J. DEVINE (Pennsylvania State University)
(9107) 147 "The Flow of Household Income in the 1984 Survey of Income andProgram Participation," H. W. WATTS (Census Bureau/ColumbiaUniversity), D. B. MCMILLEN (Census Bureau) and L. MOELLER(Census Bureau/Columbia University)
(9108) 148 "The Survey of Income and Program Participation as a Source of Data onChildren and Families: A Comparison of Estimates Derived from SIPPwith Estimates from Other Sources," C. WINQUIST NORD and A. RHOADS (Child Trends, Inc.)
(9109) 149 "Health Insurance Coverage Among the Elderly," V. WILCOX-GOK(Department of Economics and Institute for Health) J. RUBIN (HealthCare Policy, and Aging Research)
(9110) 150 "A Cognitive Approach to Redesigning Measurement in the Survey ofIncome and Program Participation," K. H. MARQUIS, J. C. MOOREand K. E. BOGEN (Census Bureau)
(9111) 151 "Effects of Measurement Error on Occupational Event History Analysis,"D. H. HILL (University of Toledo)
(9112) 152 "Record Use by Respondents," R. KOMINSKI (Census Bureau)
(9113) 153 "Recipiency History and Left-Censored Spells of Program Participation inthe SIPP," K. SHORT and J. EARGLE (Census Bureau)
(9114) 154 "Receipt of Food Stamps by Longitudinal Households and Individuals inthe SIPP," N. R. BURSTEIN (Abt Associates Inc.)
(9115) 155 "Within-PSU Sort and Stratification Research to Improve SurveyEfficiency," M. GORSAK, K. MANSUR, D. FENSTERMAKER andR. PETRONI (Census Bureau)
(9116) 156 "Marital Separation and the Economic Well-Being of Children and TheirAbsent Fathers," S. M. BIANCHI (Census Bureau)
SIPP Working Paper List Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
15
(Old #’s) New #’s
(9117) 157 "Rationale for a SIPP-Based Microsimulation Model of SSI and OASDI,"B. WIXON and D. R. VAUGHAN (Social Security Administration)
(9118) 158 "Implementing an SSI Model Using the Survey of Income and ProgramParticipation, D. R. VAUGHAN and B. WIXON (Social SecurityAdministration)
(9119) 159 "Local Labor Markets and Local Area Effects on Welfare Duration:Evidence from SIPP," J. FITZGERALD (Census Bureau) X. ZUO(Dowdoin College and Shanghai Academy of Social Science)
(9120) 160 "Oversampling the Low-Income Population in the Survey of Income andProgram Participation (SIPP)," G. D. WELLER, V. J. HUGGINS and R. P. SINGH (Census Bureau)
(9121) 161 "Estimates of the Uninsured Population from the Survey of Income andProgram Participation: Size, Characteristics, and the Possibility ofAttrition Bias, K. SWARTZ (The Urban Institute)
(9201) 162 "Changes in Parent-Child Coresidence in Later Life," A. SPEARE, JR.(Census Bureau/Brown University) and R. AVERY (Brown University)
(9202) 163 "Who Helps Whom in Older Parent-Child Families," A. SPEARE, JR.(Population Studies and Training Center) R. AVERY (Brown University)
(9203) 164 "Testing Alternative Household Roster Questions for the Survey of Incomeand Program Participation," D. CANTOR and C. EDWARDS
(9204) 165 "Pretest Results of an Alternative Measurement Design for the Survey ofIncome and Program Participation," K. BOGEN, J. C. MOORE and K. H. MARQUIS (Center for Survey Methods Research and CensusBureau)
(9205) 166 "Dependent and Independent Data Collection in Panel Surveys: Analysisof 1985, 1986 SIPP Occupation and Industry Data," D. H. HILL (SurveyResearch Institute/University of Toledo)
(9206) 167 "The Survey of Income and Program Participation in the 1990's," D. H. WEINBERG and R. J. PETRONI (Census Bureau)
(9207) 168 "A Statistical Profile of At-Risk Children in the United States," C. WINQUIST NORD and A. RHOADS (Child Trends, Inc.)
SIPP Working Paper List Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
16
(Old #’s) New #’s
(9208) 169 "Social Security Earnings of Wives Relative to Their Husbands: A CohortAnalysis", H. M. IAMS (Social Security Administration)
(9209) 170 "Private Health Insurance and the Utilization of Medical Care by theElderly, V. WILCOX-GOK and J. RUBIN
(9210) 171 "Analyzing Spells of Program Participation in the SIPP," G. KALTON, D.P. MILLER, AND J. LEPKOWSKI
(9211) 172 "Time in Panel Effects in the SIPP," G. KALTON, J. M. LEPKOWSI, S. G. PENNELL, D. P. MILLER AND E. LUIS.
(9301) 173 "Multiple Program Use in a Dynamic Context: Data from the SIPP," R. M. BLANK (Northwestern University) and P. RUGGLES (The UrbanInstitute)
(9302) 174 "A Comparative Analysis of the Labor Force Activities of EthnicPopulations," F. D. WILSON (University of Wisconsin-MadisonASA/NSF/Census Fellow) and L. L. WU (University ofWisconsin-Madison)
(9303) 175 "Variance Estimation by User of SIPP Micro-Data Files," R. P. CHAKRABARTY (Census Bureau)
(9304) 176 "Measurements of Job Exits: What Difference Does Ambiguity Make?," T. J. DEVINE (Pennsylvania State University)
(9305) 177 "The Seasonality of Moving: An Analysis of Data from the Survey ofIncome and Program Participation," D. DEARE (Census Bureau)
(9306) 178 "The Quality of Census Bureau Survey Data Among Respondents withHigh Income," C. T. NELSON (Census Bureau)
(9307) 179 "Modeling Food Stamp Participation in the Presence of Reporting Errors," C. R. BOLLINGER and M. DAVID (University of Wisconsin)
(9308) 180 "The Seam Effect in SIPP's Labor Force Data: Did the Recession Make itWorse?," P. RYSCAVAGE (Census Bureau)
(9309) 181 "Where's Papa? Fathers' Role in Child Care" M. O'CONNELL (CensusBureau)
SIPP Working Paper List Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
17
(Old #’s) New #’s
(9310) 182 "Effectiveness of Oversampling Low Income Households in the Survey ofIncome and Program Participation" T. ALLEN, R. PETRONI and R. SINGH
(9311) 183 "Informal Mechanisms for Government Decision-Making: Case Study of aTeam Approach to Redesigning the Survey of Income and ProgramParticipation," D. H. WEINBERG (Census Bureau)
(9312) 184 "The Earned Income Tax Credit: Participation, Compliance, andAntipoverty Effectiveness," J. K. SCHOLZ (University ofWisconsin-Madison)
(9313) 185 "Effects of a Cognitive Interviewing Approach on Response Quality in aPretest for the SIPP," K. H MARQUIS, J. C. MOORE and K. BOGEN(Census Bureau)
(9314) 186 "Cross-Sectional Imputation and Longitudinal Editing Procedures in theSurvey of Income and Program Participation," S. G. PENNELL (TheUniversity of Michigan)
(9315) 187 "Who's Wealthy? Who's Not? Stability and Change in SociodemographicCovariate Structures of Positive, Zero, and Negative Net Worth Data inthe Survey of Income and Program Participation," K. C. LAND and S. T. RUSSELL
(9316) 188 "Are College-Educated Young Persons Finding Good Jobs? A Look atSome of the Evidence" P. RYSCAVAGE (Census Bureau)
(9401) 189 "A Comparison of Attrition in the Panel Study of Income Dynamics andthe Survey of Income and Program Participation," J. E. ZABEL
(9402) 190 "The Effect of Attrition on Income and Poverty Estimates from the Surveyof Income and Program Participation (SIPP)," E. LAMAS, J. TIN and J. EARGLE
(9403) 191 "An Analysis of Attrition in the PSID and SIPP with an Application to aModel of Labor Market Behavior," J. E. ZABEL
(9404) 192 "Mover Nonresponse Adjustment Research for the Survey of Income andProgram Participation," T. M. ALLEN and R. J. PETRONI
SIPP Working Paper List Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
18
(Old #’s) New #’s
(9405) 193 "Use of Administrative Data in SIPP Longitudinal Estimation," S. M. DORINSKI and H. HUANG
(9406) 194 "Longitudinal Imputation of SIPP Food Stamp Benefits," A. TREMBLAY
(9407) 195 "Testing a New Attrition Nonresponse Adjustment Method for SIPP," R. E. FOLSOM and M. B. WITT
(9408) 196 "Oversampling in Panel Surveys," R. SINGH, R. J. PETRONI and T. M. ALLEN (U.S. Bureau of the Census)
(9409) 197 "An Experiment to Reduce Measurement Error in the SIPP: PreliminaryResults," K. H. MARQUIS, J. C. MOORE and K. BOGEN (CensusBureau)
(9410) 198 "Changing Social Security Survivorship Benefits and the Poverty ofWidows," M. D. HURD (State University of New York and D. A. WISE(Harvard University)
(9411) 199 "Weighting Schemes for Household Panel Surveys," G. KALTON and J. M. BRICK (Westat, Inc.)
(9412) 200 "Weighting Adjustments for Panel Nonresponse in the SIPP," L. RIZZO,G. KALTON and J. M. BRICK (Westat, Inc.)
(9413) 201 "Overview of SIPP Nonresponse Research Data," S. MACK and R. PETRONI (Census Bureau)
(9414) 202 "Regression Weighting Methods for SIPP Data," A. B. AN, F. J.BREIDT and W. A. FULLER (Iowa State University)
(9415) 203 "The Redesign of the SIPP," V. J. HUGGINS and D. P. FISCHER(Census Bureau)
(9501) 204 "Adjusting for Attrition in Event History Analysis," D. H. HILL (SurveyResearch Institute, University of Toledo)
(9502) 205 "Regression Adjustment for Nonresponse," A. B. AN and W. A. FULLER (Iowa State University)
SIPP Working Paper List Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
19
(Old #’s) New #’s
(9503) 206 "Nonresponse Research Plans for the Survey of Income and ProgramParticipation," S. P. MACK and P. J. WAITE (Census Bureau)
(9504) 207 "Income Poverty Times Series Data from the Survey of Income andProgram Participation," V. J. HUGGINS and F. WINTERS (CensusBureau)
(9505) 208 "Longitudinal Imputation of SIPP Food Stamp Benefits," A. TREMBLAY (Census Bureau)
(9506) 209 "Continuing Research on Use of Administrative Data in SIPP LongitudinalEstimation," S. M. DORINSKI (Census Bureau)
(9507) 210 "Overview of Redesign Methodology for the Survey of Income andProgram Participation," P. H. SIEGEL and S. P. MACK (CensusBureau)
(9508) 211 "Research on Characteristics of Survey of Income and ProgramParticipation Nonrespondents Using IRS Data," M. R. HENDRICK, K. E. KING and J. B. BIENIAS (Census Bureau)
(9601) 212 “The SIPP Cognitive Research Evaluation Experiment: Basic Results and Documentation,” J. C. MOORE, K. H. MARQUIS and K. BOGEN(Census Bureau)
(9602) 213 “The Effects of Special Saving Programs on Saving and Wealth,” J.M. POTERBA, S. F. VENTI and D.A. WISE (National Bureauof Economic Research)
(9603) 214 “Past is Prologue: Simulating Lifetime Social Security Earnings for theTwenty-First Century,” H. M. IAMS and S. H. SANDELL (Office ofResearch & Statistics, Social Security Administration)
(9604) 215 “Evaluating the Quality of Income Data Collected in the AnnualSupplement to the March Current Population Survey and the Survey ofIncome and Program Participation,” J. CODER and L. SCOON-ROGERS (Census Bureau)
(9605) 216 “Compensating for Missing Wave Data in the Survey of Incomeand Program Participation,” T. R. WILLIAMS and L. BAILEY (Census Bureau)
SIPP Working Paper List Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
20
(Old #’s) New #’s
(9606) 217 “The Effect of the SIPP Redesign on Employment and Earnings Data,” E. LAMAS, T. PALUMBO and J. EARGLE (Census Bureau)
(9607) 218 “A Comparative Analysis of Health Insurance Coverage Estimated: Datafrom CPS and SIPP,” R. L. BENNEFIELD
(9611) 222 “Program Participation and Attrition: The Empirical Evidence,”J. TIN (Census Bureau)
(9612) 223 “Reducing the Welfare Dependence of Single-Mother Families: HealthRelated Employment Barriers and Policy Responses,”J. KIMMEL
(9613) 224 “Who Moonlights and Why? Evidence from the SIPP,” J. KIMMEL andK. S. CONWAY (Census Bureau)
WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
21
SIPP WORKING PAPERSAuthor Index
Allen, T. - 182, 192, 197An, A. - 203, 205Attah, E. - 46Avery, R. - 94, 107, 162, 163
Bailey, L. - 216Bennefield, R. L. - 218Bianchi, S. M. - 156Bienias, J. - 211Blank, R. M. - 173Bogen, K. - 150, 165, 185, 196, 212Bollinger, C. R. - 179Bowie, C. - 31, 43, 82, 106Bregger, J. E. - 8Breidt, F. - 203Brick, J. - 199, 200Burkhead, D. - 24, 41, 75Burr, J. A. - 93, 124, 131Burstein, N. R. - 154Bye, B. - 79
Cain, G. C. - 143Cantor, D. - 164Cantor, J. A. - 56Carlson, S. - 12Carmody, T. - 89Cavanaugh, R.- 61Chakrabarty, R. P.- 18, 88, 92, 175Chollet, D. J. - 58Citro, C. F. - 17, 19Coder, J. - 24, 65, 75, 80, 215Connelly, R. - 95Conway, K. S. - 224Crystal, S. - 91
Dahmann, D. - 42Dalrymple, R. - 12, 29, 32David, M. - 52, 100, 179Deare, D. - 177Devine, T. J. - 104, 146, 176Dorinski, S. M. - 193, 209
SIPP Working Papers Author Index Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
22
Doyle, P. - 32, 48Drury, D. - 127
Durant, S. - 71
Eargle, J. - 153, 190, 217Edwards, C. - 164Ernst, L. R. - 13, 72
Farley, R. - 81Farley-Short, P. - 56Feldman-Harkins, A. - 24, 25, 41, 63, 75Fenstermaker, D. - 155Fischer, D. - 204Fitzgerald, J. - 52, 108, 145, 159Folsom, R. E. - 194Frankel, D. T. - 5Friedland, R. B. - 58Fuller, W. - 203, 205
Gallicchio, S. J. - 79Gates, G. - 76Gbur, P. - 71Gillman, D. - 72Gleason, P. M. - 143Goldscheider, F. - 107Goldstein, A. - 64Gorsak, N. - 155Grad, S. - 96Greenberg, B. - 134Greenberg, D. - 118Gustman, A. - 120
Haber, S. - 3, 33, 39, 60, 68, 82, 105, 132Hartmann, H. - 73Heeringa, S. - 26Hendrick, M. R. - 211Hernandez, D. J. - 19, 99Herriot, R. - 9, 19, 82Hill, D. - 28, 90, 116, 121, 151, 166, 198Hill, M. - 73Holt, M. - 16Hoppe, R. - 69, 110Huang, H. - 193
SIPP Working Papers Author Index Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
23
Hubble, D. - 34Huggins, V. - 7, 11, 14, 15, 89, 114, 160, 204, 207Hurd, M. - 201
Iams, H. - 135, 169, 214
Jean, A. C. - 23Judkins, D. - 34
Kalton, G. - 10, 26, 116, 171, 172, 199, 200Kasprzyk, D. - 1, 9, 10, 43, 44, 61, 77, 82, 114Kimmel, J. - 223, 224King, K. - 30, 211Klerman, J. A. - 144Kominski, R. - 132,152Ku, L. - 29
Lahmann, H. - 50, 190Lamas, E. - 33, 39, 40, 47, 51, 68, 101, 190, 217Land, K. C.- 187Lepkowski, J. - 26, 171, 172Lichtenstein, J. - 39Lin, T. - 26Logan, W. J. - 61Long, S. H. - 117Long, S. K. - 48, 119, 123, 130Luis, E, - 172
Mack, S. P. - 202, 206, 210Mansur, K. - 155Marks, J. - 4Marquis, K. - 53, 74, 113, 126, 150, 165, 185, 196, 212Martini, A. - 57, 119, 142McArthur, E. K. - 20, 23, 42McBride, T. - 138, 139McMillen, D. B. - 1, 4, 9, 10, 147McNeil, J. - 24, 3 3, 40, 47, 51, 101Miller, D. P. - 171, 172Miller, M. E. - 26, 116Moeller, L. - 147Moffit, R. - 136Monheit, A. C. - 55, 56Moore, J. - 53, 74, 113, 126, 137, 150, 165, 185, 196, 212Moorman, J. - 36
SIPP Working Papers Author Index Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
24
Mutchler, J. E. - 93, 124, 131
Neidert, L. J. - 81Nelson, C. T. - 178Nelson, D. - 1, 31Nord, C. - 102, 148, 168
O' Connell, M. - 181
Palumbo, T. - 217Pennell, S. - 172, 186Peterson, J. - 102Petroni, R. - 30, 70, 89, 115, 155, 167, 182, 192, 197, 202Poterba, J. M. - 213
Radner, D. - 54, 111Rhoads, A. - 148, 168Rizzo, L. - 200Robbin, A. - 100Rodgers, J. - 117Rubin, J. - 149, 170Ruggles, P. - 38, 49, 65, 85, 86, 112, 173Russell, S. T. - 187Ryscavage, P. - 8, 21, 25, 27, 63, 66, 80, 82, 84, 109, 141, 142, 180, 188
Sater, D. K. - 6, 22Samuhel, M. E. - 7Sandell, S. H. - 214Scholz, J. K. - 184Schur, C. L. - 55Scoon-Rogers, L. - 215Seninger, S. - 118Servais, M. - 37Shapiro, G. 78Shea, D. - 91, 125Short, K. S. - 2, 20, 21, 109, 153Siegel, P. - 210Singh, R. - 30, 70, 78, 114, 160, 182, 197Smith, K. - 87Speare, A., Jr. - 94, 107, 162, 163Steimneier, T. - 120Swartz, K. - 138, 139, 161
WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97SIPP Working Papers Author Index Con.
25
Taeuber, C. M. - 4, 46Tin, J. - 190Tremblay, A. - 194, 208Triest, R. K. - 62
Vaughan, D. - 83, 97, 157, 158Venti, S. F. - 122, 129, 213Voshell, L. - 134
Waite, P. - 206Walker, A. - 31Watts, H. W. - 17, 147Weidman, L. - 7, 11, 15, 35, 78Weinberg, D. H. - 167, 183Weller, G. D. - 160Wilcox-Gok, V. - 149,170Williams, T. R. - 38, 45, 86, 216Wilson, F. D. - 174Winters, F. - 207Wixon, B. - 157, 158Wise, D. A. - 122, 129, 201, 213Witt, M. B. - 195Witte, J. - 50, 103, 128, 140Wolfe, B. - 136Wu, L. L. - 174
Young, N. - 98
Zabel, J. E. - 189, 191Zuo, X. - 145, 159
WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
26
SIPP WORKING PAPERSSubject Index
Children2095, 102130, 135143, 148, 156162, 163, 168, 178, 181, 186 189, 193
Data Linkage/Administrative Records3, 612, 224353, 61, 74, 7682100, 135177191, 193209
Data Quality81224, 29, 3052, 53, 6378, 79, 80, 81, 83, 100, 105113, 116, 121, 126, 132, 137144, 145, 148, 150, 149, 160, 161164175, 177, 178, 180, 183, 185, 186196, 197, 215
Disability/Long Term Care125, 127
Elderly438, 4654, 58, 6491, 93, 96, 97110, 111, 122, 131, 170
SIPP Working Papers Subject Index Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
27
General/Overview1, 2, 5, 9 27, 44, 67, 77106, 112167, 183
Health Care Coverage4155, 5684117, 124, 125, 133, 138, 139144, 149, 161170, 218
Household Composition/Longitudinal Households13, 17, 1948, 5893, 94, 99108, 123, 128, 131148, 154, 156162, 163180
Income and Net Worth32, 36, 39, 40, 4751, 54, 5883, 96122, 129141, 147169178, 183, 184, 187201, 207, 217
Labor Force/Markets82125, 33, 39, 57, 62, 63 66, 68, 73, 80, 84, 95 101, 104, 109, 118, 119 120, 136, 142, 143, 146 159, 164, 174, 176, 180 188, 190, 191, 217, 223, 224
SIPP Working Papers Subject Index Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
28
Longitudinal Processing73787, 100112, 132154177, 186189, 190, 191, 192, 193, 194, 197208, 209
Mobility2023, 4250107177
Nonresponse711, 14, 1526, 31, 3270, 72105114, 115192, 195201, 202, 204, 205, 206, 211
Nonsampling Error1028, 32, 34, 357490, 98113, 116, 121, 126, 132, 137
Other16103134149, 152, 157, 159179, 180, 184, 185190, 191, 194, 195, 196, 197, 213, 223
Pension120, 169, 198, 214
WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97SIPP Working Papers Subject Index Con.
29
Poverty1727, 38, 4549, 52, 69, 7385, 86119, 123, 130, 136145, 160179, 184, 187, 194, 198, 207
Program Participation1229, 3648, 56, 59, 60, 65, 7583, 85, 96, 97123, 130, 135, 136145, 150, 153, 157, 158, 160, 161171, 172173, 182, 183, 187189, 190, 216, 217, 222, 223
Redesign 183, 203, 204, 210
Research and Evaluation13, 184751, 71, 7788, 89, 92115, 121, 126, 134155, 160, 161164, 165, 166177, 186191, 192, 195, 196209, 211, 212, 215
Sampling79, 155, 160, 175, 182, 196
Weighting199, 200, 202, 203
WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
30
Compilation of ASA Papersfor 1984
Papers Presented at the Meeting of theAmerican Statistical Association
SURVEY OF INCOME AND PROGRAM PARTICIPATION: SESSION I
"Analysis of Intra-Year Income Flows on the ISDP," by P. DOYLE (Mathematica PolicyResearch, Inc.)
"An Analysis of Turnover in the Food Stamp Program," by T. CARR and L. LUBITZ(Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.)
"The Measurement of Household Wealth in SIPP," by E. J. LAMAS and J. M. MCNEIL (CensusBureau)
"The Wealth and Income of Aged Households," by D. B. RADNER (Social SecurityAdministration)
"Using Selective Assessments of Income to Estimate Family Equivalences Scales: A Report onWork in Progress," by D. VAUGHAN (Social Security Administration)
Discussant - COURTENAY SLATER, CEC Associates
SURVEY OF INCOME AND PROGRAM PARTICIPATION: SESSION II
"Toward a Longitudinal Definition of Households," by D. B. MCMILLEN and R. HERRIOT(Census Bureau)
"Lifetime Work Experience and Its Effects on Earnings: Data From the ISDP," by . M. MCNEIL(Census Bureau) and J. T. SALVO (New York City Department of Planning)
"Panel Surveys as a Source of Migration Data," by D. DAHMANN (Census Bureau)
"SIPP and CPS Labor Force Concepts: A Comparison," by P. M. RYSCAVAGE (CensusBureau)
"Matching Economic Data to the Survey of Income and Program Participation: A Pilot Study,"by S. HABER (The George Washington University), P. M. RYSCAVAGE, (Census Bureau) D.SATER, and V. VALDISERA
Discussants - MARTIN DAVID, University of WisconsinHAROLD WATTS, Columbia University
Compilation of ASA Papers for 1984 Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
31
SURVEY OF INCOME AND PROGRAM PARTICIPATION: SESSION III
"Obtaining a Cross-Sectional Estimate From a Longitudinal Survey: Experiences of the ISDP,"by H. HUANG (Census Bureau)
"Weighting of Persons for SIPP Longitudinal Tabulations," by L. ERNST, D. HUBLE, D. JUDKINS, D. B. MCMILLEN, and R. SINGH (Census Bureau)
"Longitudinal Family and Household Estimation in SIPP," by L. ERNST, D. HUBBLE and D. JUDKINS (Census Bureau)
"Longitudinal Item Imputation in a Complex Survey," by M. E. SAMUHEL and V. HUGGINS(Census Bureau)
"Early Indications of Item Nonresponse on SIPP," by J. CODER and A. FELDMAN (CensusBureau)
Discussant - ROY WHITEMORE, Research Triangle Institute
SURVEY OF INCOME AND PROGRAM PARTICIPATION: SESSION IV
"Month-to-Month Recipiency Turnover in the ISDP," by J. C. MOORE and D. KASPRZYK(Census Bureau)
"The Student Follow-Up Investigation of the 1979 ISDP, by A. M. ROMAN and D. V. O'BRIEN(Census Bureau)
"The ISDP 1979 Research Panel as a Methodological Survey: Implications for SubstantiveAnalysis," by R. A. KULKA (Research Triangle Institute)
"Some Data Collection Issues for Panel Surveys with Application to SIPP," by A. JEAN and E. K. MCARTHUR (Census Bureau)
"Managing the Data From the 1979 ISDP," by P. DOYLE and C. CITRO (Mathematica PolicyResearch, Inc.)
Discussants - GREG J. DUNCAN, Survey Research Center, University of Michigan
RICHARD ROCKWELL, Social Science Research Council
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SURVEY OF INCOME AND PROGRAM PARTICIPATION: SESSION V
"The Survey of Income and Program Participation," by R. A. HERRIOT and D. KASPRZYK(Census Bureau)
"The German Socio-Economic Panel," by U. HANEFELD (Deutches Institut furWirtshaftsforschung, Federal Republic of Germany)
"Household Market and Nonmarket Activities-The First Year of a Swedish Panel Study, by N. A. KLEVMARKEN (University of Goteborg, Sweden)
"The Australian National Longitudinal Survey," by I. MCRAE (Bureau of Labour MarketResearch, Australia)
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Compilation of ASA Papersfor 1985
Papers Presented at the Meeting of theAmerican Statistical Association
SURVEY OF INCOME AND PROGRAM PARTICIPATION: SESSION I
"Item Nonresponse in the Survey of Income and Program Participation," byD. B. MCMILLEN and D. KASPRZYK (Census Bureau)
Characteristics of Sample Attrition in the Survey of Income and Program Participation, by K. S. SHORT (Census Bureau)
"Compensating for Wave Nonresponse in the 1979 ISDP Research Panel," by G. KALTON, J. LEPKOWSKI, and T. K. LIN (University of Michigan)
"Alternative Definitions of Longitudinal Households in the Income Survey Development Program:Implications for Annual Statistics," by C. F. CITRO (Census Bureau)
"Do We Learn From Past Experience When Constructing Complex Data?," by P. DOYLE(Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.)
Discussants - JOHN CZAJKA, Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.
ROBERT TEITEL, Data Systems
SURVEY OF INCOME AND PROGRAM PARTICIPATION: SESSION II
"Operationalizing the Poverty Line in a Survey Using Subannual Reference Periods," by D. VAUGHAN (Social Security Administration)
"Short Term Change in Household and Family Structure," by H. KOO (Research TriangleInstitute)
"Characteristics of Program Participants: Some Early Evidence From SIPP," by D. B. MCMILLEN (Census Bureau)
"An Exploration of the Applicability of Hazards Models in Analyzing the Survey of Income andProgram Participation: Labor Force Transitions," by K. S. SHORT and K. A. WOODROW(Census Bureau)
"Gross Changes in Income Recipiency From the Survey of Income and Program Participation," byD. BURKHEAD and J. CODER (Census Bureau)
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"Designing a Data Center for SIPP: An Observatory for the Social Sciences," by M. DAVID(University of Wisconsin)
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Compilation of ASA Papersfor 1986
Papers Presented at the Meeting of theAmerican Statistical Association
SURVEY OF INCOME AND PROGRAM PARTICIPATION: SESSION I
"A Review of Research and Design Issues in the Survey of Income and Program Participation,"by D. KASPRZYK (Census Bureau)
"Effects of Adjustments for Wave Nonresponse on Panel Survey Estimates," by G. KALTON andM. E. MILLER (University of Michigan)
"Life Events and Sample Attrition in the Survey of Income and Program Participation," by K. S. SHORT and E. K MCARTHUR (Census Bureau)
"Longitudinal Imputation for the SIPP," by S. G. HEERINGA and J. M. LEPKOWSKI(University of Michigan)
Discussants - ROBERT MICHAEL, NORC
JOHN CZAJKA, Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.
SURVEY OF INCOME AND PROGRAM PARTICIPATION: SESSION II
"SIPP: Longitudinal Estimation for Persons' Characteristics," by E. L KOBILARCIK and R. P. SINGH (Census Bureau)
"Labor Force Transitions: A Comparison of Unemployment Estimates From Two LongitudinalSurveys," by M. S. HILL and D. H. HILL (University of Michigan)
"An Additive Model of Recall Error: Analysis of SIPP Data," by D. H. HILL (University ofMichigan)
"Investigation of Gross Changes in Income Recipiency From the Survey of Income and ProgramParticipation," by L. WEIDMAN (Census Bureau)
"Measuring the Bias in Gross Flows in the Presence of Auto-Correlated Response Errors," by D. L HUBBLE and D. R. JUDKINS (Census Bureau)
Discussant - MARTIN H. DAVID, University of Wisconsin-Madison
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SURVEY OF INCOME AND PROGRAM PARTICIPATION: SESSION III
"Measuring Labor Market-Related Hardship Using SIPP Data," by B. W. KLEIN (Bureau ofLabor Statistics)
"Functional Limitations, Disabilities and the Need for Personal Assistance: Data from the 1984SIPP," by J. M. MCNEIL and C. J. HARPINE (Census Bureau)
"Labor Mobility and Wages: New Data from SIPP," by P. RYSCAVAGE (Census Bureau)
"Lifetime Labor Force Attachment: Retrospective Data From the Survey of Income and ProgramParticipation," by E. J. LAMAS, J. M. MCNEIL (Census Bureau), and S. E. HABER (TheGeorge Washington University)
"Log-Linear Analyses for the Income Stability of Households in the Survey of Income andProgram Participation," by H. A. SCHWARTZ (Census Bureau)
"Longitudinal Household Concepts in SIPP," by C. F. CITRO (National Research Council), D. J. HERNANDEZ and J. E. MOORMAN (Census Bureau)
SURVEY OF INCOME AND PROGRAM PARTICIPATION AS A DATA BASE FORPUBLIC POLICY
"Poverty Rates and Program Participation in the SIPP and the CPS," by R. WILLIAMS(Congressional Budget Office)
"Factors Affecting the Earnings and Welfare Income of Unmarried Mothers," by T. N. GABE, J.E. GRIFFITH and R. V. RIMKUNAS (Congressional Research Service)
Discussants - JOHN FITZGERALD, Bowdoin College
EUGENE SMOLENSKY, University of Wisconsin-Madison
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Compilation of ASA Papersfor 1987
Papers Presented at the Meeting of the AmericanStatistical Association
SURVEY OF INCOME AND PROGRAM PARTICIPATION: Using the SIPP to AnalyzeFamily Composition and Income Dynamics
"The Dynamics of Children's Home Environments," by H. WATTS (Columbia University)
"Determinants of Changes in Income Status and Welfare Program Participation," by P. RUGGLES (The Urban Institute) and R. WILLIAMS (Congressional Budget Office)
Discussants - EDITH K. MCARTHUR, Census Bureau
PAT DOYLE, Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.
ANALYSIS OF DATA FROM THE SURVEY OF INCOME AND PROGRAMPARTICIPATION
"SIPP: Characteristics of the 1984 Panel," by D. KASPRZYK and D. MCMILLEN (CensusBureau)
"An Evaluation and Analysis of Reservation Wage Data from SIPP," by P. RYSCAVAGE(Census Bureau)
"An Analysis of the SIPP Asset and Liability Feedback Experiment," by E. LAMAS and J. MCNEIL (Census Bureau)
"The Analysis of Geographical Mobility and Life Events with the SIPP," by D. DAHMANN andE. K MCARTHUR (Census Bureau)
Discussants - EVA JACOBS, Bureau of Labor Statistics
MARTHA HILL, University of Michigan
SURVEY OF INCOME AND PROGRAM PARTICIPATION: Income, ProgramParticipation and Expenditures-Papers Concerning SIPP
"Evaluation of Missing Wave Data From the SIPP," by V. HUGGINS (Census Bureau)
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"Data Quality of the SIPP," by K. KING, R. PETRONI, and R. SINGH (Census Bureau)Examination of Relationships Between Actual and Reported Changes in the SIPP," by L. WEIDMAN (Census Bureau)
"Response Errors Around the Seam: Analysis of Change in a Panel with Overlapping ReferencePeriods," by D. HILL (University of Michigan)
SURVEY OF INCOME AND PROGRAM PARTICIPATION: Accessing Large andComplex Data Sets-SIPP as a Case Study
"Access to Data: Handling the 1984 SIPP," by M. DAVID, A. ROBBIN, and T. FLORY(University of Wisconsin)
"Creating SIPP Longitudinal Files Using OSIRIS IV," by M. SERVAIS (University of Michigan)
"SIPP Data Collection in the RAPID Database System," by R. TEITEL (Teitel Data Systems)
"SIPPER: A Data Extraction Program," by E. SPIERS (Census Bureau) "SIPP as an Initiator of aData Resource Center at the Census Bureau," by F. CAVANAUGH (Census Bureau)
Discussion - PAT DOYLE, Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.
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Compilation of ASA Papersfor 1988
Papers Presented at the Meeting of the AmericanStatistical Association
ISSUES IN THE ANALYSIS OF WELFARE RECIPIENCY
"Spells of Welfare Recipiency Observed in the SIPP," by J. CODER (Census Bureau) and P. RUGGLES (ASA/NSF/Census Research Program)
"Attrition and Spell Censoring in Estimating Dynamic Models of Welfare Recipiency," by T. FLORY, A. MARTINI and A. ROBBIN (University of Wisconsin-Madison)
"What Happens When Persons Leave Welfare: Data From the First SIPP Panel File," by E. LAMAS and J. MCNEIEL (Census Bureau)
"Moving Into and Out of Poverty: Data From the First SIPP Panel File," by J. MCNNEIL, E. LAMAS and C. HARPINE (Census Bureau)
"The Relationship of (Re)Marriage and Exits From the AFDC Program Among Female-HeadedHouseholds: A Longitudinal Examination," by H. C. GOGAN (Research Triangle Institute)
"Health and Disability Status of AFDC Families," by M. ADLER (Office of the AssistantSecretary for Planning and Evaluation/Department of Health and Human Services)
PROGRAM PARTICIPATION ISSUES: FOOD STAMP AND SOCIAL SECURITY
"Factors Related to Changes in the Food Stamp Caseload: The Net Flows Model," by R. O. BARNES and K. TREESH (The Urban Institute)
"The Role of Employment in Exits From the Food Stamp Program," by C. M. ROSS(Congressional Budget Office)
"Multiple Program Participation Among Food Stamp Recipients," by S. K. LONG (MathematicaPolicy Research, Inc.)
"Impact of the Unit of Analysis on Measures of Serial Multiple Program Participation-Part II," byP. DOYLE (Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.)
"A Survey-Based Type of Benefit Classification for the Social Security Program," by D. VAUGHAN (Social Security Administration)
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"Income of Social Security Beneficiaries by Type of Benefit," by S. GRAD (Social SecurityAdministration)
DATA OUALITY ISSUES: COMPARING THE SIPP WITH OTHER DATARESOURCES
"Changes in Marital Status and Well-Being: Transitions Measured in SIPP," by M. H. DAVID(University of Wisconsin-Madison)
"Analyzing the Characteristics of Blacks: A Comparison of Data From SIPP and the CPS," by R.FARLEY and L. J. NEIDERT (University of Michigan)
"Retrospective Versus Panel Data in Estimating Gross Flows: Comparing CPS and the SIPP," byA. P. MARTINI (University of Wisconsin-Madison)
"Reservation Wages and Subsequent Acceptance Wages of Unemployment Persons," by P. RYSCAVAGE (Census Bureau)
SURVEY METHODOLOGY RESEARCH
"Survey of Income and Program Participation Experiments and Their Results," by T. J. CARMODY, A. J. MEIER, and D. P. FISCHER (Census Bureau)
"Evaluation of the SIPP Asset Feedback Experiment," by L. WEIDMAN, K. KING, and T. WILLIAMS (Census Bureau)
"Evaluation of the Survey of Income and Program Participation Cross-Sectional NoninterviewAdjustment Method," by R. PETRONI and K. KONG (Census Bureau)
"Excluding Sample that Misses Some Interviews from SIPP Longitudinal Estimates," by L. ERNST and D. GILLMAN (Census Bureau)
"Use of Administrative Data in SIPP Longitudinal Estimation," by R. E. FAY and V. J. HUGGINS (Census Bureau)
"Using Administrative Record Data to Describe SIPP Response Errors," by J. C. MOORE and K.H. MARQUIS (Census Bureau)
ADDITIONAL SIPP PAPERS PRESENTED IN OTHER SESSIONS
"Education and Earnings: Empirical Findings From Alternative Operationalizations," R. KOMINSKI, (Census Bureau)
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"Sources of Family Income in the SIPP," R. WILLIAMS, (Congressional Budget Office)
"Census Bureau Microdata: Providing Useful Research Data While Protecting The Anonymity ofRespondents," G. GATES, (Census Bureau)
"Measuring Geographical Mobility Using Panel Data From the SIPP," R. CLARK, and A. SPEARE, Jr. (Brown University)
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Compilation of ASA Papersfor 1989
Papers Presented at the Meeting of the AmericanStatistical Association
WOMEN AND CHILD RELATED ISSUES
"An Empirical Estimation of the Effect of Child Care Costs on Married Women's Labor ForceParticipation," by R. CONNELLY (Bowdoin College and Bureau of the Census)
"Maternity Leave Arrangements, 1961-1985," by M. O'CONNELL (Census Bureau)
"Child Care Needs and Options in Three Metropolitan Areas," by E. E. KISKER and R. MAYNARD (Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.)
"Mothers, Children, and Low Wage Work: The Ability to Earn a Family Wage," by R. M. SPALTER-ROTH, H. I. HARTMANN and L. M. ANDREWS (Institute for WomensPolicy Research)
MEASUREMENT AND DATA OUALITY IN PANEL SURVEYS
"Modeling 1984 SIPP Panel Attrition: Implications for Weights," by M. DAVID (University ofWisconsin-Madison)
"The Measurement of Demographic Transitions in the Survey of Income and ProgramParticipation," by D. B. MCMILLEN (Census Bureau)
"Measuring Exits and Entries of Young Adults from Their Parents Households," A. SPEARE, Jr.and R. AVERY (Brown University)
"An Evaluation and Analysis of the SIPP Data on Long-Tenn Care," by C. J. HARPINE and J. M. McNEIL (Census Bureau)
"An Evaluation of Wealth Information in SIPP," by J. H. EARGLE and E. J. LAMAS (CensusBureau)
Discussant - JOHN CZAJKA, Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.
THE WELL-BEING OF THE AGED
"Income-Wealth Measures of Economic Well-Being for Age Groups," by D. RADNER (SocialSecurity Administration)
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"Health Needs and Economic Resources of the Aged," by L. DELBENE and D. VAUGHAN(Social Security Administration)
"Household Transitions among the Elderly: Evidence from the Survey of Income and ProgramParticipation," by J. E. MUTCHLER and J. A. BURR (State University of New York-Buffalo)
"Income Change at Retirement," by S. GRAD (Social Security Administration)
Discussant - EMILY S. ANDREWS, University of Rhode Island
POVERTY AND WELL-BEING
"Longitudinal Measures of Poverty: The Role of Assets." by P. RUGGLES (The UrbanInstitute), R. WILLIAMS (Congressional Budget Office)
"The Relationship Between Employment and Exits from the Food Stamp Program," by C. M. ROSS (Committee on National Statistics)
"Economic Vulnerability of the Transitory Poor Elderly," by R. J. ENGEL (University ofPittsburgh)
"The Elderly and Housing Affordability: Age Differentials in Absolute and Relative HousingCosts" by M. NAIFEH (Census Bureau)
INDICATIONS OF NONSAMPLING ERROR IN PANEL SURVEYS
"Weighting Adjustments for Partial Nonresponse in the 1984 SIPP Panel," by J. LEPKKOWSI,G. KALTON (University of Michigan), and D. KASPRZYK (Census Bureau)
"Reporting of Income Recipiency by Self and Proxy Respondents in SIPP," by S. VICK and L. WEIDMAN (Census Bureau)
"Event History Analysis of Proxy Response Patterns and Health Care Coverage among the Aged: Data from the 1984 Survey of Income and Program Participation Panel" by L. S. CORDER andK. G. MANTON (Duke University)
"Time-in-Sample Biases in The Survey of Income and Program Participation," by R. P. CHAKRABARTY and T. R. WILLIAMS (Census Bureau)
"Preliminary Evaluation of Maximum Telephone Interviewing on the SIPP, "by P. M. GBUR andR. J. PETRONI (Census Bureau)
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"Findings from the SIPP Fringe Benefits Feasibility Study: Response Rates and Data Quality," byS. HABER (The George Washington University)
Discussant - RALPH FOLSOM, Research Triangle Institute
RESPONSE ERROR IN PANEL SURVEYS
"Analysis of SIPP Reinterview Data: A Poisson Model of Response Error," by D. H. HILL(University of Toledo)
"Some Response Errors in the SIPP-With Thoughts about Their Effects and Remedies," by K. H. MARQUIS and J. C. MOORE (Census Bureau)
"Seam Effect, Recall Bias and The Estimation of Labor Force Transition Rates from SIPP," by A.MARTINI (Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.)
"Wave Seam Effects in the SIPP," by N. YOUNG (The Urban Institute)
ADDITIONAL SIPP PAPERS PRESENTED IN OTHER SESSIONS
"Theory and Application of Replicate Weighting for Variance Calculations," by R. E. FAY(Census Bureau)
"Measuring Disability Status in Household Surveys: An Assessment of Goals and Methods," by J.M. MCNEIL (Census Bureau)
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Compilation of ASA Papersfor 1990
Papers Presented at the Meeting of theAmerican Statistical Association
GOVERNMENT STATISTICS SECTION: Persons With Disabilities - New Insights fromthe Survey of Income and Program Participation
"How Many Persons with Disabilities are There?--Evidence from SIPP", by C. THORNTON(Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.)
"Program Participation Among Working-Age Adults with Functional Limitations", by P. DOYLE(Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.)
"The Disabled: Their Health Care and Health Insurance", by M. C. ADLER (Department ofHealth and Human Services)
"Employment Status and Earnings Among Persons With Disabilities", by A. MARTINI(Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.)
"Workers with Disabilities in Large and Small Firms: Profiles from the SIPP", by D. DRURY(Berkeley Planning Associates)
Discussant: ARLENE EASELY, Department of Labor
SURVEY RESEARCH METHODS SECTION: The Survey of Income and ProgramParticipation (SIPP)
"The SIPP Event History Calendar: Aiding Respondents in the Dating of Longitudinal Events", byR. A. KOMINSKI (Bureau of the Census)
"How Does Smoothing Estimated Monthly Control Totals Affect SIPP Estimates?" by L. WEIDMAN and L. G. BOBBITT (Bureau of the Census)
"Implications of SIPP Record Check Results for Measurement Principles and Practices", by K. H. MARQUIS, J. C. MOORE, and V. J. HUGGINS (Bureau of the Census)
"Effect of Maximum Telephone Interviewing on SIPP Topical Module and LongitudinalEstimates", by P. M. GBUR, P. J. CANTWELL, and R. J. PETRONI (Bureau of the Census)
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"Investigation of the SIPP's Cross-Sectional Noninterview Adjustment Method and Variables", byK. E. KING, S. P. CHOU, M. K. MCCORMICK, and R. J. PETRONI (Bureau of the Census)
Discussant: J. MICHAEL BRICK, Westat, Inc. "VPLX: Variance Estimates for ComplexSamples", by R. E. FAY (Bureau of the Census)
"Relating Risk of Disclosure for Microdata and Geographic Area Size", by B. GREENBERG andL. VOSHELL (Bureau of the Census)
SOCIAL STATISTICS SECTION:
"Measuring the Extent of Unemployment: Retrospective vs. Longitudinal Surveys", by P. RYSCAVAGE and A. MARTINI Bureau of the Census)
"Changes In Income and Assets Associated With Health and Widowhood for Elderly AmericansUsing SIPP and the SCF" by R. AVERY and A. SPEARE, JR. (Brown University)
"An Analysis of Financial Support for Nonhousehold Members and Receipt of that Support: Datafrom SIPP Panel Files", by R. L. BENNEFIELD, (Bureau of the Census)
Discussant: K. S. SHORT, Bureau of the Census
"Income Inequality and Measures of Well-Being", by D. H. WEINBERG (Bureau of the Census)
"The Relationship Between Monthly and Annual Income: SIPP", by K. S. SHORT (Bureau of theCensus)
STATISTICAL COMPUTING SECTION:
"Processing and Analyzing Large files with Small Computers: New Technology Developments",by J. N. WELLS (Bureau of the Census)
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Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP):SIPP Quality Profile
TABLE OF CONTENTS
List of figures, tables and exhibits PAGE
Preface
Chapter 1. Introduction 1
A. Purpose and audience 1B. Source of data on quality 2C. Structure of the report 2D. Sources of additional information 3
Chapter 2. Overview of SIPP design 5
A. Survey objectives 5B. Survey design 6C. Current 7D. Data collection procedures 7E. Evaluation of the survey data 7
Chapter 3. Sample selection 11
A. Selection of sample PSUs 11B. Selection of address in sample PSUs 12C. Association of persons and other units 14 with sample addresses
Chapter 4. Data collection procedures 19
A. Basic data collection features 19B. Data collection instruments 20C. Data collection strategies 22D. Interviewer characteristics, 24 training and supervision
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Chapter 5. Nonresponse error 33
A. Steps to maximize response rates 33B. Household nonresponse 34C. Person nonresponse 36D. Item nonresponse 37
E. Methodological research and experimentation 39
Chapter 6. Measurement error 53
A. Introduction 53B. Effects of basic design features on quality 53C. The seam problem 58D. Other longitudinal measurement errors 61E. Evaluation studies and experiments 62
Chapter 7. Data preparation 79
A. Regional office operations 79B. Central operations 80C. Information about quality 81
Chapter 8. Estimation 83
A. Introduction 83B. Current imputation procedures 84C. Current cross-sectional weighting procedures 85D. Current longitudinal weighting procedures 88E. Evaluation and research 89
Chapter 9. Sampling errors 105
A. Estimation of sampling errors 105B. Sampling errors and sample size 108
Chapter 10. Evaluation of estimates 121
A. Comparisons of SIPP and program data 122B. Comparisons of SIPP and other survey data 125C. Indicators of undercoverage 130
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Chapter 11. Summary
A. Major sources of error 145B. Current research 147C. Suggestions for users 149
List of references 155Index 173
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Journal of Economic and Social Measurement
Volume 13, Numbers 3 and 4, 1985 CONTENTS
Special Issue: Survey of Income and Program Participation
Guest Editor: Martin David
MARTIN DAVID
Introduction: The Design and Development of SIPP
DEMOGRAPHIC DYNAMICS
HAROLD W. WATTS
The Scientific Potential of SIPP for Analysis of Living Arrangements for Families andHouseholds
THOMAS J. ESPENSHADE and DOUGLAS A. WOLF
SIPP Data on Marriage, Separation, Divorce, and Remarriage: Problems, Opportunities, andRecommendations
GREG J. DUNCAN
A Framework for Tracking Family Relationships Over Time
Major Social Issues
REYNOLDS FARLEY
Understanding Racial Differences and Trends: How SIPP Can Assist
CAROLYN SHAW BELL
SIPP and the Female Condition
MARY JO BANE and JAMES WELSH
SIPP's Potential Contributions to Policy Research on Children
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Enhancing Data on Human Capital
GARY S. FIELDS and GEORGE H. JAKUBSON
Labor Market Analysis Using SIPP
TIMOTHY M. SMEEDING
The Scientific Potential of SIPP: Its Content and Methods Regarding Fringe Benefits,Noncash Income, and the Value of Government Services
GAIL R. WILENSKY
SIPP and Health Care Issues
MICHAEL R. OLNECK
Critique of Questions Pertaining to Education in SIPP
Improving the Design of SIPP
MARTIN DAVID
The Distribution of Income in the United States Implications for the Design of the SIPP Panel
GRAHAM KALTON and JAMES LEPKOWSKI
Following Rules in SIPP
SHELDON E. HABER
A Perspective on Linking SIPP to Administrative and Statistical Records
A Little SIPP: Old Wine in New Bottles-Let's Recask It
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Analysis of Families Over Time
DAVID BYRON MCMILLEN and ROGER HERRIOT
Toward a Longitudinal Definition of Households
GREG J. DUNCAN and MARTHA S. HILL
Conceptions of Longitudinal Households: Fertile or Futile?
MARTIN DAVID, RICHARD C. ROCKWELL, ALICE ROBBIN, and FRANKLIN W. MONFORT
Summary of the SIPP Conference and Recommendations of the Conference
MARTIN DAVID, ALICE ROBBIN and RICHARD C. ROCKWELL
Summary and Recommendations: Second SSRC Symposium on the Scientific and ResearchPotential of SIPP - June 28-29, 1985
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Food Stamp Research: Results from the Income SurveyDevelopment Program and the Promise of the Survey of
Income and Program Participation
Table of Contents
I. OVERVIEW
A. Promise of SIPP
B. Background
C. Objectives of this Monograph
D. Organization of this Monograph
II. THE SIPP AND ISDP SURVEYS
A. The History of SIPP
B. The 1979 ISDP Research Panel
C. The Structure and Contents of SIPP
III. ECONOMIC STATUS OF THE FOOD STAMP TARGET POPULATION
A. Asset Holdings of Food Stamp Participant and Nonparticipant Households
B. The Pattern and Adequacy of Multiple Program Benefits
C. Multiple Program Benefits During the Course of a Year IV. THE DYNAMICS OF FOOD STAMP RECIPIENCY
V. MONTHLY PATTERNS OF INCOME RECEIPT
VI. PROGRAM PARTICIPATION AND LABOR SUPPLY BEHAVIOR OF FOOD STAMP HOUSEHOLDS
A. Determinants of Participation in the Food Stamp Program
B. The Effects of Food Stamp Participation on the Market Labor of Female Heads of Households
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VII. ISSUES IN THE USE OF PANEL DATA
A. Analytical Issues
B. Data Issues
VIII. ISDP RESEARCH AND THE PROMISE OF SIPP
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Individuals and Families in Transition:Understanding Change Through Longitudinal Data
Well-Being Analyzing Transitions and Change
Chair: ROBERT I. LERMAN (Brandies University)
Economic Risks of Gender Roles: Income Loss and Life Events Over the Life Course, R. V. BURKHAUSER (Vanderbilt University) and G. J. DUNCAN (University of Michigan)
Change in Marital Status and Short-Term Income Dynamics, M.H. DAVID and T. S. FLORY(University of Wisconsin)
The Transition from Wife to Widow: Data Issues in Measuring First-Period Income Effects inSIPP and the RHS, K. C. HOLDEN (University of Wisconsin)
Family Structurce, Race, and the Hazards of Young Women in Poverty, T.J. KNIESNER(University of Indiana, Bloomington), M.B. MCELROY (Duke University), and S. P. WILCOX(General Research Corporation)
The Relationship Between Family Compositional Change and the Economic Status of Children:SIPP and PSID, S.M. BIANCHI (U.S. Bureau of the Census), E.K. MCARTHUR (NationalCenter for Education Statistics), and M.S. HILL (University of Michigan)
Models for the Analysis of Change
Chair: CHRISTOPHER FLINN (New York University)
Unemployment Job Turnover, and Schooling Among Black, White, and Hispanic Youth, D.J. FEASTER and P.K ROBINS (University of Miami)
Empirical Analysis of Retirement Behavior Using RHS Data: Principle Findings, J. RUST(University of Wisconsin)
Labor Force Withdrawals from Unemployment: High Search Costs or Low Attachment to theLabor Market? A.P. MARTINI (Mathematica Policy Research, Inc)
The Effect of Income Taxation on Labor Supply When Deductions Are Endogenous: EstimationUsing Data from the ISDP, R.K. TRIEST (University of California at Davis)
Discussant: Robert Moffit (Brown University)
Recipiency: Analyzing Transition and Change
Individuals and Families in Transition: WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97Understanding Change Through Longitudinal Data Con.
56
Chair: Reynolds Farley (University of Michigan)
The Impact of the Unit of Analysis on Measures of Serial Multiple Program Participation, P. DOYLE and S. LONG (Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.)
The Impact of the Unit of Analysis on Measures of Serial Multiple Program Participation, P. DOYLE and S. LONG (Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.)
The Effect of the Marriage Market and AFDC Benefits on Exit Rates from AFDC, J. FITZGERALD (Bowdoin College)
Welfare and the Outmigration of Solo Mothers, R. CLARK (The Urban Institute)
New Dynamics Perspective on Long-Standing Problems
Chair: HAROLD BEEBOUT (Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.)
A Comparison of Gross Changes in Labor Force Status from SIPP and CPS, P. RYSCAVAGEand A. FELDMAN-HARKINS (U.S. Bureau of the Census)
The Process of Change in Families and Households, H.P. KOO and H.C. GOGAN (ResearchTriangle Institute)
A Look at Income Change During Unemployment Spells B.W. KLEIN and R.J MCINTIRE(Bureau of Labor Statistics)
Discussant: Harold Beebout (Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.)
Methodology for Data Collection and Analysis
Chair: ROBERT PEARSON (Social Science Research Council)
Panel Versus Retrospective Data on Marital Histories: Lessons from the PSID, L.A. and L.J. WAITE (The RAND Corporation)
Retrospective Versus Panel Data in Analyzing Life-Cycle Events, H.E. PETERS (University ofColorado, Boulder)
Response Errors Around the Seam: Analysis of Change in a Panel with Overlapping ReferencePeriods, D.H. HILL (University of Toledo)
Discussant: Robert Pearson (Social Science Research Council)
Individuals and Families in Transition:Understanding Changes Through Longitudinal Data Con.
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The Ouality of SIPP Data
Chair: MARTIN DAVID (University of Wisconsin)
Quality of SIPP Estimates, R.P. SINGH, L WEIDMAN, and G.M. SHAPIRO (U.S. Bureau ofthe Census)
Reflections on the Income Estimates from the Initial Panel of the Survey of Income and ProgramParticipation, D.R. VAUGHAN (Social Security Administration)
Exploring the Quality of Data from the 1984 SIPP Panel File, J. CODER (U.S. Bureau of theCensus)
Discussant: Roderick J.A. Little (University of California, Los Angeles)
WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
58
SIPP Public-Use Files
We currently have two active pricing policies, for SIPP. Most files prior to the 1988 and 1990 panels are priced at $175 per tape. We currently are releasing SIPP files on a "megabyte" basis. Technical documentation for the files costs $15.00. Unlessotherwise noted, tapes and technical documentation can be ordered from Customer Services, Bureau of the Census, Washington,DC 20233 or call (301) 763-4100
Name of Data file by Panel Number of Price(Dates are interview months; unless otherwise Specified) Tapes @6250 bpi
1984 PanelOctober 1983-January 1984: Wave 1 RECTANGULAR-CORE 2 $350
February 1984-April 1984: Wave 2 RECTANGULAR-CORE 2 $350
May 1984-August 1984: Wave 3 RECTANGULAR-CORE 2 $350
Wave 3 RECTANGULAR-CORE and TOPICAL MODULE3 $525
September 1984-December 1984: Wave 4 RECTANGULAR-CORE 2 $350
Wave 4 RECTANGULAR-CORE2 $350
January 1985-April 1985: Wave 5 RECTANGULAR-CORE 2 $350
Wave 5 RECTANGULAR-CORE and TOPICAL MODULE 2 $350
May 1985-August 1985: Wave 6 RECTANGULAR-CORE 2 $350
Wave 6 RECTANGULAR RESEARCH FILE-CORE and TOPICAL MODULE 2 $350
September 1985-December 1985: Wave 7 RECTANGULAR-CORE 2 $350
Wave 7 RECTANGULAR-CORE and TOPICAL MODULE 2 $350
January 1986-March 1986: Wave 8 RECTANGULAR-CORE 2 $350
Wave 8 RECTANGULAR-CORE and TOPICAL MODULE 2 $350
April 1986-July 1986: Wave 9 RECTANGULAR-CORE 2 $350
Wave 9 RECTANGULAR RESEARCH FILE-CORE and TOPICAL MODULE 2 $350
Longitudinal File 1984 Full Panel Research File (32-month file); June 1983-April 1986 (Data Collection Months) RECTANGULAR CORE 5 $875
SIPP Public-Use Files Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
59
Name of Data file by Panel Number of Price(Dates are interview months; unless otherwise Specified) Tapes @6250 bpi
1985 PANELFebruary 1985-May 1985 2 $350 Wave 1 RECTANGULAR-CORE
June 1985-August 1985 Wave 2 RECTANGULAR-CORE 1 $175
September 1985-December 1985 Wave 3 RECTANGULAR-CORE and TOPICAL MODULE 2 $350
January 1986-April 1986 Wave 4 RECTANGULAR-CORE and TOPICAL MODULE 2 $350
May 1986-August 1986 Wave 5 RECTANGULAR-CORE and TOPICAL MODULE 2 $350
Wave 5 RECTANGULAR RESEARCH FILE RECTANGULAR-CORE and TOPICAL MODULE 2 $350
September 1986-December 1986 RECTANGULAR-CORE and TOPICAL MODULE 2 $350
January 1987-April 1987 Wave 7 RECTANGULAR-CORE and TOPICAL MODULE 2 $350
May 1987-August 1987 Wave 8 RECTANGULAR-CORE 2 $350
Wave 8 RECTANGULAR RESEARCH FILE RECTANGULAR-CORE TOPICAL MODULE 2 $350
Longitudinal File 1985 Full Panel Research File (32-month file); October 1984-July 1987 (Data Collection Months) RECTANGULAR-CORE 4 $700
SIPP Public-Use Files Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
60
Name of Data file by Panel Number of Price(Dates are interview months; unless otherwise Specified) Tapes @6250 bpi
1986 PanelFebruary 1986-May 1986 Wave 1 RECTANGULAR-CORE 2 $350
June 1986-September 1986 Wave 2 RECTANGULAR-CORE and TOPICAL MODULE 2 $350
October 1986-December 1986 Wave 3 RECTANGULAR-CORE and TOPICAL MODULE 1 $175
January 1987-April 1987 Wave 4 RECTANGULAR-CORE and TOPICAL MODULE 2 $350
May 1987-August 1987 Wave 5 RECTANGULAR-CORE and EDUCATIONAL FINANCING 2 $350
Wave 5 RECTANGULAR RESEARCH FILE-CORE and TOPICAL MODULE 2 $350
September 1987-December 1987 Wave 6 RECTANGULAR-CORE and TOPICAL MODULE 2 $350
January 1988-April 1988 Wave 7 RECTANGULAR-CORE and TOPICAL MODULE 2 $350
Longitudinal File 1986 Full Panel Research File (28-month file); October 1986-March 1988 (Data Collection Months) RECTANGULAR-CORE 3 $525
SIPP Public-Use Files Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
61
Name of Data file by Panel Number of Price(Dates are interview months; unless otherwise Specified) Tapes @6250 bpi
1987 PanelFebruary 1987-May 1987 Wave 1 RECTANGULAR-CORE 2 $350
June 1987-September 1987 Wave 2 RECTANGULAR-CORE and TOPICAL MODULE 2 $350
October 1987-January 1988 Wave 3 RECTANGULAR-CORE and TOPICAL MODULE 2 $350
February 1988-may 1988 Wave 4 RECTANGULAR-CORE and TOPICAL MODULE 2 $350
June 1988-September 1988 Wave 5 RECTANGULAR-CORE and EDUCATIONAL FINANCING 2 $350
Wave 5 RECTANGULAR-RESEARCH FILE CORE and TOPICAL MODULE (ALL) 2 $350
October 1988-January 1989 Wave 6 RECTANGULAR-CORE and TOPICAL MODULE 2 $350
February 1989-May 1989 Wave 7 RECTANGULAR-CORE and TOPICAL MODULE 2 $350
Longitudinal File 1988 Full Panel Research File (23-month File); February 1987-May 1989 (Data Collection Months) RECTANGULAR-CORE 3 $525
SIPP Public-Use Files Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
62
Name of Data file by Panel Number of Price(Dates are interview months; unless otherwise Specified) Tapes @6250 bpi
1988 PanelFebruary 1988-May 1988 Wave 1 RECTANGULAR-CORE 2 $350
June 1988-September 1988 Wave 2 RECTANGULAR-CORE and TOPICAL MODULE 2 $276
October 1988-January 1989 Wave 3 RECTANGULAR-CORE and TOPICAL MODULE 2 $250
February 1989-May 1989 Wave 4 RECTANGULAR-CORE and TOPICAL MODULE 2 $250
June 1989-September 1989 Wave 5 RECTANGULAR-CORE and EDUCATIONAL FINANCING/ENROLLMENT 2 $222
Wave 5 CORE AND TOPICAL MODULE RECTANGULAR-RESEARCH FILE 2 $225
October 1989-January 1989 Wave 6 RECTANGULAR-CORE and TOPICAL MODULE 2 $250
Longitudinal File 1987 Full Panel Research File (28-month file); February 1988-May 1990 (Data Collection Months) RECTANGULAR-CORE 3 $600
SIPP Public-Use Files Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
63
Name of Data file by Panel Number of Price(Dates are interview months; unless otherwise Specified) Tapes @6250 bpi
1989 PanelFebruary 1989-May 1989 Wave 1 RECTANGULAR-CORE 2 $225
June 1989-September 1989 Wave 2 RECTANGULAR-CORE 2 $225
October 1989-January 1990 Wave 3 RECTANGULAR-CORE and TOPICAL MODULE 2 $250
SIPP Public-Use Files Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
64
Name of Data file by Panel Number of Price(Dates are interview months; unless otherwise Specified) Tapes @6250 bpi
1990 Panel (Data released on a person-month basis) Core and Topical Modules released separatelyFebruary 1990-May 1990 Wave 1 RECTANGULAR-CORE PERSON MONTH 3 $400
June 1990-September 1990 Wave 2 RECTANGULAR-CORE PERSON-MONTH 3 $400 TOPICAL MODULE ONLY 1 $175
October 1990-January 1991 Wave 3 PERSON-MONTH 3 $400 TOPICAL MODULE ONLY 1 $175
February 1991-May 1991 Wave 4 RECTANGULAR-CORE PERSON-MONTH 3 $400 RECTANGULAR TOPICAL MODULE 1 $175
June 1991-September 1991 Wave 5 RECTANGULAR-CORE PERSON MONTH 3 $400 RECTANGULAR TOPICAL MODULE 1 $175
Wave 5 RESEARCH FILE 1 $175
October 1991-January 1992 Wave 6 RECTANGULAR-CORE PERSON-MONTH 3 $400 RECTANGULAR TOPICAL MODULE 1 $175
February 1992-May 1992 Wave 7 RECTANGULAR-CORE 3 $400 RECTANGULAR TOPICAL MODULE 1 $175
June 1992-September 1992 Wave 8 RECTANGULAR-CORE 3 $400 TOPICAL MODULE 1 $175
June 1992-September 1992 Wave 8 RECTANGULAR RESEARCH FILE 1 $175 TOPICAL MODULE
February 1991-September 1992 5 Wave Longitudinal File 6 $1,025 1990 Full Panel Research File (27-month file); February 1990-September 1992 6 $1,100 (Data Collection Months) RECTANGULAR CORE
SIPP Public-Use Files Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
65
Name of Data file by Panel Number of Price(Dates are interview months; unless otherwise Specified) Tapes @6250 bpi
1991 Panel (Data released on a person-month basis) Core and Topical Modules released separatelyFebruary 1991-May 1991 Wave 1 RECTANGULAR-CORE PERSON MONTH 2 $250 Wave 1 RECTANGULAR-TOPICAL MODULE 1 $175
June 1991-September 1991 Wave 2 RECTANGULAR-CORE PERSON-MONTH 2 $250 RECTANGULAR TOPICAL MODULE 1 $175
October 1991-January 1992 Wave 3 RECTANGULAR-CORE PERSON-MONTH 2 $250 RECTANGULAR TOPICAL MODULE 1 $175
February 1992-May 1992 Wave 4 RECTANGULAR-CORE PERSON-MONTH 2 $250 RECTANGULAR TOPICAL MODULE 1 $175
June 1992-September 1992 Wave 5 RECTANGULAR-CORE PERSON-MONTH 2 $250 RECTANGULAR TOPICAL MODULE 1 $175 Wave 5 TOPICAL MODULE RESEARCH FILE 1 $175
October 1992-January 1993 Wave 6 RECTANGULAR-CORE PERSON-MONTH 2 $250 RECTANGULAR TOPICAL MODULE 1 $175
February 1993-May 1993 Wave 7 RECTANGULAR-CORE PERSON-MONTH 2 $250 RECTANGULAR TOPICAL MODULE 1 $175
June 1993-September 1993 Wave 8 RECTANGULAR-CORE PERSON-MONTH 2 $250 Wave 8 TOPICAL MODULE - EDUCATIONAL FINANCING 1 $175 Wave 8 TOPICAL MODULE RESEARCH FILE 1 $175
Longitudinal File 1991 Full Panel Research File (32-month File); February 1991-September 1993 (Data Collection Months) RECTANGULAR-CORE 4 $700
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Name of Data file by Panel Number of Price(Dates are interview months; unless otherwise Specified) Tapes @6250 bpi
1992 Panel (Data released on a person-month basis) Core and Topical Modules released separatelyFebruary 1992-May 1992 Wave 1 RECTANGULAR-CORE PERSON MONTH 2 $400 Wave 1 TOPICAL MODULE 1 $175
June 1992-September 1992 Wave 2 RECTANGULAR-CORE PERSON-MONTH 2 $350 RECTANGULAR TOPICAL MODULE 1 $175
October 1992-January 1993 Wave 3 RECTANGULAR-CORE PERSON MONTH 2 $350 RECTANGULAR TOPICAL MODULE 1 $175
February 1993-May 1993 Wave 4 RECTANGULAR-CORE PERSON MONTH 2 $350 RECTANGULAR TOPICAL MODULE 1 $175
June 1993-September 1993 Wave 5 RECTANGULAR-CORE PERSON-MONTH 2 $350 Wave 5 TOPICAL MODULE 1 $175
October 1993-January 1994 Wave 6 TOPICAL MODULE 2 $350 Wave 6 RECTANGULAR-CORE PERSON-MONTH 1 $175
February 1994-May 1994 Wave 7 RECTANGULAR-CORE PERSON-MONTH 2 $350 Wave 7 TOPICAL MODULE 1 $175
June 1994-September 1994 Wave 8 RECTANGULAR CORE-PERSON MONTH 2 $350
October 1994-January 1995 Wave 9 PERSON MONTH 2 $350 Wave 9 TOPICAL MODULE 6/97
Longitudinal Files 1992 SEVEN WAVE Longitudinal FILE February 1992-April 1994 6 $1,050
1992 Full Panel Research File (Longitudinal) (32-month File); February 1992-April 1995 5/97 (Data Collection Months)
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67
Name of Data file by Panel Number of Price(Dates are interview months; unless otherwise Specified) Tapes @6250 bpi
1993 Panel (Data released on a person-month basis) Core and Topical Modules released separatelyFebruary 1993-May 1993 2 $375 Wave 1 RECTANGULAR-CORE PERSON MONTH 1 $175 Wave 1 RECTANGULAR TOPICAL MODULE
June 1993-September 1993 Wave 2 RECTANGULAR-CORE PERSON MONTH 2 $375 Wave 2 RECTANGULAR-TOPICAL MODULE 1 $175
October 1993-January 1994 Wave 3 RECTANGULAR-CORE PERSON MONTH 2 $375 Wave 3 RECTANGULAR TOPICAL MODULE 1 $175
February 1994-may 1994 Wave 4 RECTANGULAR-CORE PERSON MONTH 1 $375 Wave 4 RECTANGULAR TOPICAL MODULE 2 $175
June 1994-September 1994 Wave 5 PERSON MONTH 2 $350 Wave 5 TOPICAL MODULE 1 $175 Wave 5 TOPICAL MODULE-RESEARCH FILE
October 1994-January 1995 Wave 6 PERSON MONTH 2 $350 Wave 6 TOPICAL MODULE 6/97
Febrary 1995-May 1995 Wave 7 PERSON MONTH 2 $350 Wave 7 TOPICAL MODULE 4/97
March 1995-January 1996 Wave 8 TOPICAL MODULE 2 $350 Wave 8 PERSON MONTH 1 $175 Wave 8 TOPICAL MODULE-RESEARCH FILE 1 $175
Wave 9 PERSON MONTH 3/97 Wave 9 TOPICAL MODULE 11/97
Full Panel February 1993-February 1996 7/97
SIPP Public-Use Files Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
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Number of CD-ROMS Price
SIPP CD-ROMS
1987 PanelLongitudinal File 1987 Full Panel Research File (28-month file); February 1988-May 1990 (Data Collection Months) RECTANGULAR-CORE 1 OUT OF STOCK
1988 PanelLongitudinal File 1988 Full Panel Research File (23-month file); February 1987-May 1989 (Data Collection Months) RECTANGULAR-CORE 1 FREE
1990 Panel 1990 Full Panel Research File (27-month file); February 1990-September 1992 (Data Collection Months) RECTANGULAR-CORE 1 $150
1991 Panel 1991 Full Panel Research File February 1991-September 1993 also includes 1990 Full Panel Research File 1 $150
February 1990-September 1992 (21-month file)
WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
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SURVEYS-ON-CALL (Data Extraction System/DES)
SURVEYS-On-Call (previously SIPP-On-Call) is a U.S. Bureau of the Census 'on-line' computer servicefor making data extractions from Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP) public use,microdata files. The Data Extraction System (part of Surveys-On-Call) assists users in the process ofspecifying data to be extracted. Once a user has completed the extract specifications, the systemautomatically builds a customized extract in one of several user-selected data file formats. The extracteddata can then be 'downloaded' to the user's own computer system for analysis.
For more information about Surveys-On-Call or the Data Extraction System, call the Surveys-On-Callsupport staff at (301) 763-8375 or (301) 763-8376.
Specifications for the Surveys-On-Call Computer Stems:
Internet Users: telnet www.census.gov or http://www.census.govthen login as: desuser (for census home page)
Census Bureau Headquarters EmployeesRecommended Terminal should contact the Surveys-On-CallEmulation: VT-100, VT 200 support staff for special usage
instructions.
U.S. Department of CommerceBureau of the Census
Surveys Processing and Coordination StaffSurveys-On-Call Support Group
Notice: NO Confidential data are accessible on or though this computer system.
WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
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Topical Modules by Wave and Panel
1984 PANEL 1985 PANELWave Wave
1 None 1 None
2 None 2 None
3 Health and Disability 3 AssetsEducation and Work History Liabilities
Real Estate Property and Vehicles
4 Assets 4 Marital HistoryLiabilities Fertility HistoryPension Plan Coverage Migration HistoryJob from which Retired Household RelationshipsRetirement Plans Support for Non-household Shelter Costs and Energy Usage Members
Work Related Expenses
5 Support for Non-household Members 5 Annual IncomeReasons for Not Working/Reservation Taxes
Wage Individual Retirement AccountsChild for Care Arrangements and Educational Financing and Enrollment ExpensesWelfare History and Child SupportWork-Related Expenses
6 Annual Income 6 Child Care ArrangementsTaxes Child Support AgreementsEmployee Benefits Support for Non-household MembersEducational Financing and Enrollment Job OffersTraining Questions Health Status and Utilization of
of Health Care ServicesLong-Term CareDisability Status of Children
7 Assets 7 AssetsLiabilities LiabilitiesPension Plan Coverage Pension Plan CoverageReal Estate Property andVehicles Lump Sum Distributions from Pension
PlansCharacteristics of Job from which RetiredReal Estate Property and Vehicles
8 Support for Non-household Members 8 Annual IncomeHousehold Relationships TaxesMarital History Individual Retirement AccountsFertility History Educational Financing and EnrollmentMigration HistoryWork-Related Expenses
9 Annual IncomeTaxesIndividual Retirement AccountsEducational Financing and Enrollment
Topical Modules by Wave and Panel Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
71
1986 PANEL 1987 PANELWave Wave
1 None 1 None
2 Fertility History 2 Fertility HistoryMarital History Marital HistoryMigration History Migration HistoryRecipiency History Recipiency HistoryEmployment History Employment HistoryWork Disability History Work Disability HistoryEducation and Training History Education and Training HistoryFamily Background Family BackgrounndHousehold Relationships Household Relationships
3 Child Care Arrangements 3 Child Care ArrangementsChild Support Agreements Child Support AgreementsSupport for Non-household Members Support for Non-household MembersJob Offers Work Related ExpensesHealth Status and Utilization of Shelter Cost/EnergyUsage Health Care ServicesDisability Status of ChildrenLong Term Care
4 Assets 4 AssetsLiabilities LiabilitiesPension Plan Coverage Real EstateLump Sum Distribution from Pension Property Vehicles PlansCharacteristics of Job from which RetiredReal Estate Property and Vehicles
5 Annual Income 5 Annual IncomeTaxes TaxesIndividual Retirement Accounts Individual Retirement AccountsEducational Financing and Enrollment Educational Financing and Enrollment
6 Child Care Arrangements 6 Child Care ArrangementsChild Support Agreements Child Support AgreementsSupport for Non-household Members Support for Non-household MembersWork Related Expenses Work ScheduleShelter Costs Home Health CareEnergy Usage Disability Status of Children
Health Status and Utilization of Health Care ServicesLong Term Care
7 Assets 7 Selected Financial AssetsLiabilities Medical ExpensesPension Plan Coverage Work DisabilityReal Estate Property and Vehicles Real Estate, Shelter Costs, Dependent
Care, and Vehicles
Topical Modules by Wave and Panel Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
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1988 PANEL 1989 PANELWave Wave
1 None 1 None
2 Recipiency History 2 Recipiency HistoryEmployment History Employment HistoryWork Disability History Work Disability HistoryEducation & Training History Education & Training History
Family Background Marital HistoryMarital History Migration HistoryMigration History Fertility HistoryFertility History Household RelationshipsHousehold Relationships
3 Work Schedule 3 Work ScheduleChild Care Child CareChild Support Agreements Child Support AgreementsSupport for Non-household Members Support for Non-householdHealth Status & Utilization of Members Health Care Services Home Health Care of ChildrenLong-Term Care Disability Status of ChildrenDisability Status of Children Health Status & Utilization of
Health Care ServicesFunctional Activities
4 Selected Financial AssetsMedical Expenses & Work DisabilityReal Estate, Shelter Costs, Dependent Care, & Vehicles
5 School Enrollment & FinancingAnnual Income & Retirement Accounts Taxes
6 Work ScheduleChild CareChild Support AgreementsSupport for Non-householdMembers Home Health CaresDisability Status of ChildrenHealth Status & Utilization of Health Care ServicesFunctional Activities
Topical Modules by Wave and Panel Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
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1990 PANEL 1991 PANELWave Wave
1 None 1 None
2 Recipiency History 2 Recipiency HistoryEmployment History Employment HistoryWork Disability History Work Disability HistoryEducation & Training History Education & Training HistoryMarital History Marital HistoryMigration History Migration HistoryFertility History Fertility HistoryHousehold Relationships Household Relationships
3 Work Schedule 3 Work ScheduleChild Care Child CareChild Support Agreements Child Support AgreementsSupport for Non-household Members Support for Non-household Functional Limitations & Disability Functional Limitations & DisabilityUtilization of Health Care Services Utilization of Health Care Services
4 Assets and Liabilities 4 Selected Financial AssetsRetirement Expectations & Pension Medical Expenses & Work Disability Plan Coverage Real Estate, Shelter Costs, DependentReal Estate Property & Vehicles Care, & Vehicles
5 School Enrollment & Financing 5 School Enrollment and FinancingAnnual Income & Retirement Accounts Annual Income & Retirement AccountsTaxes Taxes
6 Child Support Agreements 6 Consumer DurablesSupport for Non-household Members Living ConditionsFunctional Limitations and Disability Basic NeedsUtilization of Health Care ServicesSpells Outside of the Work Force
7 Selected Financial Assets 7 Assets & LiabilitiesMedical Expenses & Work Disability Retirement Expectation & Pension PlanReal Estate, Shelter Costs, Dependent Coverage
Care, & Vehicles Real Estate & Property Vehicles
8 School Enrollment and Financing 8 School Enrollment and FinancingAnnual Income & Retirement Accounts Annual Income & Retirement AccountsTaxes Taxes
WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97Topical Modules by Wave and Panel Con.
74
1992 PANEL 1993 PANELWave Wave
1 Recipiency History 1 Recipiency HistoryEmployment Employment
2 Work Disability History 2 Work Disability HistoryEducation and Training History Education and Training HistoryMarital History Marital HistoryMigration History Migration HistoryFertility History Fertility HistoryHousehold Relationships Household Relationships
3 Extended Measures of Well-Being 3 Work Schedule, Child Care, Child (Consumer Durables, Living Support, Support for Non-household Conditions, Basic Needs) Members, Functional Limitations &
Disability, Utilization of Health Care Services, 1 Q on Home Based Self-Employment, I Q on Size of Firm
4 Assets & Liabilities; Retirement 4 Selected Financial Assets; MedicalExpectations & Pension Plan Expenses & Work Disability; Real Coverage; Real Estate, Property & Shelter Costs, Dependent Care,& Vehicles Vehicles
5 Annual Income & Retirement 5 Annual Income & Retirement Accounts; Taxes; School Accounts; Taxes; SchoolEnrollment & Financing Enrollment & Financing
6 Work Schedule, Child Care, Child 6 Work Schedule, Child Care, Child Support, Support for Support, Support for Non-household Non-household Members Members, Functional Limitations &Function Limits & Disability, Utilization Disability, Utilization of Health of Health Care Services, 1 Q on Home Care Services, I Q on Home Based Based Self-Employment, I Q on Size of Self-Employment, I Q on Size of Firm Firm
7 Selected Financial Assets; Medical 7 Assets & Liabilities; Medicaid Expenses & Work Disability; Expenses & Work Disability; Real Real Estate, Shelter Costs, Estate Shelter Costs, Dependent Dependent Care, & Vehicles Care & Vehicles
8 Annual Income & Retirement 8 Annual Income & Retirement Accounts; Taxes; School Accounts Taxes; School Enrollment & Financing Enrollment & Financing
9 Work Schedule, Child Care, Child 9 Work Schedule, Child Care, Child Support, Support for Non-household Support, Support for Non-household Members, Functional Limitations & Members, Functional Limitations & Disability, Utilization of Health Care Disability, Utilization of Health Services, 1 Q on Home Based Care Services, Childrens Well Being Self-Employment, 1 Q on Size of Firm
WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
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SIPP User Note Subjects
1993 PANEL
Waves 1, 2, and 3 Core
No. 1 Bottom Code BRTHYR
No. 2 Replacement of File Information Chapter
No. 3 Additional Questions and Check Item to Social Security Questions
Wave 2 Core
No. 1 Replacement of File Information Chapter
No. 2 Additional Questions and Check Item to Social Security Questions
Wave 3 Core
No. 1 Replacement of File Information Chapter
No. 2 Additional Questions and Check Item to Social Security Questions
Wave 1 Topical Module
No. 1 Replacement of File Information Chapter
Wave 2 Topical Module
No. 1 Revision of PP-MIS Variables and TM8736
Wave 3 Topical Module
No. 1 Sipp Data Review of 1993 Wave 3 Child Care
No. 2 Replacement of File Information Chapter appendices A-4, 1990 Census of PopulationOccupation Classification System and A-5, 1990 Census of Population IndustryClassification System
Waves 4, 5, 6, and 7 Core
No. 1 Release of Wave 5 Data File
No. 2 Replacement of File Information Chapter appendices A-4, 1990 Census of PopulationOccupation Classification System and A-5, 1990 Census of Population IndustryClassification System
SIPP User Note Subjects Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
76
No. 3 Release of Wave 6 and 7 Data Files
No. 4 Additional Questions and Check Item to Social Security Questions
Wave 4 Topical Module
No. 1 Revised Abstract Replacement of File Information Chapter Appendices A-4, 1990 Censusof Population Occupation Classification System and A-5, 1990 Census of PopulationIndustry Classification System
Wave 5 Topical Module (School Enrollment & Financing Topical ModuleMicrodata File & Wave 5 Annual Income & Retirement Accounts & TaxesTopical Module Research File
No. 1 Replacement of File Information Chapter Appendices A-4, 1990 Census of PopulationOccupation Classification System and A-5, 1990 Census of Population IndustryClassification System
No. 2 Correction of File Size (Replace Abstract)
No. 3 Authorization Form
1992 PANEL
Wave 1 Topical Module
No. 1 Appendices A-4, 1990 Census of Population Occupation Classification System and A-5,1990 Census of Population Industry Classification System
Wave 2 Topical Module
No. 1 Revision of PP-MIS and TM8736 Variables
No. 2 Appendices A-4, 1990 Census of Population Occupation Classification System and A-5,1990 Census of Population Industry Classification System
Wave 3 Topical Module
No. 1 Appendices A-4, 1990 Census of Population Occupation Classification System and A-5,1990 Census of Population Industry Classification System.
Waves 1, 2, 3 Core
No. 1 Replacement of File Information Chapter Appendices A-4, 1990 Census of PopulationOccupation Classification System and A-5, 1990 Census of Population IndustryClassification System
SIPP User Note Subjects Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
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No. 2 Additional Question and Check Item to Social Security Questions
Waves 4, 5, 6, & 7 Core and Waves 4-8 are combined)
No. 1 Release of Wave 6 Data File
No. 2 Release of Wave 7 Data File
No. 3 Release of Wave 8 Data File
No. 4 Replecement of File Information Chapter
No. 5 Additional Question and Check Item to Social Security Quesitons
Wave 4 Topical Module
No. 1 Replacement of Variables TM4320 and TM4420 by Filler
No. 2 Appendices A-4, 1990 Census of Population Occupation Classification System and A-5,1990 Census of Population Industry Classification System
Wave 6 Topical Module
No. 1 SIPP Data Review of 1992 Wave 6 Child Care Module
No. 2 Replacement of File Information Chapter Appendices A-4, 1990 Census of PopulationOccupation Classification System and A-5, 1990 Census of Population IndustryClassification System
Wave 7 Topical Module
No. 1 Revised AbstractReplacement of File Information Chapter Appendices A-4, 1990 Census of PopulationOccupation Classification System and A-5, 1990 Census of Population Industry Classification System
No. 1 Authorization Form
Wave 1-7 Longitudinal File (SEVNWAVE FILE)
No. 1 File Corrrection - Problem Description, Explanation, Files Affected, Solution
Wave 8 School Enrollment & Financing Topical Module Microdata File &Wave 8 Annual Income & Retirement Accounts & Taxes Topical Module Research File
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No. 1 Replacement of File Information Chapter Appendices A-4, 1990 Census of Population Occupation Classification System and A-5,1990 Census of Population Industry Classification System
No. 2 Authorization Form
1991 Rectangular Files
Wave 1 Core
No. 1 Additional Question and Check Item to Social Security Questions
Wave 2 Core
No. 1 Additional Question and Check Item to Social Security Questions
Wave 2 Topical Module
No. 1 Review of Education and Training History Topical Module
No. 2 Change in Description of TM8254
Wave 3 Core
No. 1 Additional Question and Check Item to Social Security Questions
Wave 3 Topical Module
No user notes
Wave 4 Core
No. 1 Additional Question and Check Item to Social Security Questions
Wave 4 Topical Module
No. 1 Mortgage Record Recode
No. 2 Replacement of File Information Chapter
Wave 5 Core
No. 1 Additional Question and Check Item to Social Security Questions
Wave 5 Topical Module Research
No. 1 Revised Index and Variable Listing
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Wave 6 Core
No. 1 Additional Question and Check Item to Social Security Questions
Wave 6 Topical Module
No user notes
Wave 7 Core
No. 1 Replacement of Variables TM4320 and TM4420 by Filler
No. 2 Additional Question and Check Item to Social Security Questions
Wave 7 Topical Module
No. 1 Replacement of Variables TM4320 and TM4420 by Filler
1991 FULL PANEL MICRODATA TAPE AND CD-ROM
No. 1 Replacement of File Information Chapter (Disregard User Note #1, it has been combinedwith User Note #2)
No. 2 Poverty ThresholdsFile Information
No. 3 File Correction - Problem Description, Explanation, Files Affected, Solution
1990 Panel Rectangular Files
Wave 1 Core
No. 1 Source and Accuracy Statement
No. 2 Control Counts
No. 3 Additional Question and Check Item to Social Security Questions
Wave 2 Core
No. 1 Control Counts
No. 2 Additional Question and Check Item to Social Security Questions
Wave 2 Topical Module
No. 1 Change in Description of TM8254
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Wave 3 Core
No. 1 Control Counts
No. 2 Additional Question and Check Item to Social Security Questions
Wave 3 Topical Module
No. 1 Review of Child Care Module Along With Clarification of Lost Time From Work Item
No. 2 Review of Functional Limitations and Disability Module
Wave 4 Core
No. 1 Control Counts
No. 2 Additional Question and Check Item to Social Security Questions
Wave 4 Topical Module
No. 1 Mortgage Record Recode
No. 2 Replacement of File Information Chapter
Wave 5 Core
No. 1 Additional Question and Check Item to Social Security Questions
Wave 5 Topical Module Research File (Rerelease)
No. 1 Replacement of File Information Chapter
Wave 6 Core
No. 1 Additional Question and Check Item to Social Security Questions
Wave 6 Topical Module
No. 1 Record Count Correction on Abstract
No. 2 Replacement of File Information Chapter
Wave 7 Core
No. 1 Replacement of File Information Chapter
No. 2 Additional Question and Check Item to Social Security Questions
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Wave 7 Topical Module
No user notes
Wave 8 Core
No. 1 Replacement of File Information Chapter
No. 2 Additional Question and Check Item to Social Security Questions
Wave 8 Topical Module
No user notes
Full Panel Waves 1-8 Microdata File on CD-ROM
No. 1 CHAMP Health Insurance Correction
No. 2 Replacement of the Source and Accuracy Statement
No. 3 Replacement of the Abstract
No. 4 Replacement of File Information Chaperer
No. 5 File Correction - Problem Description, Explanation, Files Affected, Solution
Full Panel Waves 1-8 Microdata Tape File
No. 1 CHAMP Health Insurance Correction
No. 2 Replacement of the Source and Accuracy Statement
No. 3 Replacement of the Abstract
No. 4 Replacement of File Information Chapter
No. 5 File Correction - Problem Description, Explanation, Files Affected, Solution
Longitudinal Waves 1-5
No. 1 CHAMP Health Insurance Correction
No. 2 Replacement of File Information Chapter
No. 3 File Correction - Problem Description, Explanation, Files Affected, Solution
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1989 PANEL
Wave 1 Core
No. 1 Additional Question and Check Item to Social Security Questions
Wave 2 Core
No. 1 Additional Question and Check Item to Social Security Questions
Wave 2 Topical Module
No user notes
Wave 3 Core
No. 1 Additional Question and Check Item to Social Security Questions
Wave 3 Topical Module
No user notes
1988 PANEL
Wave 1 Core
No. 1 Corrected Record Count
No. 2 Frequency Diskette
No. 3 Revised Source and Accuracy Statement Pages
No. 4 Additional Question and Check Item to Social Security Quesitons
Wave 2 Core and Topical Module
No. 1 Frequency Diskette
No. 2 Revised Source and Accuracy Statement Pages
No. 3 Correction to Data Dictionary
No. 4 Additional Question and Check Item to Social Security Questions
Wave 3 Core and Topical Module
No. 1 Frequency Diskette
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No. 2 Revised Source and Accuracy Statement Pages
No. 3 Additional Question and Check Item to Social Security Quesitons
Wave 4 Core and Topical Module
No. 1 Frequency Diskette
No. 2 Revised Source and Accuracy Statement Pages
No. 3 Additional Question and Check Item to Social Security Quesitons
Wave 5 Core and Educational Financing/Enrollment Topical Module
No. 1 Frequency Diskette
No. 2 Revised Source and Accuracy Statement Pages
No. 3 Additional Question and Check Item to Social Security Quesitons
Wave 5 Core and Topical Module Research Microdata File
No. 1 Frequency Diskette
No. 2 Revised Source and Accuracy Statement Pages
No. 3 Additional Question and Check Item to Social Security Quesitons
Wave 6 Core and Topical Module
No. 1 Frequency Diskette
No. 2 Revised Source and Accuracy Statement Pages
Full Panel Microdata Tape
No. 1 Revised Abstract, File Information, Variable Listing, Index, and Data Dictionary
No. 2 CHAMP Health Insurance Correction
No.3 File Correction - Problem Description, Explanation, Files Affected, Solution
Full Panel CD-ROM
No. 1 CHAMP Health Insurance Correction
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1987 PANEL
Wave 1
No. 1 Correction on Table 12 of Source and Accuracy Statement
No. 2 Revised Source and Accuracy Statement
No. 3 Insertion of Omitted Variables
No. 4 Control Counts (Weighted and Unweighted)
No. 5 Frequency Diskette
Wave 2
No. 1 Correction of WICCOV2, FILLER, and I41AMT Variables
No. 2 Control Counts (Weighted and Unweighted)
No. 3 Non-Responses Imputation Procedure for Specific Items
No. 4 Revisions to Topical Module Begin Positions
No. 5 Correction to Data in Variable TM8736
No. 6 Frequency Diskette
Wave 3
No. 1 Source and Accuracy on Child Care
No. 2 Correction of WICCOV2, FILLER, and I41AMT Variables
No. 3 Control Counts (Weighted and Unweighted)
No. 4 Frequency Diskette
Wave 4
No. 1 Correction of WICCOV2, FILLER, I41AMT, and TM8598 Variables
No. 2 Control Counts (Weighted and Unweighted)
No. 3 Frequency Diskette
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Wave 5
No. 1 Educational Financing\Enrollment Topical Module Data Review
No. 2 Revised Source and Accuracy Statement
No. 3 Correction of FILLER and I41AMT Variables
No. 4 Control Counts (Weighted and Unweighted)
No. 5 Frequency Diskette
Wave 6
No. 1 Control Counts (Weighted and Unweighted)
No. 2 Frequency Diskette
Wave 7
No. 1 Control Counts (Weighted and Unweighted)
No. 2 Frequency Diskette
1986 PANEL
Wave 1 (Core)
No. 1 Correction on Table 12 of Source and Accuracy Statement
No. 2 Revised Source and Accuracy Statement
No. 3 Control Counts
No. 4 Revised Table 7 for Weighted and Unweighted Control Counts
No. 5 Statement on the Effects of Maximum Telephone Interviewing Experiment on 1986 PanelLongitudinal Estimates
No. 6 Insertion of Omitted Variables
No. 7 Maximum Telephone Interviewing Experiment - Preliminary analysis
No. 8 Frequency Diskette
Wave 2 (Core and Topical Module)
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No. 1 Revised Source and Accuracy Statement
No. 2 Control Counts
No. 3 Revised Table 7 for Weighted and Unweighted Control Counts
No. 4 Statement on the Effects of Maximum Telephone Interviewing Experiment on 1986 PanelLongitudinal Estimates
No. 5 Maximum Telephone Interviewing Experiment - Preliminary analysis
No. 6 Frequency Diskette
No. 7 Nonresponse Imputation Procedure for Specific Items
No. 8 Correction of Variables SC1046 and WS2-2125
Wave 3 (Core and Topical Module)
No. 1 Topical Module Reviews
No. 2 Revised Source and Accuracy Statement
No. 3 Control Counts
No. 4 Revised Table 7 for Weighted and Unweighted Control Counts
No. 5 Statement on the Effects of Maximum Telephone Interviewing Experiment on 1986 PanelLongitudinal Estimates
No. 6 Source and Accuracy Statement on Child Care
No. 7 Maximum Telephone Interviewing Experiment - Preliminary Analysis
No. 8 Frequency Diskette
Wave 4 (Core and Topical Module)
No. 1 Correction on Table 12 of Source and Accuracy Statement
No. 2 Topical Module Review on Assets and Liabilities
No. 3 Recodes for Secured and Total Debt
No. 4 Revised Source and Accuracy Statement
No. 5 Control Counts
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No. 6 Revised Table 7 for Weighted and Unweighted Control Counts
No. 7 Statement on the Effects of Maximum Telephone Interviewing Experiment on 1986 PanelLongitudinal Estimates
No. 8 Maximum Telephone Interviewing Experiment - Preliminary Analysis
No. 9 Frequency Diskette
Wave 5 (Core and Educational Financing/Enrollment Topical Module)
No. 1 Topical Module Review on Education Training
No. 2 Revised Source and Accuracy Statement
No. 3 Control Counts
No. 4 Revised Table 7 for Weighted and Unweighted Control Counts
No. 5 Statement on the Effects of Maximum Telephone Interviewing Experiment on 1986 PanelLongitudinal Estimates
No. 6 Maximum Telephone Interviewing Experiment - Preliminary Analysis
No. 7 Frequency Diskette
Wave 6 (Core and Topical Module)
No. 1 Revised Source and Accuracy Statement
No. 2 Control Counts
No. 3 Revised Table 7 for Weighted and Unweighted Control Counts
No. 4 Statement on the Effects of Maximum Telephone Interviewing Experiment on 1986 PanelLongitudinal Estimates
No. 5 Source and Accuracy Statement on Child Care
No. 6 Maximum Telephone Interviewing Experiment - Preliminary Analysis
No. 7 Frequency Diskette
Wave 7 (Core and Topical Module)
No. 1 Revised Source and Accuracy Statement
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No. 2 Control Counts
No. 3 Revised Table 7 for Weighted and Unweighted Control Counts
No. 4 Statement on the Effects of Maximum Telephone Interviewing Experiment on 1986 PanelLongitudinal Estimates
No. 5 Maximum Telephone Interviewing Experiment - Preliminary analysis
No. 6 Frequency Diskette
1985 PANEL
Wave 1 (Core)
No. 1 Revised File Sort Sequence in Abstract
No. 2 Control Counts
No. 3 Revised Source and Accuracy Statement
No. 4 Frequency Diskette
Wave 2 (Core)
No. 1 Correction of Specific Mnemonics with Duplicate Names
No. 2 New Descriptions for SC0064, SC0066, and SC0068
No. 3 Omission of Mnemonic SE1-OCC
No. 4 Correction of Filler Mnemonic (Revised)
No. 5 Revised File Sort Sequence in Abstract
No. 6 Control Counts
No. 7 Revised Source and Accuracy Statement
No. 8 Revised Table 7 for Weighted and Unweighted Control Counts
No. 9 Frequency Diskette
Wave 3 (Core and Topical Module)
No. 1 Correction of Specific Mnemonics with Duplicate Names
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No. 2 New Descriptions for SC0064, SC0066, and SC0068
No. 3 Correction of Filler Mnemonic
No. 4 Revised File Sort Sequence in Abstract
No. 5 Recodes for Secured and Total Debt
No. 6 Control Counts
No. 7 Revised Source and Accuracy Statement
No. 8 Revised Table 7 for Weighted and Unweighted Control Counts
No. 9 Frequency Diskette
Wave 4 (Core and Topical Module)
No. 1 Correction of Specific Mnemonics with Duplicate Names
No. 2 New Descriptions for SC0064, SC0066, and SC0068
No. 3 Evaluations of Topical Module Data
No. 4 Correction of Filler Mnemonic
No. 5 Revised File Sort Sequence in Abstract
No. 6 Control Counts
No. 7 Revised Source and Accuracy Statement
No. 8 Revised Table 7 for Weighted and Unweighted Control Counts
No. 9 Frequency Diskette
Waves 5 and 8 (Core)
No. 1 Revised File Sort Sequence in Abstract
No. 2 Control Counts
No. 3 Revised Source and Accuracy Statement
No. 4 Revised Table 7 for Weighted and Unweighted Control Counts
No. 5 Frequency Diskette
Wave 6 (Core and Topical Module)
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No. 1 Correction of Filler Mnemonic
No. 2 Revised File Sort Sequence in Abstract
No. 3 Control Counts
No. 4 Revision to Variable TM8306
No. 5 Revised Source and Accuracy Statement
No. 6 Source and Accuracy Statement on Child Care
No. 7 Revised Table 7 for Weighted and Unweighted Control Counts
No. 8 Frequency Diskette
Wave 7 (Core and Topical Module)
No. 1 Revised File Sort Sequence in Abstract
No. 2 Recodes for Secured and Total Debt
No. 3 Control Counts
No. 4 Revised Source and Accuracy Statement
No. 5 Revised Table 7 for Weighted and Unweighted Control Counts
No. 6 Frequency Diskette
1985 Panel Relational Files
Wave 1
No user notes issued as of revision date
Wave 2
No. 1 Correction of Specific Mnemonics with Duplicate Names
No. 2 New Descriptions for SC0064, SC0066, and SC0068
Waves 3-8
No user notes issued as of revision date
1984 Panel Relational Files
Wave 1
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No. 1 Revised Documentation Page (4-24B and 4-24C)
No. 2 File Changes in Second Release of File
No. 3 SIPP 1984 Panel Wave 1 and Wave 2 Cases where Armed Forces Status was IncorrectlyClassified as ``Active Duty''
Wave 2
No. 1 Matching Person Records Between Wave 1 and Wave 2 Public Use Files
No. 2 Revised Version of the Machine-readable Data Dictionary and Location of VariableAFDC3
No. 3 Matching the Wave 1 and Wave 2 SIPP Data Files
No. 4 SIPP 1984 Panel Wave 1 and Wave 2 Cases where Armed Forces Status was IncorrectlyClassified as ``Active Duty.''
No. 5 Comparison of Item Locations on Wave 1 and Later Waves
No. 6 MSA Coding Correction
Wave 3
No. 1 Comparison of Wave 3 Data Dictionary to Wave 2 Data Dictionary
No. 2 Revised Data Dictionary pages
No. 3 Matching the 1984 SIPP Panel, Wave 1 Rotation 4 and Wave 3 Rotation 4
No. 4 Matching the 1984 SIPP Panel, Waves 2 and 3, Rotations 1, 2, and 3
No. 5 Weighting on Revised File
No. 6 Comparison of Item Locations on Wave 1 and Later Waves
No. 7 SIPP 1984 Panel Wave 1 and Wave 2 Cases where Armed Forces Status was IncorrectlyClassified as ``Active Duty''
No. 8 MSA Coding Correction
Wave 4
No. 1 Resolution of Nonmatches: 1984 SIPP Panel, Waves 3 and 4 and Armed Forces StatusIncorrectly Classified as ``Active Duty''
No. 2 MSA Coding Correction
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Wave 5
No. 1 SIPP 1984 Panel Wave 1 and Wave 2 Cases where Armed Forces Status Was IncorrectlyClassified as ``Active Duty'' (Relationship to this Wave)
No. 2 MSA Coding Correction
No. 3 Matching Information for Waves 5 and 6
No. 4 Resolution of Nonmatches; 1984 SIPP Panel, Waves 4 and 5
No. 5 Revised Documentation Page (page 323)
No. 6 Revised Documentation Page (page 21)
Wave 6
No. 1 Matching Information for Waves 5 and 6
No. 2 Revised Documentation Page (page 323)
No. 3 Revised Documentation Page (page 21)
Wave 7
No. 1 Revised Documentation Page (page 21) (12/86)
No. 2 Revised Documentation Page (page 323)
No. 3 Revised Documentation Page (page 21) (5/87)
Wave 8
No. 1 Revised Documentation Page (page 21) (12/86)
No. 2 Revised Documentation Page (page 323)
No. 3 Revised Documentation Page (page 21) (5/87)
Wave 9
No. 1 Revised Documentation Page (page 21)
No. 2 Explanation for Additional Family Records in Version 2
SIPP User Note Subjects Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
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1984 Panel Rectangular Files
Wave 1
No. 1 Universe Description Correction
No. 2 Revised Documentation Pages
No. 3 Changes in Machine-Readable Dictionary
No. 4 Imputation Explanation
No. 5 SIPP 1984 Panel Wave 1 and Wave 2 Cases where Armed Forces Status was IncorrectlyClassified as ``Active Duty.''
No. 6 Frequency Diskette
Wave 2
No. 1 Matching Person Records Between Wave 1 and Wave 2 Public Use Files
No. 2 Matching the Wave 1 and Wave 2 SIPP Data Files
No. 3 Comparison of Item Locations on Wave 1 and Later Waves
No. 4 SIPP 1984 Panel Wave 1 and Wave 2 Cases where Armed Forces Status was IncorrectlyClassified as ``Active Duty.''
No. 5 MSA Coding Correction
No. 6 Frequency Diskette
Wave 3
No. 1 Comparison of Wave 3 Data Dictionary to Wave 2 Data Dictionary
No. 2 Revised Data Dictionary Pages
No. 3 Matching the 1984 SIPP Panel, Wave 1, Rotation 4 and Wave 3, Rotation 4
No. 4 Reasons for Mismatches between Wave 2 and Wave 3
No. 5 Revised Data Dictionary Pages (pages 117-118)
No. 6 Comparison of Item Locations on Wave 1 and Later Waves
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No. 7 SIPP 1984 Panel Wave 1 and Wave 2 Cases where Armed Forces Status was IncorrectlyClassified as ``Active Duty''
No. 8 Revised Documentation Page (page 2)
No. 9 Frequency Diskette
Wave 3 (Core and Topical Module)
No. 1 Comparison of Wave 3 Data Dictionary to Wave 2 Data Dictionary
No. 2 Revised Data Dictionary pages
No. 3 Matching the 1984 SIPP Panel, Wave 1 Rotation 4 and Wave 3 Rotation 4
No. 4 Reasons for Mismatches between Wave 2 and Wave 3
No. 5 Revised Data Dictionary Pages (pages 117-118)
No. 6 Comparison of Item Locations on Wave 1 and Later Waves
No. 7 SIPP 1984 Panel Wave 1 and Wave 2 Cases where Armed Forces Status was IncorrectlyClassified as ``Active Duty''
No. 8 Revised Documentation Pages (pages 493, 495,537)
No. 9 Revised Documentation Page (page 2)
No. 10 Updated Generalized Variance Parameters
No. 11 Correction to Topical Module - Disability Status of Children
No. 12 Specific Imputation Flags in the Topical Module
No. 13 Frequency Diskette
Wave 4
No. 1 Resolution of Nonmatches: 1984 SIPP Panel, Waves 3 and 4 and Armed Forces StatusIncorrectly Classified as ``Active Duty''
No. 2 Sizes of AFDC Amount Fields
No. 3 Frequency Diskette
Wave 4 (Core and Topical Module)
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No. 1 Resolution of Nonmatches: 1984 SIPP Panel, Waves 3 and 4 and Armed Forces StatusIncorrectly Classified as ``Active Duty''
No. 2 Revised Documentation Page (page 562)
No. 3 Variable Changes on Second File Release
No. 4 Sizes of AFDC Amount Fields
No. 5 Revised Documentation Page (page 21)
No. 6 Recodes for Secured and Total Debt
No. 7 Frequency Diskette
Wave 5 (Core)
No. 1 SIPP 1984 Panel Wave 1 and Wave 2 Cases where Armed Forces Status was IncorrectlyClassified as ``Active Duty'' (Relationship to this Wave)
No. 2 Matching Information for Waves 5 and 6
No. 3 Resolution of Nonmatches; 1984 SIPP Panel, Waves 4 and 5
No. 4 Sizes of AFDC Amount Fields
No. 5 Revised Documentation Page (page 21)
No. 6 Frequency Diskette
Wave 5 Core and Topical Module
No. 1 SIPP 1984 Panel Wave 1 and Wave 2 Cases where Armed Forces Status was IncorrectlyClassified as ``Active Duty'' (Relationship to this Wave)
No. 2 Matching Information for Waves 5 and 6
No. 3 Resolution of Nonmatches; 1984 SIPP Panel, Waves 4 and 5
No. 4 Sizes of AFDC Amount Fields
No. 5 Revised Documentation Page (page 21)
No. 6 Frequency Diskette
Wave 6 (Core)
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No. 1 Matching Information for Waves 5 and 6
No. 2 Sizes of AFDC Amount Fields
No. 3 Revised Documentation Page (page 21)
No. 4 Frequency Diskette
Wave 7 (Core)
No. 1 Revised Documentation Page (page 21) (12/86)
No. 2 Sizes of AFDC Amount Fields
No. 3 Revised Documentation Page (page 21) (5/87)
No. 4 Frequency Diskette
Wave 7 (Core and Topical Module)
No. 1 ``A'' and ``B'' Parameters
No. 2 Pension Plan Parameters
No. 3 Data File/Data Dictionary Inconsistency
No. 4 Revised Documentation Pages (183-224)
No. 5 Recodes for Secured and Total Debt
No. 6 Frequency Diskette
Wave 8 (Core)
No. 1 Revised Documentation Page (page 21)(12/86)
No. 2 Sizes of AFDC Amount Fields
No. 3 Revised Documentation Page (page 21)(5/87)
No. 4 Revised Source and Reliability Statement
No. 5 Frequency Diskette
Wave 8 (Core and Topical Module)
No. 1 Reference Person - Field TM8268
WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97SIPP User Note Subjects Con.
97
No. 2 Fertility Module
No. 3 Revised Source and Reliability Statement
No. 4 Frequency Diskette
Wave 9 (Core)
No. 1 Revised Documentation Page (page 21)
No. 2 Explanation for Additional Family Records in Version 2
No. 3 Frequency Diskette
1984 Full Panel Microdata Research File
No. 1 Subject: File Correction - Problem Description, Explanation, Files Affected, Solution
WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
98
How to Order Current Population Reports, Series P-70
Most reports are available through the U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington D.C. 20402. Fortelephone orders call (202) 783-3238 or fax order (202) 783-3236. Those reports, which are out of stock at theGovernment Printing Office, are still available through Customer Services at the Census Bureau. Those reportswhich are "out of print" are available only on microfiche for $10.00. For both of those cases, use the "CustomerServices order form for Publications and Electronic Media Products.
Current Population Reports, Series P-70
P-70-7 (Household Wealth and Asset Ownership, 1984) (SN 703-088-00006-6, $3.75)Microfiche only - $10.00
P-70-8 (Disability, Functional Limitations, and Health Insurance Coverage: 1984/85)(SN 703-088-00007-4, $2.75) Microfiche only - $10.00
P-70-9 ("Who's Minding the Kids?" Child Care Arrangements: Winter 1984-85) (SN 703-088-00008-2, $2.75) - out of stock - Available through Customer Services
P-70-10 (Male-Female Differences in Work Experience, Occupation, and Earnings: 1984)(SN 703-088-00009-1, $2.75) - out of stock - Available through Customer Services
P-70-11 ("What's It Worth?" Educational Background and Economic Status: Spring 1984)(SN 703-088-00010-4, $2.75) Microfiche only $10.00
P-70-12 (Pensions: Workers Coverage and Retirement Income, 1984)(SN 703-088-00011-2, $2.75) Microfiche only $10.00
P-70-13 ("Who's Helping Out?" Support Network Among American Families)(SN 803-044-00001-5, $2.75) - Available through Customer Services
P-70-14 (Characteristics of Persons Receiving Benefits from Major Assistance Programs) (SN 803-044-00002-3, $1.75) - out of stock - Available through Customer Services
P-70-15-RD-1 (Transitions In Income and Poverty Status: 1984-85)(SN 803-044-0003-1, $3.00) - Available through Customer Services
P-70-16-RD-2 (Spells of Job Search and Layoff ... and Their Outcomes)(SN 803-044-00004-12, $1.75) - Available through Customer Services
P-70-17 (Health Insurance Coverage, 1986-88) (SN 803-044-00005-8, $2.50)Available through Customer Services
P-70-18 (Transitions in Income and Poverty Status: 1985-1986)(SN 803-044-00006-6, $4.00) - Available through Customer Services
P-70-19 (The Need for Personal Assistance with Everyday Activities: Recipients andCaregivers) - Available through Customer Services
Current Population Reports, Series P-70 Con. WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
99
P-70-20 (Who's Minding the Kids? Child Care Arrangements: Winter of 1986-1987)(SN 803-044-00008-2, $2.25)
P-70-21 (What's It Worth? Educational Background and Economic Status:Spring: 1987) (SN 803-044-00009-1) - out of stock - Available through Customer Services
P-70-22 (Household Wealth and Asset Ownership: 1988) (SN 803-044-00010-4, $2.75)Available through Customer Services
P-70-23 (Family Disruption and Economic Hardship: The Short-Run Picture forChildren) (SN 803-044-00011-2, $2.25)
P-70-24 (Transitions in Income and Poverty Status: 1987-88) (SN 803-044-00012-1, $3.75)
P-70-25 (Pensions: Worker Coverage and Retirement Benefits, 1987) (SN 803-044-00013-9)
P-70-26 (Extended Measures of Well-Being: 1984) (SN 803-044-00014-7, $19.00)
P-70-27 (Job Creation During Late 1980's: Dynamic Aspects of Employment Growth) (SN 803-044-00015-53, $1.75)
P-70-28 (Who's Helping Out? Support Network Among American Families) (SN 803-044-00016-3, $2.50)
P-70-29 (Health Insurance Coverage: 1987 to 1990) ($3.00) - Available through Customer Services
P-70-30 (Who's Minding the Kids? Child Care Arrangements: Fall 1988) (SN 803-044-00018-0, $4.25)
P-70-31 (Characteristics of Recipients and the Dynamics of Program Participation:1987-1988) (SN 803-044-00019-8, $6.50)
P-70-32 (What's It Worth: Educational Background and Economic Status: Spring 1990)(SN 803-044-00020-1, $3.50)
P-70-33 (Americans With Disabilities: 1991-1992) (SN 803-044-00021-0, $6.50)
P-70-34 (Household Wealth and Asset Ownership: 1991) (SN 803-044-00022-8, $3.75)
P-70-35 (Monitoring the Economic Health of American Households: Average MonthlyEstimates of Income, Labor Force Activity, Program Participation and Health Insurance,First Quarter 1984 to Third Quarter 1991) (SN 803-044-00023-6, $4.50)
P-70-36 (Who's Minding the Kids? Child Care Arrangements: Fall 1991)(SN 803-044-0002-4, $4.75)
P-70-37 (Dynamics of Economic Well-Being: Health Insurance, 1990 to 1992)(SN 803-044-00026-1, $4.75)
WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97Current Population Reports, Series P-70 Con.
100
P-70-38 (The Diverse Living Arrangements of Children: Summer 1991)(SN 803-044-00027-9, $2.50)
P-70-39 (Dollars for Scholars: Postsecondary Costs and Financing, 1990-1991)(SN 803-044-00028-7, $2.50)
P-70-40 (Dynamics of Economic Well-Being: Program Participation: 1990-1992) (SN 803-044-00029-5, $4.75)
P-70-41 (Dynamics of Economic Well-Being: Labor Force and Income: 1990-1992) (SN 803-044-00030-9, $21.00)
P-70-42 (Dynamics of Economic Well-Being: Poverty: 1990) (SN 803-044-0031-7, $4.50)
P-70-43 (Dynamics of Economic Well-Being: Health Insurance: 1991-1993) (SN 803-044-00032-5, $2.50)
P-70-44 (The Effect of Health Insurance Coverage on Doctor and Hospital Visits: 1990-1992)(SN 803-044-00033-3)
P-70-45 (Dynamics of Economic Well-Being: Poverty: 1991-1993) (SN 803-044-00034-1, $2.25)
P-70-46 (Dynamics of Economic Well-Being: Program Participation: 1991-1993) (J’Ville $2.00)
P-70-47 (Asset Ownership of Households: 1993) (SN 803-044-00036-8, $1.00)
P-70-48 (Dynamics of Economic Well-Being: Income: 1991-1992) (SN 803-044-00039-2, $1.00)
P-70-49 (Dynamics of of Economic Well-Labor Force: 1991-1993) (SN 803-044-00037-6, $1.00)
P-70-50 (Beyond Poverty, Extended Measures of Well-Being: 1992) (SN 803-044-00040-6, $1.00)
P-70-52 (What Does it Cost to Mind Our Preschoolers) (SN 803-044-00042-2, $1.00)
P-70-53 (Who’s Minding Our Preschoolers?)
P-70-54 (Who Loses Coverage and for How Long?) (SN 803-044-00054-7, $1.00)
P-70-55 (Dynamics of Economic Well-Being: Poverty, 1992-1993, Who Stays Poor? Who Doesen’t?)
P-70-56 (Dynamics of Economic Well-Being: Income, 1992-1993, Moving Up and Down the Income Ladder)(SN 803-044-00047-3, $1.00)
P-70-57 (Dynamics of Economic Well-Being: Labor Force, 1992-1993--A Perspective on Low-Wage Workers)(SN 803-044-00049-0, $1.75)
P-70-58 (Dynamics of Economic Well-Being: Program Participation, 1992-1993--Who Gets Assistance?)(SN 803044-00050-3, $1.00)
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101
Special Studies Series P-23
SIPP Printed Reports
P-23-No. 165 Work and Family Patterns of American Women ($3.50)Available through Customer Services
P-23-No. 166 Perspectives on Migration Analysis ($3.00)Available through Customer Services
P-23-No. 184 How We're Changing Demographic State of the Nation: 1993 (CPS & SIPP)(SN 803-005-10037-5, $1.00)
P-23-No. 185 Population Profile of the United States: 1993 (CPS & SIPP) ($8.50) - Available through CustomerServices
P-23-No. 187 How We're Changing Demographic State of the Nation: 1994 (CPS & SIPP) ($1.00)
P-23-No. 188 How We're Changing Demographic State of Nation: 1995 (SN 803-005-10041-3, Free)
P-23-No. 191 How We’re Changing, Demographic State of the Nation: 1996 (SN 803-005-10044-8, $1.00)
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102
Current Population Reports: Consumer Income P-60
SIPP Printed Reports
P-60-No. 188 Income, Poverty, and Valuation of Noncash Benefits; 1993 (SN 803-005-30035-8, $7.50)
WHAT’S AVAILABLE - 3/97
103
Current Housing Reports Series H-121
SIPP PRINTED REPORTS
H121-91-1 Who Can Afford to Buy a House?: 1988 ($2.50)
H121-92-2 Housing Characteristics of One Parent Households: 1989 ($4.50)
H121-93-31 Who Can Afford to Buy a House?: 1991 ($4.00)
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104
Ordering SIPP Working Papers and Other Research Papers
Customer Service (Census Bureau) Order Form
If you want to receive any of these products, put a check by the appropriate number and mail to: Microdata Access, Administrative andCustomer Data Services Division, Bureau of the Census, Washington, D.C. 20233, (301) 457-1139. FAX # (301) 457-1296.
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COMPILATION OF ASA PAPERS
1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990
OTHER
Sipp Quality Profile "Individuals and Families in Transition: Understanding Change Through Longitudinal Data" Journal of Economic and Social Measurement "Food Stamp Research: Results of ISDP and the Promise of SIPP
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110
GPO Order Form