![]() The first SIPP panel that was introduced in October 1983 includedĪbout 21,000 households. To improve both participant and income-by-source information byĬomparing survey reports with venous administrative files. Other cross-sectional estimates developed from the longitudinal SIPP data-īy starting a new SIPP panel every year with a fresh sample of households to maintain the quality of annual income and poverty statistics and.(e.g., disability, child support, day care, health status, and use of health Sections of questions (topical modules) on subjects of current policy interest to provide an opportunity to obtain timely information on emergingĬoncerns of social welfare policy, broadly defined-by including special.to obtain information necessary to determine program eligibility, in-Ĭluding data on assets, and to characterize participants in comparison with.Namics of participation over time by asking for monthly information atĮach interview, with more detailed questions and relevant explanatory vari-Ībles, and by following the same people to observe program entries and Program participants, including multiprogram participants, and on the dy. to obtain detailed information, comparable to administrative data, on.to improve the reporting of family and personal income, both cashĪnd in-kind, by source by asking more questions and by obtaining reports.Some of the design features that resulted from those goals were identified: Within this broad framework, the following specific goals of SIPP and Program planning and socioeconomic research. Meet the growing needs for information to support federal social welfare ![]() Plied most of the available statistics about household income, could not Vey (CPS) March income supplement, which since the mid-1940s has sup. Other continuing surveys, including the Current Population Sur. Programs for example, Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC),įood stamps, social security, unemployment compensation, Medicare, and THE SURVEY OF INCOME AND PROGRAM PARTICIPATION government Guy Orcutt, an economist at Yale University (recently retired) andīruce Chapman, director of the Census Bureau in the early 1980s. Services for several years Joseph Duncan of Dun and Bradstreet, formerly chief statistician of Who directed developmental work on SIPP at the U.S. Ticipation and eligibility for a wide range of government social welfareġThe set of comments quoted above about SIPP are from Charles Lininger, an economist Income distribution and economic well-being of the population and on par. ![]() Why were people so enthusiastic about its prospects?)Īs its name implies, SIPP was designed to improve information on the Month intervals over a period of about 2-1/2 years. Viewers queried a new sample of households, revisiting each of them at 4. Ginning in February 1985 and each year thereafter, Census Bureau inter. The survey did not stop with one panel: be. ![]() Years, the interviewers returned to each household in the 1984 SIPP panel to At 4-month intervals ("waves") over the next 2-1/2 Participation (SIPP) began operations in the fall of 1983, when interview-Įrs of the Bureau of the Census fanned out across the country to ask resi-ĭents of 20,000 households a set of detailed questions about their social andĮconomic circumstances. The object of these glowing words the Survey of Income and Program Important data available in the 1980s for research on Americanįamilies and individuals. The most significant statistical survey in four decades. The most exciting thing going on in social science in the 1980s Because it is UNCORRECTED material, please consider the following text as a useful but insufficient proxy for the authoritative book pages. Below is the uncorrected machine-read text of this chapter, intended to provide our own search engines and external engines with highly rich, chapter-representative searchable text of each book. ![]()
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