The 2025 ACS Data Users Conference will be held on May 29, 2025 (virtual day) and June 3, 2025 (in-person in DC)
American Community Survey Data Users Group
Search for topics, people, or keywords
Sign Up
Log in
Site
Search for topics, people, or keywords
User
Home
Discussion Forum
ACS Resources
Webinars
Conferences
Steering Committee
More
Cancel
Home
Discussion Forum
ACS Resources
Webinars
Conferences
About
More
Cancel
Details
Views
3244 views
Replies
1 reply
Subscribers
541 subscribers
Users
0 members are here
Labels
Measuring trends
poverty
Related Census Bureau Resources
Related Forum Threads
ACS vs CPS at the state level
Gene Shackman
over 10 years ago
Hi all
Which is more 'accurate' at the state level? Single year ACS or CPS? In particular, I'm looking at trends in the number of people in poverty over time. Some times the two different trends seem to go in opposite directions. My concern is espectially for 2012 where the ACS shows poverty not growing, but the CPS shows a pretty sharp increase. Maybe the general trends are similar, but year to year they seem different.
I have two sources
1. Table 21. Number of Poor and Poverty Rate, by State
www.census.gov/.../people.html
Historical poverty tables. These tables are based on the CPS
2. ACS, S1701, Poverty Status in the Past 12 Months, American Community Survey, various years.
Not sure how well this table will stay formatted, but I've attached a spreadsheet too.
below ACS CPS
pov
2012 3,025,016 3,328,036
2011 3,027,342 3,085,000
2010 2,821,470 3,062,000
2009 2,691,757 3,018,000
2008 2,581,491 2,734,000
2007 2,570,014 2,757,000
2006 2,662,199 2,668,000
2005 2,565,836 2,760,000
Thanks
Parents
TJ Sheehy
over 10 years ago
My understanding is that the ACS is much better/more accurate for state-level estimates purely because the sample size is so much larger than the CPS. To take one example, Alabama, the CPS estimate is a 16.2% poverty rate in 2012, and a 1.9% standard error (the 90% margin of error, which is what the ACS reports rather than standard error, would be +/- 3.1%). The ACS for the same year, by contrast, has a higher point estimate but a much smaller margin of error -- 19.0% and +/-0.4%, respectively. In fact, the CPS estimate of Alabama's 2012 poverty rate, due to the large margin of error, isn't significantly different than the ACS estimate, because the upper value of the CPS confidence interval is 19.33%. So I would defer to the ACS estimate for state-level analysis to ensure greater confidence in the point estimate, which is what generally gets the focus.
Cancel
Up
0
Down
Reply
Cancel
Reply
TJ Sheehy
over 10 years ago
My understanding is that the ACS is much better/more accurate for state-level estimates purely because the sample size is so much larger than the CPS. To take one example, Alabama, the CPS estimate is a 16.2% poverty rate in 2012, and a 1.9% standard error (the 90% margin of error, which is what the ACS reports rather than standard error, would be +/- 3.1%). The ACS for the same year, by contrast, has a higher point estimate but a much smaller margin of error -- 19.0% and +/-0.4%, respectively. In fact, the CPS estimate of Alabama's 2012 poverty rate, due to the large margin of error, isn't significantly different than the ACS estimate, because the upper value of the CPS confidence interval is 19.33%. So I would defer to the ACS estimate for state-level analysis to ensure greater confidence in the point estimate, which is what generally gets the focus.
Cancel
Up
0
Down
Reply
Cancel
Children
No Data