The 2005 ACS did not count group quarters. Perhaps that could be responsible for at least
some of the distortion.
Cliff Cook
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Planning Information Manager
City of Cambridge, Massachusetts
________________________________________
From: ctpp-news-bounces(a)chrispy.net [ctpp-news-bounces(a)chrispy.net] On Behalf Of Frank
Lenk [FLENK(a)marc.org]
Sent: Tuesday, April 21, 2009 12:26 AM
To: ctpp-news(a)chrispy.net
Subject: [CTPP] Comparison of ACS 1-year, ACS 3-year & Annual Estimates
The attached spreadsheet was prepared by my staff, showing the comparison in total
county-level population between the 2007 ACS 1-year estimates, the 2007 ACS 3-year
estimates and the Census Bureau’s July 1, 2007 population estimates by county. The latter
are supposed to be the official population estimates to which ACS is controlled. And,
based on the attached spreadsheet, this appears to be true for (most) counties in the
1-year estimates. But the total population in the 3-year ACS estimates is systematically
biased downwards from the total population in the 1-year ACS estimates and/or the
official estimates.
Does anyone have a good idea why?
There is some vague language about differences in weighting in the Census Bureau’s
documentation, but I can’t find a satisfying explanation. I do notice that the faster a
county is growing the bigger the discrepancy between the 3-year and 1-year estimates of
total population. This suggests that the 3-year estimates are being controlled to an
average of the 3 years of official total population estimates (2005, 2006 and 2007). But
my understanding is that the3- year ACS estimates are not averaged. Instead, they a
represent a single sample taken over a 3-year period. My expectation, then, is that this
sample would be expanded to the same population as the 1-year estimates – The 3-year and
1-year estimates are, after all, identified by the same year (2007) while a 3-year
estimate based on a 3-year moving average would be closer to 2006’s 1-year estimate.
Any help in clarifying this issue would be greatly appreciated.
Sincerely,
Frank
Frank Lenk
Director of Research Services
Mid-America Regional Council
600 Broadway, Suite 200
Kansas City, MO 64105
www.marc.org<http://www.marc.org>
816.474.4240
flenk@marc.org<mailto:flenk@marc.org>
816.701.8237