| Literature DB >> 31317504 |
J David Brown1, Misty L Heggeness2, Suzanne M Dorinski3, Lawrence Warren4, Moises Yi4.
Abstract
The addition of a citizenship question to the 2020 census could affect the self-response rate, a key driver of the cost and quality of a census. We find that citizenship question response patterns in the American Community Survey (ACS) suggest that it is a sensitive question when asked about administrative record noncitizens but not when asked about administrative record citizens. ACS respondents who were administrative record noncitizens in 2017 frequently choose to skip the question or answer that the person is a citizen. We predict the effect on self-response to the entire survey by comparing mail response rates in the 2010 ACS, which included a citizenship question, with those of the 2010 census, which did not have a citizenship question, among households in both surveys. We compare the actual ACS-census difference in response rates for households that may contain noncitizens (more sensitive to the question) with the difference for households containing only U.S. citizens. We estimate that the addition of a citizenship question will have an 8.0 percentage point larger effect on self-response rates in households that may have noncitizens relative to those with only U.S. citizens. Assuming that the citizenship question does not affect unit self-response in all-citizen households and applying the 8.0 percentage point drop to the 28.1 % of housing units potentially having at least one noncitizen would predict an overall 2.2 percentage point drop in self-response in the 2020 census, increasing costs and reducing the quality of the population count.Entities:
Keywords: Administrative records; Citizenship; Immigration; Nonresponse; Sensitive questions
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31317504 PMCID: PMC6667411 DOI: 10.1007/s13524-019-00803-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Demography ISSN: 0070-3370
Fig. 1The 2010 American Community Survey (ACS) question on citizenship
Summary statistics for ACS item nonresponse and AR–ACS disagreement regressions
| AR Citizens | AR Noncitizens | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Variable | Mean | SE | Sample Size | Mean | SE | Sample Size |
| Age Item Nonresponse | 0.85 | 0.008 | 4,108,000 | 1.32 | 0.03 | 253,000 |
| Citizenship Item Nonresponse | 0.44 | 0.005 | 4,108,000 | 4.42 | 0.07 | 253,000 |
| ACS–AR Age Disagreement | 4.58 | 0.02 | 4,060,000 | 6.42 | 0.07 | 249,000 |
| ACS–AR Citizenship Disagreement | 0.43 | 0.006 | 3,872,000 | 39.73 | 0.14 | 229,000 |
Notes: The sample sizes are unweighted, and the means and standard errors are survey-weighted. The standard errors are calculated using Fay’s balanced repeated replication variance estimation method, with 80 replicate weights, adjusting the original weights by a coefficient of 0.5. Group quarters and Puerto Rico are excluded from the sample.
Source: American Community Survey (ACS), Census Numident, and ITINs, 2017. The Disclosure Review Board release number is DRB-B0035-CED-20190322.
Item nonresponse and ACS–AR disagreement regressions
| Age Item Nonresponse | Citizenship Item Nonresponse | ACS–AR Age Disagreement | ACS–AR Citizenship Disagreement | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AR Citizen | AR Noncitizen | AR Citizen | AR Noncitizen | AR Citizen | AR Noncitizen | AR Citizen | AR Noncitizen | |
| Relative | 0.116 | 0.188 | –0.382 | –1.105 | 0.000 | 0.010 | –0.069 | –7.080 |
| (0.013) | (0.061) | (0.010) | (0.087) | (0.000) | (0.001) | (0.010) | (0.248) | |
| Nonrelative | 2.552 | 3.057 | 1.093 | 4.839 | 0.036 | 0.058 | 0.499 | –15.987 |
| (0.086) | (0.299) | (0.053) | (0.370) | (0.001) | (0.005) | (0.054) | (0.731) | |
| Non-Hispanic African American | 0.372 | 0.077 | 0.393 | 2.515 | 0.015 | –0.022 | 0.024 | 1.660 |
| (0.032) | (0.162) | (0.016) | (0.185) | (0.001) | (0.003) | (0.015) | (0.661) | |
| Hispanic | –0.065 | –0.450 | 0.030 | 3.738 | 0.014 | 0.014 | 0.620 | –4.817 |
| (0.033) | (0.111) | (0.026) | (0.156) | (0.001) | (0.002) | (0.030) | (0.483) | |
| Other Non-Hispanic | 0.108 | –0.024 | 0.856 | 2.304 | 0.039 | 0.016 | 0.536 | –0.459 |
| (0.037) | (0.102) | (0.035) | (0.141) | (0.001) | (0.002) | (0.035) | (0.450) | |
| Not Linguistically Isolated | 0.118 | –0.348 | 1.412 | 1.810 | 0.007 | –0.113 | 0.924 | –8.477 |
| (0.030) | (0.119) | (0.026) | (0.136) | (0.001) | (0.003) | (0.026) | (0.478) | |
| Linguistically Isolated | 0.191 | –0.084 | 1.825 | 1.049 | 0.021 | –0.126 | 5.187 | –16.86 |
| (0.074) | (0.148) | (0.073) | (0.177) | (0.002) | (0.003) | (0.149) | (0.561) | |
| Better Linkage | –0.932 | –1.658 | –0.079 | –0.509 | –0.000 | –0.006 | –0.767 | 3.533 |
| (0.033) | (0.125) | (0.015) | (0.154) | (0.001) | (0.002) | (0.024) | (0.397) | |
| Mail/Internet Response | –0.304 | –1.035 | 0.416 | 5.280 | –0.008 | –0.020 | –0.100 | 3.672 |
| (0.023) | (0.085) | (0.013) | (0.133) | (0.001) | (0.002) | (0.013) | (0.346) | |
| Weighted Observations | 262,800,000 | 20,700,000 | 262,800,000 | 20,700,000 | 259,500,000 | 20,350,000 | 248,400,000 | 19,030,000 |
| Unweighted Observations | 4,108,000 | 253,000 | 4,108,000 | 253,000 | 4,060,000 | 249,000 | 3,872,000 | 229,000 |
Notes: These regressions are estimated by ordinary least squares (OLS), weighted by ACS person weights. Standard errors, shown in parentheses, are clustered by block group. We also include person of interest worked in the last week and searched for a job within the last four weeks; reference person sex and educational attainment (less than high school, high school but less than bachelor’s degree, bachelor’s degree, and graduate degree); household income categories; and share of households in the block group that contain at least one noncitizen and the share of households in the block group below the poverty level. Group quarters and Puerto Rico are excluded from the sample.
Source: American Community Survey (ACS), Census Numident, and ITINs, 2017. The Disclosure Review Board release number is CBDRB-FY19-CMS-7917.
Blinder-Oaxaca decomposition of the differences in problematic response to the citizenship and age questions by AR citizenship status
| Problematic Response Rate (%) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Citizenship | Age | Difference | |
| AR Noncitizens | 44.6 | 8.0 | 36.6 |
| (0.15) | (0.07) | (0.17) | |
| AR Citizens | 5.9 | 5.8 | 0.1 |
| (0.03) | (0.02) | (0.04) | |
| Difference-in-Differences | 36.5 | ||
| (0.08) | |||
| Explained | –1.0 | ||
| (0.04) | |||
| Unexplained | 37.4 | ||
| (0.09) | |||
Notes: The results use ACS person weights. The sample excludes observations where age or citizenship is missing from AR. The response is problematic if no answer is provided about the item, the answer is changed in the edit process, or the answer is inconsistent with the AR record for the person. The response is not problematic if the answer is consistent with the person’s AR record. Standard errors are shown in parentheses. The standard errors for the differences are bootstrapped using 80 ACS replicate weights. The number of observations is 4,361,000.
Source: ACS one-year file, Census Numident, and ITINs, 2017. The Disclosure Review Board release number is DRB-B0035-CED-20190322.
Blinder-Oaxaca decomposition of the differences in 2010 ACS to 2010 census self-response rates by household citizenship type
| Self-response Rate (%) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| 2010 ACS | 2010 Census | Difference | |
| All Other Households | 42.0 | 62.7 | –20.7 |
| (0.32) | (0.14) | (0.12) | |
| AR and ACS All-Citizen Households | 65.6 | 74.4 | –8.9 |
| (0.33) | (0.11) | (0.12) | |
| Difference-in-Differences | –11.9 | ||
| (0.07) | |||
| Explained | –3.1 | ||
| (0.08) | |||
| Unexplained | –8.8 | ||
| (0.11) | |||
Notes: Only NRFU–eligible housing units are included. 2010 CUF self-response is nonblank response to the first mailing, and ACS self-response is mail response. The standard errors are shown in parentheses, and they are bootstrapped using 80 ACS replicate weights. The number of observations is 1,418,000.
Source: ACS one-year file, Census Unedited File (CUF), Census Numident, and ITINs, 2010. The Disclosure Review Board release number is DRB-B0035-CED-20190322.
Predicted 2017 ACS to 2010 census response rate differences for other households using other household versus all-citizen models
| Model | 2017 ACS – 2010 Census |
|---|---|
| All Other Household Model | –19.9 |
| (0.40) | |
| AR and ACS All-Citizen Household Model | –11.9 |
| (0.31) | |
| Difference-in-Differences | –8.0 |
| (0.51) |
Notes: Only NRFU-eligible housing units are included. 2010 census self-response is nonblank response to the first mailing, and ACS self-response is mail response. The standard errors are shown in parentheses. The standard errors for the 2017 ACS – 2010 census response differences are calculated using Fay’s balanced repeated replication variance estimation method, with 80 replicate weights, adjusting the original weights by a coefficient of 0.5. The difference-in-differences (DiD) standard errors (SE) are calculated as , where the two estimates (Est) are the 2017 ACS – 2010 census differences for the two groups. They are the standard errors of the model predictions, based on the bootstrapped regressions in Eqs. (9) and (10) that use 80 ACS replicate weights. The estimates use ACS housing unit weights. The all other households group makes up 28.1 % of housing units in 2017. The number of observations is 755,000.
Source: ACS one-year file, Census Numident, and ITINs, 2017. The Disclosure Review Board release number is DRB-B0035-CED-20190322.