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Annual Housing Survey. A New Look in Evaluating Future Needs
This brochure provides details on the Annual Housing Survey, which represents the first major effort by the Federal Government to collect data on the quality and quantity of housing in the Nation. Among those who will find the data collected useful in their daily operations as well as for long - term planning are policymakers for housing and community development programs, State and local planning officials concerned with housing and transportation trends and their impact on growth policies, corporate and financial planners concerned with future investment opportunities, marketing managers, and social scientists and other academicians concerned with the interrelationship of housing with other social goals. The Annual Housing Survey consists of two separate parts: (1) a national sample of housing units from urban and rural areas to be examined every year, and (2) metropolitan area samples from 60 selected Standard Metropolitan Statistical Areas, including the largest and many smaller, fast - growing areas, with one - third of them to be examined in detail every third year. Housing units to be surveyed were scientifically selected to represent a cross section of all housing in the Nation, based on 1970 census records updated to include new construction. In gathering data, Census Bureau interviewers visit households occupying each unit sample. For unoccupied housing units, they obtain information from landlords, rental agents, or neighbors. Information collected will be used to determine how much of the Nation's housing needs rehabilitation and the extent of that need, how the rent and supply of suburban rental units compare with that in the central city, how much housing costs of urban and rural families change from year to year, what the key neighborhood services are that influence residents to stay or move, and how much those who do move manage to improve their living conditions. Statistics are aggregated for a whole area or for the whole Nation, so that information about any household or neighborhood is not identifiable. The populations of areas to be surveyed during the first 3 years of the survey are tabulated. (Author abstract modified).
Annual Housing Survey. A New Look in Evaluating Future Needs
This brochure provides details on the Annual Housing Survey, which represents the first major effort by the Federal Government to collect data on the quality and quantity of housing in the Nation. Among those who will find the data collected useful in their daily operations as well as for long - term planning are policymakers for housing and community development programs, State and local planning officials concerned with housing and transportation trends and their impact on growth policies, corporate and financial planners concerned with future investment opportunities, marketing managers, and social scientists and other academicians concerned with the interrelationship of housing with other social goals. The Annual Housing Survey consists of two separate parts: (1) a national sample of housing units from urban and rural areas to be examined every year, and (2) metropolitan area samples from 60 selected Standard Metropolitan Statistical Areas, including the largest and many smaller, fast - growing areas, with one - third of them to be examined in detail every third year. Housing units to be surveyed were scientifically selected to represent a cross section of all housing in the Nation, based on 1970 census records updated to include new construction. In gathering data, Census Bureau interviewers visit households occupying each unit sample. For unoccupied housing units, they obtain information from landlords, rental agents, or neighbors. Information collected will be used to determine how much of the Nation's housing needs rehabilitation and the extent of that need, how the rent and supply of suburban rental units compare with that in the central city, how much housing costs of urban and rural families change from year to year, what the key neighborhood services are that influence residents to stay or move, and how much those who do move manage to improve their living conditions. Statistics are aggregated for a whole area or for the whole Nation, so that information about any household or neighborhood is not identifiable. The populations of areas to be surveyed during the first 3 years of the survey are tabulated. (Author abstract modified).
Annual Housing Survey. A New Look in Evaluating Future Needs
1974
17 pages
Report
Keine Angabe
Englisch
Housing , Building Industry Technology , Economic Studies , Housing studies , United States , Surveys , Census , Statistical data , Urban areas , Rural areas , Houses , Mobility , Socioeconomic status , Neighborhoods , Quality , Planning , Community development , Standard metropolitan statistical areas , New construction
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