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July 29 -- The U.S. Census Bureau today announced that it will not release its standard 1-year estimates from the 2020 American Community Survey (ACS) because of the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on data collection. The Census Bureau will release experimental estimates developed from 2020 ACS 1-year data.  See: https://www.census.gov/newsroom/press-releases/2021/changes-2020-acs-1-year.html

The standard 2020 ACS 1-year estimates do not meet the Census Bureau’s Statistical Data Quality Standards designed to ensure the utility, objectivity and integrity of the statistical information. Unlike the ACS, the 2020 Census was able to postpone their Nonresponse Followup to a time when they could carry out the full operation, limiting the impact of the pandemic on data quality in ways the ACS could not.
 
The COVID-19 pandemic posed numerous challenges to collecting ACS data in 2020, as described in our recent Adapting the American Community Survey Amid COVID-19 blog. As a result, the ACS collected only two-thirds of the responses it usually collects in a survey year and the people who did respond to the survey had significantly different social, economic and housing characteristics from those who did not. This is called “nonresponse bias.”

Specifically, Census Bureau staff found high nonresponse from people with lower income, lower educational attainment, and who were less likely to own their home. Nonresponse bias is a natural part of sample surveys, and often statisticians can adjust for nonresponse bias by giving more weight to responses from underrepresented groups. However, Census Bureau staff found that standard nonresponse adjustments to the ACS 1-year estimates could not fully address the differences in a way that meets Census Bureau quality standards.

“The Census Bureau is committed to providing high quality data. The 1-year estimates for the 2020 ACS don’t meet our standards, so we can’t release them,” Census Bureau Acting Director Ron Jarmin said. “The ACS is one of the most comprehensive sources of information about the U.S. population, and it is relied upon by the government, business community and individual Americans. Because of that, it is essential that ACS data truly represent our communities, and the standard 1-year products from the 2020 ACS don’t do that.”
 
The Census Bureau will release a series of “experimental” estimates from the 1-year data in November. Because of the underlying quality concerns, the Census Bureau urges caution in using the experimental estimates as a replacement for standard 2020 ACS 1-year estimates. Users should evaluate the estimates and alternatives to determine if they are suited for their needs. To create these estimates, the Census Bureau will apply an alternative set of weights to the 2020 ACS data to attempt to adjust for some of the nonresponse bias. Data from other surveys and administrative records will inform the weights.

The Census Bureau plans to release the experimental estimates in the form of a limited number of data tables for limited geographies. It will also release at the same time a research paper detailing the methodology for the experimental weights.

In December, the Census Bureau plans to release a 2020 ACS 1-year Public Use Microdata Sample (PUMS) file containing experimental weights.

We do not plan to release 2020 ACS 1-year experimental products on data.census.gov.

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