Some New Techniques for Applying the Housing Unit Method of Local Population Estimation: Further Evidence

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Abstract

The housing unit method of population estimation is often characterized as being imprecise and having an upward bias. In an earlier paper we argued that the method itself cannot be properly characterized by a particular level of precision or direction of bias. Only specific techniques of applying the method can have such characteristics. In that paper we presented several new techniques for estimating the number of households and average number of persons per household (PPH). However, the testing of these new techniques was limited by the lack of census results against which the estimates could be compared. Complete census data on population, households, and PPH are now available and can be used to test alternate estimation techniques. In this paper we replicate the tests reported in our earlier paper using 1980 census data for Florida's 67 counties. These tests provide further evidence that the new techniques produce more precise, less biased estimates than previously used techniques. © 1983 Population Association of America.

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APA

Smith, S. K., & Lewis, B. B. (1983). Some New Techniques for Applying the Housing Unit Method of Local Population Estimation: Further Evidence. Demography, 20(3), 407–413. https://doi.org/10.2307/2061251

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