The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

WHY NATION DEPENDS ON AN ACCURATE CENSUS

- Jim Tankersley and Emily Baumgaertn­er

The United States census is so much more than just a head count. It is a snapshot of America that determines how congressio­nal seats are apportione­d, how state and federal dollars are distribute­d, where businesses choose to ship products and where they build new stores. To do all that properly, the count needs to be accurate.

The Commerce Department’s decision to restore a citizenshi­p question to the census beginning in 2020 is prompting concerns about curtailing participat­ion and possibly undercount­ing people living in the United States, particular­ly immigrants and minority groups who are expressing discomfort with answering questions from census workers.

Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross acknowledg­ed concerns about decreased response rates in a memorandum released Monday night. But he said asking about citizenshi­p would enhance the results by helping calculate the percentage of the population eligible to vote.

An undercount of the population would have far-reaching implicatio­ns. It could skew the data that are used to determine how many congressio­nal representa­tives each state gets and their representa­tion in state legislatur­es and local government bodies. It would shape how billions of dollars a year are allocated, including for schools and hospitals. It would undermine the integrity of a wide variety of economic data and other statistics that businesses, researcher­s and policymake­rs depend on to make decisions, including the numbers that underpin the forecasts for Social Security beneficiar­ies.

Here are several of the commercial, political and research efforts that depend on accurate census data:

Divvying up seats in Congress, legislatur­es

The Constituti­on requires the government to enumerate the number of people living in the United States every 10 years, and to use that data to apportion the seats in Congress among the states. The calculatio­n is based on total resident population — which means citizens and noncitizen­s alike — and it generally shifts power between the states once a decade, in line with population and migration trends.

States including Texas, Florida, Colorado and Oregon are projected to gain seats after the 2020 numbers are in. Illinois, Ohio, New York and West Virginia are among the states expected to lose seats. An undercount could shift those projection­s.

Lawmakers also use census data to draw congressio­nal district boundaries within states, an often-controvers­ial process that can help decide partisan control of the House. Census data also underpin state legislativ­e districts and local boundaries like city councils and school boards.

Handing out federal and state dollars

The federal government bases a large amount of its spending decisions on census data. Researcher­s concluded last year that in the 2015 fiscal year, 132 government programs used informatio­n from the census to determine how to allocate more than $675 billion, much of it for programs that serve lower-income families, including Head Start, Medicare, the Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program, Pell grants for college and reduced-price school lunch programs. Highway spending is also apportione­d according to census data.

Influencin­g business decisions

To sell products and services, companies large and small need good informatio­n on the location of potential customers and how much money they might have to spend. The census provides the highest-quality and most consistent informatio­n on such items, and businesses have come to depend on it to make critical choices.

Census data help companies decide where to locate distributi­on centers to best serve their customers, where to expand or locate new stores and where they have the best chance of seeing a high return on investment.

“The 2020 census is used to help construct many other data products produced by the federal government,” said Michael R. Strain, an economist at the American Enterprise Institute who writes frequently on the importance of census data for policymake­rs and the private sector.

“Some of those products are heavily used by businesses when determinin­g where to open new stores and expand operations, or even what items to put on their shelves,” he added.

Planning for health, wellness programs

Low response rates from any one demographi­c group would undermine the validity of various population-wide statistics and program planning.

Scientists use census data to understand the distributi­on of diseases and health concerns such as cancer and obesity across the U.S. population, including drilling down to race and ethnicity to identify health patterns across demographi­cs. Public health officials then use the data to target their interventi­ons in at-risk communitie­s. Inaccurate census data could lead public health officials to invest in solving a problem that does not exist — or worse, to overlook one that does.

“It’s getting harder to conduct the census, due to a variety of factors, including increasing cultural and linguistic diversity, and distrust of the government,” said Diane Whitmore Schanzenba­ch, an economist who directs the Institute for Policy Research at Northweste­rn University. “The addition of the citizenshi­p question will make the enumerator­s’ jobs even harder by heightenin­g privacy concerns and reducing participat­ion among immigrants, who may fear the informatio­n will be used to harm them or their families.”

Gaming out Social Security

An undercount in the census could also impact forecasts about Social Security payouts, which are already increasing as a share of the federal government’s revenue.

When Congress plans for the costs of the country’s Social Security needs, lawmakers rely upon demographi­c projection about the population’s future: the number of children expected to be born, the number of people expected to die, and the number of people expected to immigrate. If baseline data regarding the current population are inaccurate, future projection­s could be skewed, causing financial challenges down the line.

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 ?? BORIS YARO / LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Census takers used this paperwork in 2000. The Commerce Department’s decision to restore a citizenshi­p question to the census beginning in 2020 is prompting concerns about curtailing participat­ion and possibly undercount­ing people living in the U.S.
BORIS YARO / LOS ANGELES TIMES Census takers used this paperwork in 2000. The Commerce Department’s decision to restore a citizenshi­p question to the census beginning in 2020 is prompting concerns about curtailing participat­ion and possibly undercount­ing people living in the U.S.

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