Glenn Joins other Economists Who Have Served on the CEA in Calling for More Funding for the BLS

Image generated by GTP-4o of the U.S. Department of Labor building

The Census Bureau and the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) jointly conduct the monthly Current Population Survey (CPS). As we discuss in Macroeconomics, Chapter 9, Section 9.1 (Economics, Chapter 19, Section 19.1), the BLS uses the data gathered by the CPS to calculate a number of important labor market statistics including the unemployment rate, the labor force participation rate, and the employment-population ratio.

Unfortunately, over the years Congress has not increased its appropriations for the BLS enough to cover the increasing costs of surveying 60,000 households each month. As a result, the BLS has announced that beginning in January 2025, it will be surveying fewer households in each month’s CPS.

Glenn has joined 120 other economists who have served over the years on the President’s Council of Economic Advisers (CEA) in writing a letter to Congress urging that the BLS be given sufficient funds to maintain the current size of the CPS sample and to begin steps to modernize the collection of the sample.

The letter notes that: “Reducing the CPS sample size will make its statistics less reliable…. will also hinder accurate analysis of states and local areas and subpopulations, including teenagers, seniors, veterans, people with disabilities, the self-employed, people who identify as Asian, Hispanic or Latino ethnicity, and Black or African Americans.”

The whole text of the letter can be read here.

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