Income of the Aged Chartbook, 2001
Preface
Since 1941, the Social Security Administration (SSA) has periodically surveyed the aged to determine their economic status. The first national survey was conducted in 1963. In 1976, SSA's Office of Research and Statistics began compiling a biennial series of reports on the income of the aged based on data collected by the U.S. Census Bureau in its Current Population Survey. These SSA reports are published under the title Income of the Population 55 or Older, which forms the basis for this chartbook. This edition of the chartbook has been specially updated with 2001 data.
The unit of analysis here, with the exception of measures of poverty, is the "aged unit" and not the household, the family, or unrelated individuals, as are used by the Census Bureau. The aged unit is either a married couple living together, with husband or wife aged 65 or older (generally measured by the age of the husband), or a person 65 or older who does not live with a spouse. The unit of analysis for poverty is persons aged 65 or older.
The 2001 sample represented 10,461,000 couples and 15,397,000 single units. The single unit may be a widow(er), a divorced or separated person, a legally married person who does not live with a spouse, or a person who never married. This unit of analysis allows one to measure the economic status of the entire noninstitutionalized aged population separately from that of the family or household in which the unit may live.
Melissa Koenig and Shanti Mulpuru prepared this chartbook. The chartbook was edited by Celine Houget and designed by Emil Loomis, who also prepared the print version for publication. Laurie Brown prepared the Web versions.