Demographic Data

*Bureau of Labor Statistics home page
This site contains an easy to use search form to select the BLS labor series that are most appropriate.

*Chicago Health and Family Life Survey
This 1995-1997 survey collects extensive information on sexual activities, fertility, relationship formation, and the educational and demographic characteristics of a Chicago sample of individuals aged 18 to 59.

*Chinese Health and Family Life Survey
This 1999-2000 survey collects extensive information on sexual activities, fertility, relationship formation, and the educational and demographic characteristics of a Chinese sample of individuals aged 20 to 64.

*CIESIN's U.S. - Demography Home Page
This site, provided by the Consortium for International Earth Science Information Network, contains links to a variety of online sources of demographic data. This site contains online data from the U.S. Census (1940 - 1990), Current Population Survey, County and City Data Book, and a cariety of other sources.

* European Community Household Panel
The European Community Household Panel is a longitudinal survey of 60,500 households beginning in 1994 and continuing through 2001. Data is available on income, demographic factors, labor supply, education, and health.

*Family Life Surveys
The RAND Corporation conducted Family Life Surveys in Malaysia, Indonesia, Guatemala, and Matlab, Bangladesh. Data is available on a variety of individual, household, and community characteristics. Data is available on income, education, health status, and labor market activities.

*German Socio-Economic Panel
The German Socio-Economic Panel contains longitudinal data on over 12,000 households, beginning with a 1983 base year. Data is available in SPSS, SAS, Stata, and ASCII formats. (Stata, in particular, now has an SOEP menu command available that allows the user "directly to select variables, observations, etc., and automatically create data retrievals on your computer." When a variable is selected, all years of data are imported.)

*General Social Survey data
The General Social Survey (GSS) has been conducted by the National Opinion Research Center (NORC) since 1972. It contains responses from numerous questions dealing with social and political attitudes, and also contains a fair amount of economic and demographic information. You can browse and search through the variable list at this page. This data may also be downloaded from either Berkeley's online data archive (this site contains a nice extract facility that also creates a codebook for the extract file) or from Queens College. The Queens College site also contains a nice downloadable DOS-based extract program that makes it possible to construct your own extracts from one or more years of data. A program containing a searchable annotated bibliography of studies conducted using this data is also available.

*Hispanic Population of the United States
This Census Bureau web site contains demographic, educational, employment, and other statistics for the Hispanic population in the U.S.

*Historical Data: County Populations 1900-1990
This Census Bureau ftp site contains data on county populations (sorted by states).

* International Data Base (IDB)
This online database provided by the U.S. Census Bureau contains labor market and demographic information for all countries in selected years between 1950 and the present.

*Integrated Public Use Microdata Samples
From this page, you can download samples containing cross-sectional data from the 1850-2000 U.S. Censuses. (Caution: these are large files.)

* Labour Economics Gateway: Statistics and Datasets
The Labour Economics Gateway provides a collection of links to a variety of international sources of labor-related statistics and datasets.

*National Health and Family Life Survey
This 1992 survey collects extensive information on sexual activities, fertility, relationship formation, and the educational and demographic characteristics of a U.S. sample of approximately 2500 individuals aged 18 to 44.

* National Longitudinal Survey of Adolescent Health (Add Health)
This data collection is a longitudinal survey of adolescents who were enrolled in grades 7 through 12 in 1994. The data was collected at individual, family, school, and community levels.

*National Longitudinal Surveys
This web site contains links to the data and codebooks for:

*National Longitudinal Survey of the High School Class of 1972
The National Longitudinal Survey of the High School class of 1972 provides a rich data set on a large sample of individuals who were high school seniors in 1972. Many of these individuals were followed up in five subsequent follow-up surveys, ending in 1986. Information on ordering the CD containing the data is available through this site.

* National Survey of America's Families
The National Survey of America's Families is a longitudinal study that began with a 1997 sample of over 44,000 households containing over 100,000 adults. This study is sponsored by the Urban Institute and focuses "on the economic, health, and social characteristics of children, adults under the age of 65, and their families."

* The National Survey of Families and Households
This longitudinal study (base-year interviews in 1987-88 and follow-ups in 1992-94 and 2002-03) includes data from a sample of over 9,000 households. Each respondent was asked questions about their family background, educational attainment, marital and fertility history, and employment and labor market experiences.

*National Survey of Family Growth
A nationally representative survey of women designed to measure factors related to births, pregnancy, and women's reproductive health. (Men were surveyed for the first time in Cycle 6 in 2002.) The data is downloadable from the site or may be ordered on a CD.

*Office of Population Research (Princeton University)
This demographic research center provides a several useful demographic data sets that are available for downloading. Among these are:

*Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID)
The Panel Study of Income Dynamics is a rather large longitudinal data set that began in 1968 with a sample of approximately 5,000 households. Followup interviews have been conducted with these households and splitoffs from these households that occurred as children left home, or households split because of divorce, separation or death. This data set contains a great deal of information on marital patterns, fertility, educational attainment, labor market experiences, public assistance, housework time, geographic mobility, health, and many other topics. Data from this study may be downloaded from this site, or ordered on a CD-ROM. An online extract facility is also available to construct subsets of the data that may be downloaded.

*Taiwan Women and Family Studies
This 1989 survey contains information on a sample of 3,803 women aged 25 to 59 in Taiwan. This study focuses on the determinants and consequences of labor market activity and the interrelationships among labor market activity, physical and psychological wellbeing, and family relationships.

*U.S. Census Bureau DataFerrett
This service, provided by the U.S. Census Bureau, makes it possible to create extracts of data from any of the following data sets: After selecting the variables that you wish to extract from these data sets, a downloadable extract file is created and stored at the Census Bureau's ftp site. The use of this program requires a fair amount of free browser memory cache. Data files created by this program can be extremely large. Use this system carefully and be sure to only extract those variables that you require for your analysis.

*Panel Study of Income Dynamics
One of the earliest and largest longitudinal studies designed for labor and demographic studies. The original 5,000 families were first interviewed in 1968 and have been followed up annually. The entire data set is available on the web. Don't think about downloading this, however, unless you have a large amount of free disk space. Check the file sizes before downloading.
You may also wish to visit the educational, labor, or health care data links for other topics related to demographic economics.
This page was collected by John Kane, SUNY OSWEGO