Examples of Census year in a sentence
Some census tract boundaries and numbers change from Census year to Census year.
Finally, we examine firm-specific covariate differentials, combining data on all establishments from the Economic Census (year 1998) and supplementing it with information on a sample of firms from the Annual Survey of Industries (year 2001).
To investigate this pos- sibility, I classify the firms in Table 3, which presents data for 2017, based on the first Economic Census year in which they enter the data, starting in 1992.
Table presents the number of firms, share of employment, and average employment in 2017 based on firms’ 2017 factoryless goods production status and the first Economic Census year in which they are alive.
First, to determine the number of emigrants E of gender g and cohort c, presumed to be absent from region r in Census year t, we relied on the stock of immigrants from that cohort18From Spain, instead, the period 1968-1975 brought a negligible increase in the stock of Spanish immigrants in France.
Ii represents a dummy indicating whether there is at least one pardoned individual resident in the municipality.16 Xi is a vector of controls at the municipal level that includes the average municipal pre-pardon (2004-2005) crime rate, the average taxable per capita income in 2008 and a set of municipal characteristics in Census year 2001 (see Table 2B).
That is for each of the three regressions we control for race by Census year fixed effects, race by age fixed effects, and state by race by cohort fixed effects.
Population aged 5 years and over by Journey time to work, school or college and Census year ..............................................................................................................................................................
Following the MPC, we identify as the reference population the potentially linkable individuals within this Census who would have been alive in the previous year by dropping all individuals who (given their reported age) would not have been alive in the earlier Census year (e.g. men younger than 30 in the 1880 Census in the 1850–1880 IPUMS-LRS).
The size of each circle is proportional to the number of inhabitants registered in each agglomeration in the last Census year.