Construction Reports: Housing starts. C20U. S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, 1977 |
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Page 15
... selected each month and an inquiry is made of the owner or the builder to find out whether and when the units covered by the permit have been started . In case the units authorized by permits in a particular month are not started by the ...
... selected each month and an inquiry is made of the owner or the builder to find out whether and when the units covered by the permit have been started . In case the units authorized by permits in a particular month are not started by the ...
Page 16
... selected for the Housing Starts and Building Permits surveys are each one of a large number of similar probability samples that , by chance , might have been selected under the same specifications . Estimates derived from the different ...
... selected for the Housing Starts and Building Permits surveys are each one of a large number of similar probability samples that , by chance , might have been selected under the same specifications . Estimates derived from the different ...
Page 18
... Selected Standard Metropolitan Statistical Areas . ( quarter ) Construction Reports , Series C22 : Housing Completions ( month ) Construction Reports , Series C25 : Sales of New One - Family Houses ( month ) Construction Reports ...
... Selected Standard Metropolitan Statistical Areas . ( quarter ) Construction Reports , Series C22 : Housing Completions ( month ) Construction Reports , Series C25 : Sales of New One - Family Houses ( month ) Construction Reports ...
Page 12
... 96 25 152 126 20 93 25 157 129 64 25 133 105 24 3232 77 56 111 76 106 73 106 72 6632 14 24 24 1233 4 4 4 2 2 4 10 10 16 7 7 14 11 14 2 2 10 00 " Revised . 4 4 7 12. SELECTED CHARACTERISTICS OF HOUSING UNITS IN NEW PRIVATELY OWNED 12.
... 96 25 152 126 20 93 25 157 129 64 25 133 105 24 3232 77 56 111 76 106 73 106 72 6632 14 24 24 1233 4 4 4 2 2 4 10 10 16 7 7 14 11 14 2 2 10 00 " Revised . 4 4 7 12. SELECTED CHARACTERISTICS OF HOUSING UNITS IN NEW PRIVATELY OWNED 12.
Page 13
... reported . X Not applicable . Z Fewer than 500 units or less than 0.5 percent . Includes houses already sold when construction started . ( X ) Table 11. SELECTED CHARACTERISTICS OF NEW PRIVATELY OWNED BUILDINGS STARTED 13.
... reported . X Not applicable . Z Fewer than 500 units or less than 0.5 percent . Includes houses already sold when construction started . ( X ) Table 11. SELECTED CHARACTERISTICS OF NEW PRIVATELY OWNED BUILDINGS STARTED 13.
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Common terms and phrases
100 2nd quarter 1st quarter 3rd quarter add to total adjusted annual rate ANNUAL DATA 1963 April August AVERAGE RELATIVE STANDARD building permit Bureau Census Central South West Construction Reports December east North Central ERROR OF MONTHLY ESTIMATES Percents February housing units authorized housing units started January July June March Metropolitan Statistical Areas mobile home shipments month MONTHLY DATA nonsampling errors North Central South November number of housing number of units October Period Table permit authorizations place series possible samples Ppreliminary PRIVATE HOUSING STARTS PRIVATELY OWNED HOUSING QUARTERLY DATA regard to sign Region Period Total relative standard errors sampling error seasonally adjusted annual September shipments of mobile shown for revised single family SMSA's Outside SMSA's South West ANNUAL started plus mobile starts and building struc thousands of units Total 1 unit Total Total Total tures type of structure U.S. Department U.S. Government Printing units 5 units units units West ANNUAL DATA
Popular passages
Page 19 - The standard error of a sample estimate is a measure of the variation among the estimates from all the possible samples and thus is a measure of the precision with which an estimate from a particular sample approximates the average result of all possible samples. The...
Page 19 - Subscription to : Remittance Enclosed (Make checks payable to Superintendent of Documents) Charge to my Deposit Account No. MAIL ORDER FORM TO: Superintendent of Documents Government Printing Office Washington, DC 20402...
Page 13 - The standard or sampling error of a survey estimate is a measure of the variation among the estimates from all possible...
Page 19 - Nonsampling errors can be attributed to many sources, eg, inability to obtain information about all cases in the sample, definitional difficulties, differences in the interpretation of questions, inability or unwillingness...
Page 13 - ... feet or more long, designed to be towed on its own chassis, with transportation gear integral to the unit when it leaves the factory and without need of a permanent foundation.
Page 19 - For a description of the method used to compute these factors, see Bureau of the Census Technical Paper No. 15, The X-ll Variant of the Census Method II Seasonal Adjustment Program.
Page 19 - Since the estimates in this report are based on a sample, they may differ somewhat from the figures that would have been obtained from a complete census, using the same schedules, instructions, and enumerators.
Page 19 - ... comparable complete-coverage values. Estimates of the standard errors have been computed from the sample data for selected statistics in this report. They are presented in the form of relative standard errors, the standard errors divided by the estimated values to which they refer. In conjunction with its associated estimate, the relative standard error may be used to define confidence intervals, ranges that would include the comparable complete-coverage value for specified percentages of all...
Page 19 - The statistics in this report are estimates derived from a sample survey and may differ from the statistics which would have been obtained from a complete census using the same schedules and procedures. An estimate based on a sample survey is subfeet to both sampling error and nonsampling error. The "accuracy...
Page 13 - Disregarding this difference, the sampling error, or standard error of the estimate, is a measure of the variability among the estimates from all possible samples of the same size and design and, thus, is a measure of the precision with which an estimate from a particular sample approximates the results of a complete enumeration.