All Stories

  1. An Afterword
  2. Look again: Editing and imputation of SCF panel data
  3. Wealth measurement in the survey of consumer finances: Methodology and directions for future research
  4. Modeling wealth with multiple observations of income: Redesign of the sample for the 2001 Survey of Consumer Finances
  5. Multiple imputation in the Survey of Consumer Finances
  6. Using range techniques with CAPI in the 1995 Survey of Consumer Finances
  7. Try, try again: Response and nonresponse in the 2009 SCF panel
  8. Getting to the top: Reaching wealthy respondents in the SCF
  9. The bitter end? The close of the 2007 SCF field period
  10. Tossed and turned: Wealth dynamics of U.S. households 2007-2009
  11. The other, other half: Changes in the finances of the least wealthy 50 percent, 2007-2009
  12. Shared understanding and data quality in the SCF
  13. What do the ``late'' cases tell us? Evidence from the 1998 Survey of Consumer Finances
  14. Using income data to predict wealth
  15. What's the chance? Interviewers' expectations of response in the 2010 SCF
  16. Interviewers and data quality: Evidence from the 2001 survey of consumer finances
  17. Constant focus: Engaging to measure wealth
  18. Lining up: Survey and administrative data estimates of wealth concentration