An area's economic and social characteristics have significant
effects on its development and need for various types of public
programs. To provide policy-relevant information about diverse
county conditions to policymakers, public officials, and researchers,
ERS has developed a new set of county-level typology codes that
captures differences in economic and social characteristics. This
2004 County Typology is a major update and revision of ERS's 1989
County Typology.
In contrast to earlier ERS county typologies, the 2004 County
Typology Codes were developed for all 3,141 counties, county equivalents,
and independent cities in the United States. Their primary function
is to help differentiate among nonmetro counties, but metro counties
are also coded to facilitate comparisons. Metropolitan and nonmetropolitan
(micropolitan and noncore) are those designated by the Office of Management and
Budget in 2003, based on population and commuting data from the
2000 census.
The 2004 County Typology (download data) classifies all U.S. counties according
to six non-overlapping categories of economic dependence and seven
overlapping categories of policy-relevant themes. Click the links that follow to view maps of each of the types.
Economic Type—Codes and definitions of the categories are as follows:
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Farming-dependent
(440 total, 403 nonmetro) countieseither
15 percent or more of average annual labor and
proprietors' earnings derived from farming during
1998-2000 or 15 percent or more of employed residents
worked in farm occupations in 2000. Note that
a few counties have changed farm dependency status
from the preliminary group posted in May 2004.
See methods,
data sources, and documentation for an explanation
of these changes.
Mining-dependent
(128 total, 113 nonmetro) counties15 percent
or more of average annual labor and proprietors'
earnings derived from mining during 1998-2000.
Manufacturing-dependent (905 total, 585 nonmetro) counties25 percent or more of average annual labor and proprietors' earnings derived from manufacturing during 1998-2000.
Federal/State government-dependent (381 total, 222 nonmetro) counties15 percent or more of average annual labor and proprietors' earnings derived from Federal and State government during 1998-2000.
Services-dependent (340 total, 114 nonmetro) counties45 percent or more of average annual labor and proprietors' earnings derived from services (SIC categories of retail trade; finance, insurance, and real estate; and services) during 1998-2000.
Nonspecialized (948 total, 615 nonmetro) countiesdid not meet the dependence threshold for any one of the above industries.
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Policy Types—These indicators are not mutually exclusive; definitions of the types are as follows: |
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Housing stress (537 total, 302 nonmetro) counties30 percent or more of households had one or more of these housing conditions in 2000: lacked complete plumbing, lacked complete kitchen, paid 30 percent or more of income for owner costs or rent, or had more than 1 person per room. See methods for more details.
Low-education (622 total, 499 nonmetro) counties25 percent or more of residents 25-64 years old had neither a high school diploma nor GED in 2000.
Low-employment (460 total, 396 nonmetro) countiesless than 65 percent of residents 21-64 years old were employed in 2000.
Persistent poverty (386 total, 340 nonmetro) counties20 percent or more of residents were poor as measured by each of the last 4 censuses, 1970, 1980, 1990, and 2000.
Population
loss (601 total, 532 nonmetro) countiesnumber
of residents declined both between the 1980 and
1990 censuses and between the 1990 and 2000 censuses.
Nonmetro recreation (334 designated nonmetro in either 1993 or 2003, 34 were designated metro in 2003) countiesclassified using a combination of factors, including share of employment or share of earnings in recreation-related industries in 1999, share of seasonal or occasional use housing units in 2000, and per capita receipts from motels and hotels in 1997. See methods for more details.
Retirement
destination (440 total, 277 nonmetro)
countiesnumber of residents 60 and older
grew by 15 percent or more between 1990 and 2000
due to inmigration.
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More on methods, data sources, and documentation.
Download the 2004 County Typology
Codes.
Access the 1989 County Typology Codes.
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