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US Census Bureau News Release
 EMBARGOED UNTIL: 12:01 A.M. EST, JANUARY 17, 2002 (THURSDAY)

Public Information Office                                        CB02-06
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e-mail: pio@census.gov

Clara Reschovsky                                           Related report 
301-457-2454

           9.3 Million People Worked at Home in 1997,
                     Census Bureau Reports 
                                
  During a typical week in the spring and summer of 1997, about 7 percent
of U.S. workers (9.3 million people) worked at least one full day at home,
according to a report released today by the Commerce Department's Census
Bureau. About two-thirds (6.4 million) of these people worked only at
home, while about one-third (2.9 million) split their time between home
and some other work location.

  "The typical home-based worker in 1997 worked exclusively at home and
many operated home-based businesses," said Clara Reschovsky, co-author of
Home-Based Workers in the United States: 1997. [pdf]

  Among those who split their work time between home and another location,
a ratio of 3-in-5 worked only one day a week at home and 1-in-5 worked two
days at home.
  
  Other report highlights:

    -Of the 6.4 million people who worked exclusively at home, 50 percent 
     were self-employed and 54 percent were women.

    -Among people who split their work time between home and other
     locations, 52 percent were employed in executive, administrative, 
     managerial and professional occupations. Those who split their work 
     time also had high levels of educational attainment (52 percent with 
     a bachelor's degree or higher) and high earnings. 


    -Average annual earnings were about $15,000 a year more for those who
     worked both at home and at other locations than for people who worked 
     only at home or who never worked at home.
  
  The estimates are based on data collected in a four-month period from
April to July 1997 as part of the 1996 panel of the Survey of Income and
Program Participation. Statistics from sample surveys are subject to
sampling and nonsampling errors. 
 
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Source: U.S. Census Bureau | Public Information Office |  Last Revised: August 09, 2007