Chapter 3
Occupational Employment Statistics
The Occupational Employment Statistics (OES) survey is a mail survey measuring occupational employment and wage rates of wage and salary workers in nonfarm establishments in the 50 States and the District of Columbia. Guam, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands are also surveyed, but their data are not included in national estimates.
About 6.8 million in-scope establishments are stratified within their respective States by substate area and industry. Substate areas include all officially defined metropolitan areas and one or more residual balance-of-State areas (MSA/BOS areas). The North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) is used to stratify establishments by industry.
The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics selects semiannual probability samples—referred to
as panels—of about 200,000 business establishments. Responses are obtained through mail,
telephone contact, and e-mail or other electronic means. Most respondents report their number of
employees by occupation across 12 wage bands. Currently, there are 97 different survey forms—
each used for a different set of industries—as well as a write-in form sent to the smallest
establishments. The Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) system is used to define
occupations.
Estimates of occupational employment and occupational wage rates are based on a rolling
six-panel (or 3-year) cycle. The final in-scope post-collection sample size when six panels are
combined is approximately 1.1 million establishments.
OES Background
In 1971, questionnaires were sent to 50,000 manufacturing establishments throughout the United
States, marking the beginning of the OES survey. This survey was conducted in cooperation with
the Employment and Training Administration and 15 State Workforce Agencies (SWAs). It was
designed to obtain national and State occupational employment estimates for the cooperating
States. Following the completion of the manufacturing survey, similar surveys were developed
for nonmanufacturing industries and State and local governments.
From 1988 to 1995, a new OES data collection method began with the compilation of
employment data by industry in a 3-year cycle. These data do not include wage information, data
by State or metropolitan area, or cross-industry data. Rather, they consist of industry-based
employment estimates by 2-digit and 3-digit Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) industry.
Each industry was surveyed once every 3 years. As a result, the 1988–1995 estimates are useful
mainly to data users interested in occupational staffing patterns for specific industries during this
period. Note that OES estimates are not available before 1988 or for the year 1996.
For the year 1996 the OES program began collecting occupational wage data, in addition to
occupational employment data, for every State. In addition, the program's 3-year survey cycle
was modified to collect data from all covered industries each year. In 1997 the OES program
began producing both industry-specific and cross-industry estimates of occupational employment
and wages. From 1997-2002, OES data from 400,000 establishments were collected annually
using an October, November, or December payroll reference period.
In 1999, the OES survey began using the U.S. Office of Management and Budget’s
(OMB) new occupational classification system—the Standard Occupational Classification (SOC)
system. (See http://www.bls.gov/soc/home.htm for information on the SOC system.) The SOC is
the first OMB-required occupational classification system for Federal statistical agencies. The
OES survey uses 22 major occupational groups from the SOC to categorize workers into 1 of
801 detailed occupations.
In 2002, the OES survey switched from the Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) system to the
North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). More information about NAICS can
be found at the BLS Web site http://www.bls.gov/bls/naics.htm or in the 2002 North American
Industry Classification System manual. Each establishment is assigned a 6-digit NAICS code
based on its primary activity. Also, starting with the 2002 survey, OES began collecting data
from 200,000 establishments semiannually using May and November reference periods.
Industrial scope and stratification
The survey covers the following NAICS industry sectors: |
11 |
Logging (1133), support activities for crop production (1151), and support activities for animal production (1152) only |
21 |
Mining |
22 |
Utilities |
23 |
Construction |
31-33 |
Manufacturing |
42 |
Wholesale Trade |
44-45 |
Retail Trade |
48-49 |
Transportation and warehousing |
51 |
Information |
52 |
Finance and insurance |
53 |
Real estate and rental and leasing |
54 |
Professional, scientific, and technical services |
55 |
Management of companies and enterprises |
56 |
Administrative and support and waste management and remediation services |
61 |
Educational services |
62 |
Health care and social assistance |
71 |
Arts, entertainment, and recreation |
72 |
Accommodation and food services |
81 |
Other services, except public administration [private households (814) are excluded] |
99 |
Federal, State, and local government (OES designation) |
These sectors are stratified into about 340 industry groups at the 4- or 5-digit NAICS
level. Industry stratification is mostly at the 4-digit level. However, some 5-digit groups are used
because of the heterogeneity of the 4-digit groups and the unique occupations found among the
5-digit industries.
Concepts
Establishment- An establishment is a single physical location at which economic activity occurs
(e.g., a store, a factory, a restaurant, etc.). Each establishment is assigned a six-digit NAICS
code. When a single physical location encompasses two or more distinct economic activities, it is
treated as two or more separate establishments if separate payroll records are available and
certain other criteria are met.
Employment- Employment refers to the number of workers who can be classified as full- or parttime
employees, including workers on paid vacations or other types of leave; salaried officers,
executives, and staff members of incorporated firms; employees temporarily assigned to other
units; and non-contract employees for whom the reporting unit is the permanent duty station,
regardless of whether that unit prepares their paychecks.
Occupations- Workers are classified into occupations on the basis of the work performed and the
skills required in each occupation. Employees are assigned to an occupation on the basis of the
work they perform and not on the basis of their education or training. For example, an employee
trained as an engineer but working as a drafter is reported as a drafter. An employee who
performs the duties of two or more occupations is reported in the occupation that requires the
highest level of skill or in the occupation in which the employee spends the most time if there is
no measurable difference in skill requirements. Working supervisors (those spending 20 percent
or more of their time doing work similar to the workers they supervise) are classified with the
workers they supervise. Workers receiving on-the-job training, apprentices, and trainees are
classified in the occupations for which they are being trained.
A wage is money that is paid or received for work or services performed in a specified period.
Base rate pay, cost-of-living allowances, guaranteed pay, hazardous-duty pay, incentive pay such
as commissions and production bonuses, tips, and on-call pay are included in a wage. Back pay,
jury duty pay, overtime pay, severance pay, shift differentials, nonproduction bonuses, employer
costs for supplementary benefits, and tuition reimbursements are excluded. Employers are asked
to classify each of their workers into an SOC occupation and one of the following 12 wage
intervals:
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|
Wages |
|
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|
Interval |
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Hourly rate intervals |
Annual rate intervals |
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Range A |
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Under $7.50 |
Under $15,600 |
Range B |
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$7.50 to $9.49 |
$15,600 to $19,759 |
Range C |
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$9.50 to $11.99 |
$19,760 to $24,959 |
Range D |
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$12.00 to $15.24 |
$24,960 to $31,719 |
Range E |
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$15.25 to $19.24 |
$31,720 to $40,039 |
Range F |
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$19.25 to $24.49 |
$40,040 to $50,959 |
Range G |
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$24.50 to $30.99 |
$50,960 to $64,479 |
Range H |
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$31.00 to $39.24 |
$64,480 to $81,639 |
Range I |
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$39.25 to $49.74 |
$81,640 to $103,479 |
Range J |
|
$49.75 to $63.24 |
$103,480 to $131,559 |
Range K |
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$63.25 to $79.99 |
$131,560 to $166,399 |
Range L |
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$80.00 and over |
$166,400 and over |
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|
Note: These wage intervals are for the May 2006 panel and are updated periodically based on the
wages in the labor market.
3-year Survey Cycle of Data Collection
The survey is based on a probability sample drawn from a universe of about 6.8 million in-scope
establishments stratified by geography and industry. The sample is designed to represent all
nonfarm establishments in the United States.
The OES survey allocates and selects a sample of approximately 200,000 establishments
semiannually. Semiannual samples are referred to as panels. To the extent possible, private
sector units selected in any one panel are not sampled again in the next five succeeding panels.
The survey is conducted over a rolling six-panel (or 3-year) cycle. This is done in order
to provide adequate geographic, industrial, and occupational coverage. Over the course of a sixpanel
cycle, approximately 1.2 million establishments are sampled.
For a given panel, survey questionnaires are initially mailed out to almost all sampled
establishments. State workforce agency staff may make personal visits to some of the larger
establishments; however, these are limited due to cost and time constraints. Three additional
mailings are sent to nonrespondents at intervals of approximately 4 weeks. Nonrespondents
receive follow-up telephone calls and e-mails.
Censuses of Federal and State governments are taken annually.
- Through administrative records, the U.S. Office of Personnel Management and U.S.
Postal Service provide complete enumeration of Federal executive branch and postal
service employment annually for a June reference month. BLS processes employment
and wage information from these files. Data from only the most recent year are retained
for use in OES estimates.
- Every November, for each area, State governments provide a census of employment at
establishments, except for schools and hospitals. Data from only the most recent year are
retained for use in OES estimates.
- A probability sample is taken of local government establishments, except for hospitals, in
every State except Hawaii.
- A census of Hawaii’s local government is conducted annually each November. With the
exception of schools and hospitals, all local-government-owned establishments in Hawaii
are included.
- A census of public- and private-owned hospitals is taken over the 3-year period.
- A probability sample of schools owned by State or local government, as well as schools
in the private sector, is taken over the 3-year period.
Sampling Procedures
The five steps
The creation of the OES sample consists of five steps:
Frame Construction
The sampling frame, or universe, is a list of about 6.8 million in-scope nonfarm establishments
that file unemployment insurance (UI) reports to the State workforce agencies. Employers are
required by law to file these reports to the State where each establishment is located. Every quarter BLS creates a national sampling frame by combining the administrative lists of unemployment insurance reports from all of the States into a single database called the
Longitudinal Data Base (LDB). Every 6 months, OES extracts the administrative data for
establishments that are in scope for OES from the most current LDB; the most current LDB is
usually the quarter that is one year prior to OES’s collection date. For example, the May 2008
sample was selected from the 2007/2nd quarter LDB file. The LDB files are also supplemented
with a frame covering establishments in Guam and rail transportation (NAICS 4821), because
these establishments are not covered by the UI program.
Construction of the sampling frame includes a process in which establishments that are
linked together in multiunit companies are assigned to either the May or November sample. This
is to prevent BLS from contacting large multiunit companies more than once a year.
Furthermore, the frame is matched to the five previous sample panels, and units that have already
been selected for any of these five panels are marked as ineligible for sampling for the current
panel.
Stratification
Establishments in the frame are stratified by geographic area and industry group.
- Geography—As of May 2006, 627 Metropolitan Statistical Areas (which are referred to
as MSAs and are defined and mandated by the Office of Management and Budget) or
balance-of-State (BOS) areas are specified. Each officially defined metropolitan area
within a State is specified as a substate area. Each cross-State MSA has a separate portion
for each State contributing to the MSA. In addition, most States may specify up to four1 residual balance-of-State areas to cover the remaining non-MSA portion of the State.
- Industry—339 industry groups are defined at the NAICS 4- or 5-digit level.
At any given time there are about 172,000 nonempty State/MSA/BOS-by-NAICS4/5
strata on the frame. When comparing nonempty strata between frames, there may be substantial
frame-to-frame differences. The differences are due primarily to normal establishment birth and death processes and normal establishment growth and shrinkage. Other differences are due to
NAICS reclassification and changes in geographic location.
Allocation of the sample to strata
Each State is assigned a fixed overall sample size. The frame is stratified into 174,000 nonempty
State-by-MSA/BOS-by-NAICS4/5 strata. Each time a sample is selected, a six-panel allocation
of the 1.2 million sample units among these strata is performed. The largest establishments are
removed from the allocation because they will be selected with certainty once during the sixpanel
cycle. For the remaining noncertainty strata, a set of minimum sample size requirements
based on the number of establishments in each cell is used to ensure coverage for industry and
MSAs. For each State-by-MSA/BOS-by-NAICS4/5 stratum, a sample allocation is calculated
using a power allocation. Two factors influence the power allocation. One is the square root of
the employment size of each stratum. In general, strata with higher levels of employment are
allocated more sample than strata with lower levels of employment.
The other factor is a measure of the occupational variability of the industry. The
occupational variability of an industry is measured by computing the coefficient of variation
(CV) for each occupation within the 90th percentile of occupational employment in a given
industry, averaging the CVs, and then calculating the standard error from the average CV. Using
this measure, industries that tend to have greater occupational variability are allocated more
sample than industries that are more occupationally homogenous. The actual six-panel sample
allocation is the larger of the minimum sample allocation and the power allocation. To determine
the current single-panel allocation, the six-panel allocation is divided by six and the resulting
quotient is randomly rounded.
Sample selection
Sample selection within strata is approximately proportional to size. In order to provide the most
occupational coverage, larger employers are more likely to be selected than smaller employers;
some of the largest employers are selected with certainty. The unweighted employment of
sampled establishments makes up approximately 65 percent of total employment.
Permanent random numbers (PRNs) are used in the sample selection process. To
minimize sample overlap among the OES survey and other large surveys conducted by the
Bureau of Labor Statistics, each establishment is assigned a PRN. For each stratum, a specific
PRN value is designated as the "starting point" to select a sample. From this starting point, we
sequentially select the first n eligible establishments in the frame into the sample where n
denotes the number of establishments to be sampled.
Single Panel weights (sampling weights)
Sampling weights are computed so that each panel will roughly represent the entire universe of
establishments.
Federal Government, USPS, and State government units are assigned a panel weight of 1.
Other sampled establishments are assigned a design-based panel weight, which reflects the
inverse of the probability of selection.
Response and nonresponse
Response
Regarding the May 2007 panel, of the approximately 1.2 million establishments throughout the
Nation in the combined initial sample, 1,138,228 were viable establishments (that is,
establishments that are not outside the scope or out of business). Of the viable establishments,
877,375 responded and 245,663 did not—a 77.1 percent response rate. The average percentage
of the establishments that responded from 2000 to 2006 was 78.4, representing 72.1 percent of
the sampled establishments’ employment.
Nonresponse
Nonresponse is a chronic problem in virtually all large-scale surveys because it may introduce a
bias in estimates if the nonrespondents tend to be different from respondents in terms of the
characteristic being measured. To partially compensate for nonresponse, plausible data from
responding units that have similar characteristics are imputed for the missing data of each
nonresponding establishment.
Establishments that do not report occupational employment data are called "unit"
nonrespondents. Establishments that report employment by occupation but fail to report by wage
intervals are called "partial" nonrespondents. Missing data for unit nonrespondents are imputed through a two-step imputation process. Missing data for partial nonrespondents are imputed through the second step of the process only.
Step 1: impute an occupational employment staffing pattern.
For each unit nonrespondent, a staffing pattern is imputed using a nearest-neighbor "hotdeck"
imputation method. The procedure links a responding donor establishment to each
nonrespondent. Possible donors are respondents from the current panel and any of the
five previous panels. The nearest-neighbor hot-deck procedure searches within defined
cells for the donor that most closely resembles the nonrespondent by geographic area,
industry, and employment size. Ownership is also used in the hospital and education
industries. The procedure initially searches for a donor whose reported employment is
approximately the same as the nonrespondent’s frame employment within the same
MSA-BOS and 5-digit NAICS industry. If two or more otherwise equally qualified
donors are found, a donor from a more recent panel is selected over a donor from an older
panel. If the search is unsuccessful, the pool of donors is enlarged in incremental steps by
expanding geographic area and industry until a suitable donor is found. Limits are placed
on the number of times a donor can be used.
After a donor has been found, its occupational staffing pattern is used to prorate
the nonrespondent’s frame employment by occupation. The prorated employment is the
nonrespondent’s imputed occupational employment.
Note: At the end of step 1, total employment has been imputed by occupation for the
nonrespondent, but there is, however, no employment distribution across wage intervals
for the occupations.
- Step 2: impute an employment distribution across wage intervals.
For each "unit" nonrespondent or "partial" nonrespondent, impute an employment
distribution across wage intervals for all occupations. This distribution, called the wage
- Identify the imputation cell for the nonrespondent. Imputation cells are initially
defined by MSA/BOS, NAICS4/5, and size class from the most recent panel only.
- Determine whether the imputation cell has enough respondents to compute wage
employment distributions. If not, incrementally enlarge the cell until there are
enough respondents.
- For each occupation in the imputation cell, use the respondents to calculate an
employment distribution as a percentage across wage intervals.
- Use the distributions mentioned earlier to prorate the nonrespondent’s imputed
occupational employment across wage intervals. (Or, for partial respondents, use
the distributions mentioned earlier to prorate the reported occupational
employment across wage intervals.)
Estimation Methodology
This section describes the weighting methodology and formulas used for making OES estimates.
Each semiannual sample represents roughly one-sixth of the establishments from the full sixpanel
sample plan and is used in conjunction with the previous five semiannual samples in order
to create a combined sample of approximately 1.2 million establishments that includes only the
most recent Federal and State government data.
Reweighting of the combined sample
Employment and wage rate estimates are computed using a rolling six-panel (3-year) sample. For
example, estimates based on the May 2007 survey were calculated using data from the May
2007, November 2006, May 2006, November 2005, May 2005, and November 2004 samples.
Establishments from each panel’s sample are initially assigned weights as if one panel were
being used to represent the entire population. When the samples are combined, each sampled
establishment must be reweighted so that the aggregated sample across six panels represents the
entire population. Establishments selected with certainty in the six-panel cycle are given a weight equal to 1. Noncertainty units are reweighted stratum-by-stratum. This revised weight is called
the d-weight or six-panel combined sample weight. The original single-panel sampling weights
are computed so that responses in a stratum can be weighted to represent the entire stratum
population. In one common scenario, six panel samples are combined and all six panels have
sample units for a particular stratum. A summation of the single-panel weights would
overrepresent the stratum population by a factor of six. Because it is important not to
overrepresent the stratum population, the final weight of each establishment is set equal to onesixth
of its single-panel sampling weight. In general, when six panel samples are combined, a
count of the number of panels with at least one unit selected for a given stratum is assigned to k.
The six-panel combined sample weight of each establishment in the stratum is computed by
multiplying its single-panel sampling weight by 1/k.
Benchmarking to QCEW employment
A ratio estimator is used to calculate estimates of occupational employment. The auxiliary
variable for the estimator is the average of the latest May and November employment totals from
the Bureau’s Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages (QCEW). For example, for the May
2007 survey, the auxiliary variable is the average of May 2007 and November 2006 employment.
In order to balance the State need for estimates at differing levels of geography and industry, the
ratio estimation process is carried out through a series of four hierarchical employment ratio
adjustments. The ratio adjustments are also known as benchmark factors (BMFs).
The first of the hierarchical benchmark factors is calculated in the States for cells defined
by MSA-BOS, NAICS4/5, and employment size class. (There are four size classes: 1–19, 20–49,
50–249, and 250+.) If a first level BMF is out of range, it is reset to a maximum ceiling or
minimum floor value. First-level BMFs are calculated as follows:
h = MSA-BOS by NAICS4/5
H = State by NAICS4/5
s = employment size classes (1–19, 20–49, 50–249, 250+)
S = aggregated employment size classes (1-49, 50+)
M = average of May and November QCEW
wi = six-panel combined sample weight for establishment i
xi = total establishment employment
BMFmin = a parameter, the lowest value allowed for BMF
BMFmax = a parameter, the highest value allowed for BMF
βhs = (Mhs / ∑i∈hs wixi), βhS = (MhS / ∑i∈hS wixi), βh = (Mh / ∑i∈h wixi)
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BMF1, hs { |
βhs , if all βhs within h are bounded by BMFmin, BMFmax |
βhS , if all βhS within h are bounded by BMFmin, BMFmax |
BMFmin , if βh < BMFmin |
BMFmax , if βh > BMFmax |
βh otherwise |
Second-level BMFs are calculated for cells defined within States at the NAICS4/5 level
by summing the product of final weight and first-level BMF for each establishment in the cell.
Second-level BMFs account for the portion of universe employment that is not adequately
covered by weighted employment in first-level benchmarking. Inadequate coverage occurs when
"MSA-BOS | NAICS4/5 | size class" cells have no sample data or when a floor or ceiling is
imposed on first-level BMFs. Second level benchmarks are calculated as follows:
βH = ( MH / ∑hs∈H ∑i∈hs wi xi BMF1, hs) , then
|
BMF2, H { |
BMFmin , if βH < BMFmin |
BMFmax , if βH > BMFmax |
βh otherwise |
Third-level BMFs (BMF3,H) are calculated at the "State | 3-digit NAICS" cell level by
summing the product of the final weight, first-level BMF, and second-level BMF for each
establishment in the cell. Fourth-level BMFs (BMF4,H) are calculated at the "State | 2-digit
NAICS" cell level by summing the product of the final weight, first-level BMF, second-level
BMF, and third-level BMF for each establishment in the cell. As with second-level BMFs, third and fourth-level BMFs are computed to account for inadequate coverage of the universe employment.
A final benchmark factor, BMFi, is calculated for each establishment as the product of its
four hierarchical benchmark factors (BMFi = BMF1 * BMF2 * BMF3 * BMF4). A benchmark weight value is then calculated as the product of the establishment’s six-panel combined sample
weight and final benchmark factor.
Occupational employment estimates
Benchmark weights are used to compute estimates of occupational employment. Estimates are
produced for cells that are defined by geographic area, industry group, and size of establishment
(i.e., size class). The total employment for an occupation in a cell is estimated by taking the
product of the reported occupational employment, the 6-panel combined sample weight, and the
final benchmark factor for each establishment in the cell, and summing the product across all
establishments in the cell. This sum is the estimate of total occupational employment in the cell.
The following equation is used to calculate occupational employment estimates for an
estimation cell defined by geographic area, industry group, and size class.
Xˆho = ∑i∈h(wi BMFi xio)
o = occupation;
h = estimation cell;
wi = six-panel combined sample weight for establishment i;
BMFi = final benchmark factor for establishment i;
xio = reported employment for occupation o in establishment i;
Xˆho = estimated employment for occupation o in cell h
Wage rate estimation
Two externally derived parameters are used to calculate wage rate estimates. They are:
- the mean wage rates for each of the 12 wage intervals
- wage updating factors (also known as aging factors)
Wage rates of workers are reported to the OES survey as grouped data across 12
consecutive, nonoverlapping wage bands. Individual wage rates are not collected.
An illustration: An establishment employs 10 secretaries at the following wage rates:
$ 8/hour – 1 secretary
$ 9/hour – 1 secretary
$12/hour – 2 secretaries
$13/hour – 2 secretaries
$14/hour – 2 secretaries
$16/hour – 1 secretary
$17/hour – 1 secretary
The establishment, however, will report its secretaries’ wage rates to the OES survey as follows:
Wage interval A (under $ 7.5/hour) – 0 secretaries
Wage interval B ($ 7.5-$9.49/hour) – 2 secretaries
Wage interval C ($ 9.50-$11.99/hour) – 0 secretaries
Wage interval D ($12,99-$15.24/hour) – 6 secretaries
Wage interval E ($15.25-$19.24/hour) – 2 secretaries
The remaining wage intervals have zero secretaries.
Because wage rates are collected as grouped data, we must use grouped data formulae to
calculate estimates of mean and percentile wage rates. Assumptions are made when using
grouped data formulae. When using the mean wage-rate formula, we assume that we can
calculate the average wage rate for workers in each interval. When using the percentile wage-rate
formula, we assume that workers are evenly distributed in each interval.
Wage data from different panels are not equivalent in real-dollar terms because of
inflation and rising living costs. Consequently, wage data collected prior to the current survey
reference period have to be updated or aged to approximate that period.
Determining a mean wage rate for each interval
The mean hourly wage rate for all workers in any given wage interval is not computed using
grouped data collected by the OES survey. Rather, this value is calculated externally using data
from the Bureau’s National Compensation Survey (NCS). Although smaller than the OES survey
in terms of sample size, the NCS program, unlike OES, collects individual wage data. The mean
hourly wage rate for interval L (the upper, open-ended wage interval) is calculated without wage
data for pilots. This occupation is excluded because pilots work fewer hours than workers in
other occupations. Consequently, their hourly wage rates are much higher.
Wage aging process
Aging factors are developed from the Bureau’s Employment Cost Index (ECI) survey. The ECI
survey measures the rate of change in compensation for eleven major occupational groups on a
quarterly basis. Aging factors are used to adjust OES wage data from past survey reference
periods to the current survey reference period.
Mean hourly wage rate estimates
Mean hourly wage is the total weighted hourly wages for an occupation divided by its weighted
survey employment. Estimates of mean hourly wage are calculated using a standard grouped data
formula that was modified to use ECI aging factors.
Rˆo = ∑tz=t-5(∑i∈ z wi BMFi Yˆi o) Xˆo
|
Yˆi o = uz o ∑r xi o r cz r
(i ∈ z)
o = occupation
Rˆo = mean hourly wage rate for occupation o
z = panel (or year)
t = current panel
wi = six-panel combined sample weight for establishment i
BMFi = final benchmark factor applied to establishment i
Yˆi o = unweighted total hourly wage estimate for occupation o in
establishment i
r = wage interval
Xˆo = estimated employment for occupation o
xi o r = reported employment for occupation o in establishment i in wage interval r (note that establishment i reports data for only one panel z or one
year z)
uz o = ECI aging factor for panel (or year) z and occupation o
cz r = mean hourly wage for interval r in panel (or year) z
In this formula, cz r represents the mean hourly wage of interval r in panel (or year) z. The
mean is computed externally using data from the Bureau’s NCS survey. Research is conducted at
periodic intervals to verify the continued viability of this updating procedure.
Percentile hourly wage rate estimates
The p-th percentile hourly wage rate for an occupation is the wage at which p percent of all
workers earn that amount or less and at which (100-p) percent of all workers earn that amount or
more. The wage interval containing the p-th percentile hourly wage rate is located using a
cumulative frequency count of estimated employment across all wage intervals. After the
targeted wage interval is identified, the p-th percentile wage rate is estimated using a linear
interpolation procedure.
pRo = Lr + j fr (Ur - Lr)
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pRo = p-th percentile hourly wage rate for occupation o
r = wage interval that encompasses pRo
Lr = lower bound of wage interval r
Ur = upper bound of wage interval r
fr = number of workers in interval r
j = difference between the number of workers needed to
reach the p-th percentile wage rate and the number of
workers needed to reach the Lr wage rate
Annual wage rate estimates
These estimates are calculated by multiplying mean or percentile hourly wage rate estimates by a
"year-round, full-time" figure of 2,080 hours (52 weeks x 40 hours) per year. These estimates,
however, may not represent mean annual pay should the employees work more or less than 2,080
hours per year.
Alternatively, some workers are paid an annual salary but do not work the usual 2,080
hours per year. For these workers, survey respondents report annual wages. Since the survey
does not collect the actual number of hours worked, hourly wage rates cannot be derived from
annual wage rates with any reasonable degree of confidence. For some occupations, only annual
wages are reported.
Variance Estimation
Occupational employment variance estimation
A subsample replication technique called the "jackknife random group" is used to estimate
variances of occupational employment. In this technique, each sampled establishment is assigned
to one of G random groups. G subsamples are created from the G random groups. Each
subsample is reweighted to represent the universe.
G estimates of total occupational employment ( Xˆhjog ) (one estimate per subsample) are
calculated. The variability among the G employment estimates is a good variance estimate for
occupational employment. The two formulae below are used to estimate the variance of
occupational employment in an estimation cell defined by geographic area and industry group.
v(Xˆhjo) = ∑Gg=1(Xˆhjog - Xˆhjo__)2 G(G-1) |
h = estimation cell defined by geographic area and industry group |
j = employment size class (1–19, 20–49, 50–249, 250+) |
o = occupation |
v(Xˆhjo) = estimated variance of Xˆhjo |
G = number of random groups |
Xˆhjo = estimated employment of occupation o in cell h and size class j |
Xˆhjog = estimated employment of occupation o in cell h, size class j, and subsample g |
Xˆhjo__ = estimated mean employment for occupation o in cell h and size class j
based on the G subsamples (Note: a finite population correction factor is
applied to the terms Xˆhjog and Xˆhjo__.) |
The variance for an occupational employment estimate in cell h is obtained by summing the
variances v(Xˆhjo) across all size classes j in the cell.
v(Xˆho) = ∑j∈h (Xˆhjo)
Occupational mean wage variance estimates
Because the OES wage data are collected in intervals (grouped), we do not capture the exact
wage of each worker. Therefore, some components of the wage variance are approximated using
factors developed from NCS data. A Taylor Series Linearization technique is used to develop a
variance estimator appropriate for OES mean wage estimates. The primary component of the
mean wage variance, which accounts for the variability of the observed sample data, is estimated
using the standard estimator of variance for a ratio estimate. This component is the first term in
the formula given here:
v(Rˆo)=( |
1 Xˆ 2o (∑h {nho (1-fho)} {∑i∈h w2i(qio - qho__)2}) +
|
) |
∑r θ2or σ2cr + 1 Xˆ 2o ∑r (∑i=1no (wi xior)2σ2er + 1 Xˆo∑r θor σ2wr) |
Rˆo = estimated mean wage for occupation o
v(Rˆo) = estimated variance of o
Xˆo = estimated occupational employment for occupation o
h = stratum (area/industry/size class)
fho = sampling fraction for occupation o in stratum h
nho = number of sampled establishments that reported occupation o in stratum h
wi = six-panel combined sample weight for establishment i
BMFi = final benchmark factor applied to establishment i
qio = (Yˆio - Rˆo xio) for occupation o in establishment i
Yˆio = estimated total occupational wage in establishment i for occupation o
xio = reported employment in establishment i for occupation o
qho__ = mean of the qio quantities for occupation o in stratum h
θor = proportion of employment within interval
r for occupation
o;
xior = reported employment in establishment i within wage interval r for occupation o
( σ2cr , σ2er and σ2wr ) Within wage interval r, these are estimated using the NCS and,
respectively, represent the variability of the wage value imputed to each worker, the
variability of wages across establishments, and the variability of wages within
establishments.
Reliability of the Estimates
Estimates developed from a sample will differ from the results of a census. An estimate based on
a sample survey is subject to two types of error—sampling and nonsampling error. An estimate
based on a census is only subject to nonsampling error.
Nonsampling error
This type of error is attributable to several causes, such as: errors in the sampling frame; an
inability to obtain information for all establishments in the sample; differences in respondents'
interpretation of a survey question; an inability or unwillingness of the respondents to provide
correct information; errors made in recording, coding, or processing the data; and errors made in
imputing values for missing data. Explicit measures of the effects of nonsampling error are not
available.
Sampling errors
When a sample, rather than an entire population, is surveyed, estimates differ from the true
population values that they represent. This difference, or sampling error, occurs by chance, and
its variability is measured by the variance of the estimate or the standard error of the estimate
(the square root of the variance). The relative standard error is the ratio of the standard error to
the estimate itself.
Estimates of the sampling error affecting occupational employment and the mean wage
rate are provided for all employment and mean wage estimates to allow data users to determine
whether those statistics are reliable enough for their needs. Only a probability-based sample can
be used to calculate estimates of sampling error. The formulae used to estimate OES variances
are adaptations of formulae appropriate for the survey design used.
The particular sample used in the OES Survey for a panel is one of a large number of
many possible samples of the same size that could be selected using the same sample design.
Sample estimates from a given design are said to be unbiased when an average of the estimates
from all possible samples yields the true population value. In this case, the sample estimate and
its standard error can be used to construct confidence intervals, or ranges of values with known
probabilities of the true value falling within those ranges. To illustrate, if the process of selecting
a sample from the population is repeated many times, if each sample is surveyed under essentially the same unbiased conditions, and if an estimate and a suitable estimate of its
standard error is made from each sample, then:
- approximately 68 percent of the intervals from one standard error below to one standard
error above the estimate will include the true population value. This interval is called a
68-percent confidence interval.
- approximately 90 percent of the intervals from 1.6 standard errors below to 1.6 standard
errors above the estimate will include the true population value. This interval is called a
90-percent confidence interval.
- approximately 95 percent of the intervals from 2 standard errors below to 2 standard
errors above the estimate will include the true population value. This interval is called a
95-percent confidence interval.
- almost all (99.7 percent) of the intervals from 3 standard errors below to 3 standard errors
above the estimate will include the true population value.
For example, suppose that an estimated occupational employment total is 5,000, with an
associated estimate of relative standard error of 2.0 percent. On the basis of these data, the
standard error of the estimate is 100 (2 percent of 5,000). To construct a 95-percent confidence
interval, add and subtract 200 (twice the standard error) from the estimate to create a range
spanning from 4,800 to 5,200. Approximately 95 percent of the intervals constructed in this
manner include the true occupational employment if survey methods are nearly unbiased.
Estimated standard errors do not indicate anything other than the magnitude of sampling
error. They are not intended to measure biases in the data or any other kind of nonsampling error.
Particular care should be exercised in the interpretation of small estimates or of small differences
between estimates when the sampling error is relatively large or the magnitude of the bias is
unknown.
Quality control measures
The OES survey is a Federal-State cooperative effort that enables States to conduct their
own surveys. A major concern regarding a cooperative program such as OES is the
accommodation of the needs of BLS and other Federal agencies, as well as State-specific
publication needs, despite limited resources while simultaneously standardizing survey
procedures across all 50 States, the District of Columbia, and the U.S. territories. Controlling
sources of nonsampling error in this decentralized environment can be difficult. One important
computerized quality control tool used by the OES survey is the Survey Processing and
Management (SPAM) system. It was developed to provide a consistent and automated
framework for survey processing and to reduce the workload for analysts at the State, regional,
and national levels.
To ensure standardized sampling methods in all areas, the sample is drawn in the national
office. Standardizing data processing activities such as validating the sampling frame, allocating
and selecting the sample, refining mailing addresses, addressing envelopes and mailers, editing
and updating questionnaires, conducting electronic review, producing management reports, and
calculating employment estimates have resulted in the overall standardization of the OES survey
methodology. This has reduced the number of errors in the data files as well as the time needed
to review them.
Other quality control measures used in the OES survey include:
- follow-up mail and telephone solicitations of nonresponding establishments, especially those
that are critical or large
- review of schedules to verify the accuracy and reasonableness of the reported data
- adjustments for atypical reporting units on the data file
- validation of the benchmark employment figures and of the benchmark factors
- validation of the analytical tables of estimates at the NAICS4/5 level
- response analysis studies conducted to assess respondents’ comprehension of the questionnaire
Confidentiality
BLS has a strict confidentiality policy which ensures that the survey sample composition, lists of
reporters, and names of respondents will be kept confidential. Additionally, the policy assures respondents that published figures will not reveal the identity of any specific respondent and will not allow the data of any specific respondent to be imputed. Each published estimate is screened to ensure that it meets these confidentiality requirements. To further protect the confidentiality of
the data, the specific screening criteria are not listed in this publication.
Data Presentation
OES estimates are published on the BLS Web site at www.bls.gov/oes/#tables in HTML format.
Included are cross-industry data for the United States as a whole, for individual U.S. States, and
for metropolitan areas, along with U.S. estimates by 3-, 4- and some 5-digit NAICS levels for
industry data. Also provided are downloadable files in EXCEL format. The home page of the
OES program is www.bls.gov/oes. In addition, these tables provide the Relative Standard Error
(RSE) for appropriate estimates of employment and wages.
When updated estimates become available, a BLS news release makes an announcement
providing a summary of U.S. data. The OES program produces an annual publication that
highlights OES data for particular occupations, industries, States, and MSAs.
For additional information, contact the OES staff at (202) 691-6569 or send e-mail to
oesinfo@bls.gov.
Uses
For many years, the OES survey has been a major source of detailed occupational employment
data by industry for the Nation, for States, and for metropolitan areas. This survey provides
information for many data users, including individuals and organizations engaged in planning
vocational education programs, higher education programs, and employment and training
programs. OES data also are used to prepare information for career counseling, for job placement
activities performed at State Workforce Agencies, and for personnel planning and market
research conducted by private enterprises. OES data also is used by the Department of Labor’s
Foreign Labor Certification (FLC) program, which sets the minimum rate at which workers on
work visas in the United States must be paid.
Technical References
Executive Office of the President, Office of Management and Budget, Standard Occupational Classification--
Revision for 2010, Federal Register Notice, May 16, 2006
Executive Office of the President, Office of Management and Budget, North American Industry Classification
System, 2002
Executive Office of the President, Office of Management and Budget, Standard Occupational Classification
Manual, 2000
U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Revising the Standard Occupational Classification System,
Report 929, June 1999.
U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment and Wages, 1997,
Bulletin 2516, August 1999.
U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment and Wages, 1998,
Bulletin 2528, June 2000.
U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment and Wages, 1999,
Bulletin 2545, September 2001.
U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment and Wages, 2000,
Bulletin 2549, April 2002.
U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment and Wages, 2001,
Bulletin 2559, June 2003.
U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment and Wages, May 2003,
Bulletin 2567, September 2004
U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment and Wages, May 2004,
Bulletin 2575, September 2005
U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment and Wages, May 2005,
Bulletin 2585, May 2007.
Last Modified Date: December 10, 2009