The Census of Governments identifies the scope and nature of the nation's state and local government sector; provides authoritative benchmark figures of public finance and public employment; classifies local government organizations, powers, and activities; and measures federal, state, and local fiscal relationships. The United States Code, Title 13, Section 161, requires that this census be taken. All state and local governments in the United States. Local governments include: Data are obtained about how governments are organized, how many people they employ and payroll amounts, and the finances of governments. Government organization data include location, type, and characteristics of local governments. Finance and employment data are the same as in comparable annual surveys and include revenues, expenditures, debt, assets, number of employees (by full-time and part-time status), payroll, and benefits. Every five years since 1957, for years ending in "2" and "7". Government organization data and information are for October of the year preceding the Census (2006, 2001, and so forth). Public releases include electronic files and Internet tables. The data comprise three main topic areas: Government Organization includes: Government Employment & Payroll includes the number of full-time and part-time employees and payroll amounts for the following levels of government: Government Finance includes: Both electronic files and Internet tables are available for each of the finance topics above; in addition, a published report is available on Public Education Finance. Two federal statistical agencies - the Bureau of Economic Analysis and the Federal Reserve Board - use the data to measure the nation's economic and financial performance. State and local governments use the data to develop programs and budgets, assess financial condition, and perform comparative analyses. In addition, analysts, economists, market specialists, and researchers need these data to measure the changing characteristics of the government sector of the economy and to conduct public policy research. Journalists report on, and teachers and students learn about, their governments' activities using our data. Internally, the Census Bureau uses these data as a benchmark for all our non-census year samples. Provides the only source of periodic information that identifies and describes all units of government in the U.S. Uses nationally consistent definitions and classifications for the types of governments and for their activities. Additional information on our methodology - the population of interest, data collection, data processing, and data quality, are available at How the Data are Collected
Directory Survey of Local Governments
Annual Survey of State
and Local Government Finances
Annual Public Employment
Survey EXPLORE INFORMATION CONTINUE OVERVIEW
CENSUS OF GOVERNMENTS
About the Data
PURPOSE
COVERAGE
CONTENT
FREQUENCY
PRODUCTS
USES
SPECIAL FEATURES
RELATED PROGRAMS