Survey of Consumer Finances, 1949
View DatasetDescription
This data collection is one in a series of financial surveys of consumers conducted annually since 1946. In a nationally representative sample, the head of each spending unit (usually the husband, the main earner, or the owner of the home) was interviewed. The basic unit of reference in the study was the spending unit, but some family data are also available. The questions in the 1949 survey covered the respondent's attitudes toward national economic conditions and price activity, as well as the respondent's own financial situation. Other questions examined the spending unit head's occupation, and the nature and amount of the spending unit's income, debts, liquid assets, changes in liquid assets, savings, investment preferences, and actual and expected purchases of cars and other major durables. In addition, the survey explored in detail the subject of housing, e.g., previous and present home ownership, value of respondent's dwelling, and mortgage information. Personal data include number of people in the spending unit, age, sex, and education of thehead, and the race and sex of the respondent.
Citations (2)
Cited on 01 May 2021
Weight: 2.20
Cited on 01 October 2001
Weight: 1.95
Mentions (0)
No mentions found
Metrics Over Time
Publication Details
DOI
Publisher
ICPSR - Interuniversity Consortium for Political and Social Research
Subfield
Economics and Econometrics
Field
Economics, Econometrics and Finance
Domain
Social Sciences
Confidence Score
50%
Source
Open Alex