AccountantsAuditorsPct {Ecdat}R Documentation

Accountants and Auditors in the US 1850-2016

Description

Accountants and auditors as a percent of the US labor force 1850 to 2016 updating the analysis in Wyatt and Hecker (2006).

Usage

data(AccountantsAuditorsPct)

Format

a numeric vector of length 30 giving the percent of the US labor force in "Accounting and Auditing" each decade from 1850 to 2010 except for 1940 plus each year between 2011 and 2016.

Source

This is based primarily on data extracted from the Integrated Public Use Microdata Series on 2018-09-01 with the computations documented in a vignette by this title in the Ecfun package.

This updates the data on Accountants and Auditors in Wyatt and Hecker (2006). They relied primarily on data extracted from the Integrated Public Use Microdata Series. This follows the same methodology with two modifications:

1. IPUMS provided no data for 1940. Wyatt and Hecker (2006) used Historical Statistics of the United States, Colonial Times to 1970, Bicentennial Edition, part 1 (U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, 1975) for 1910-1940. The current data set uses that source only for 1040.

2. The IPUMS numbers showed an extreme jump from 1850 to 1860 followed by an even more extreme drop to 1870. The numbers in Sobek (2006) showed essentially the same behavior. Specifically, Sobek (2006) estimated the number of accountants and auditors in the US in those three years as 700, 1700, and 1200, and the labor force as 5277000, 8160800, and 12004200. These numbers give accountants and auditors as 0.013, 0.021, and 0.010 percent of the labor force, respectively for those three years. These numbers portray an incredible increase in the employment of accountants and auditors between 1850 and 1860 followed by a shocking decline the following decade. If, however, we swap the 1700 and 1200 between 1860 and 1870, the percentages become quite stable: 0.013, 0.015, and 0.014 percent, respectively.

We use these latter numbers, even though the uncorrected numbers seem more consistent with the numbers obtained from IPUMS.

References

Historical Statistics of the United States, Colonial Times to 1970, Bicentennial Edition, part 1 (U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, 1975)

Steven Ruggles, Sarah Flood, Ronald Goeken, Josiah Grover, Erin Meyer, Jose Pacas, and Matthew Sobek (2018) IPUMS USA: Version 8.0 [dataset]. Minneapolis, MN: IPUMS. doi:10.18128/D010.V8.0

Matthew Sobek (2006) Chapter Ba. "Labor Occupations" in Susan B. Carter, ed., Historical Statistics of the United States, Cambridge U. Pr.

Ian D. Wyatt and Daniel E. Hecker (2006) "Occupational changes during the 20th century", Monthly Labor Review, March 2006, pp. 35-57

See Also

Index.Source, Index.Economics, Index.Econometrics, Index.Observations

Examples

data(AccountantsAuditorsPct)
plot(names(AccountantsAuditorsPct), AccountantsAuditorsPct, 
  type='l', log='y', cex.axis=1.8)
# for the version of this contributed to Wikimedia Commons  

[Package Ecdat version 0.4-2 Index]