United States | Telling it how it isn’t

As response rates decline, the risk of polling errors rises

A growing problem for America’s pollsters

United States Census Bureau enumerator sits on a porch as he counts the members of a large family for the upcoming census, 1940
Image: Getty Images
|Washington, DC

KNOWLEDGE of many facets of American life comes from surveys. Every ten years the Census Bureau asks adults to tally themselves and their demographic information in an online or mail-in form: a survey. The Bureau of Labour Statistics (BLS) produces monthly estimates of the unemployment rate and other economic numbers that are derived from interviews with tens of thousands of households: another survey. And knowledge of political issues from opinion polls, of course, comes from surveys. That would not be a problem if everyone answered the pollsters. But not everyone does, and the people who don’t can be very different from those who do.

This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Telling it how it isn’t”

From the June 24th 2023 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from United States

Pro-Trump protesters gather in front of the U.S. Capitol Building on January 6, 2021 in Washington, DC.

Following Trump’s pardons, the Proud Boys are back in the game

Enrique Tarrio tells The Economist he is still figuring out what is next for the group

US President Donald Trump

America really could enter a golden age

Donald Trump would need to build on its strengths, and subdue his own weaknesses


A 4-year-old girl carries a doll while walking with her immigrant mother.

To end birthright citizenship, Trump misreads the constitution

It would also create huge practical problems


Donald Trump cries “invasion” to justify an immigration crackdown

His first immigration executive orders range from benign to belligerent

The new American imperialism

Donald Trump is the first president in more than 100 years to call for new American territory—including Mars

The beginning of the end of the Trump era

The new president is more confident, and radical, than ever—and also more accepted