Federal Reserve Economic Data: Your trusted data source since 1991

Table Data - Single-Parent Households with Children as a Percentage of Households with Children (5-year estimate) in Ulster County, NY

NOTE: To improve accessibility of data for all users, this file was converted from a text format to an html table.

Title Single-Parent Households with Children as a Percentage of Households with Children (5-year estimate) in Ulster County, NY
Series ID S1101SPHOUSE036111
Source U.S. Census Bureau
Release Single Parent Households with Children (Not a Press Release)
Seasonal Adjustment Not Seasonally Adjusted
Frequency Annual
Units Percent
Date Range 2009-01-01 to 2022-01-01
Last Updated 2023-12-07 11:20 AM CST
Notes The single-parent household rate is calculated as the sum of male and female single-parent households with their own children who are younger than 18-years of age divided by total households with their own children who are younger than 18-years of age (ACS 5-year variables S1101_C03_005E, S1101_C04_005E, and S1101_C01_005E respectively from table S1101).

Multiyear estimates from the American Community Survey (ACS) are "period" estimates derived from a data sample collected over a period of time, as opposed to "point-in-time" estimates such as those from past decennial censuses. ACS 5-year estimate includes data collected over a 60-month period. The date of the data is the end of the 5-year period. For example, a value dated 2014 represents data from 2010 to 2014. However, they do not describe any specific day, month, or year within that time period.

Multiyear estimates require some considerations that single-year estimates do not. For example, multiyear estimates released in consecutive years consist mostly of overlapping years and shared data. The 2010-2014 ACS 5-year estimates share sample data from 2011 through 2014 with the 2011-2015 ACS 5-year estimates. Because of this overlap, users should use extreme caution in making comparisons with consecutive years of multiyear estimates.

Please see "Section 3: Understanding and Using ACS Single-Year and Multiyear Estimates" on publication page 13 (file page 19) of the 2018 ACS General Handbook for a more thorough clarification.
DATE VALUE
2009-01-01 28.073158165893870
2010-01-01 28.255795861210520
2011-01-01 31.112726517472350
2012-01-01 32.261459923161940
2013-01-01 31.958481289265230
2014-01-01 32.086714715396404
2015-01-01 31.322843822843822
2016-01-01 31.521338088795964
2017-01-01 33.569448721897140
2018-01-01 34.526118235846106
2019-01-01 34.748241737723280
2020-01-01 36.959192912112790
2021-01-01 35.846346033728920
2022-01-01 35.182291666666664

Subscribe to the FRED newsletter


Follow us

Back to Top