Industry


For both employee and self-employed jobs, respondents' verbatim descriptors of their business or industry are coded.  Freelance jobs that do not qualify as self-employment are coded according to the type of work performed.

Important Information For Using Industry Data

1. If the job has already been reported during a previous interview, that job's start-date information was already gathered during that previous interview.  Respondents are read a description of the industry they reported as of the last interview date and asked if there was any change between the last interview date and the current interview date (or stop date for jobs that ended).  If there is no difference, the job is assigned the same industry code; if the respondent reports a change, a new industry code is assigned for the current round.  However, if the job has been previously reported and the respondent's total job length was less than 13 weeks, no additional information is collected in the current interview.  In this situation the relevant data are available in the previous round's data.

2. Some respondents reported a job for the first time in round 2 that ended before the round 1 interview date.  (These jobs should have been reported in round 1 but were overlooked by the respondent.)  In these cases no industry information was collected.

 

Employee Jobs

The NLSY97 asks respondents age 14 or older to report the industry of each employer as of the job's start date.  Respondent descriptors of the "kind of business or industry at the job's start date"--or, if the respondent is confused by the question, "what did they make or do where you worked"--are the basis of the industrial codes.  For employee jobs lasting more than 13 weeks, respondents also describe the business or industry as of the job's stop date (or at the survey date for on-going jobs).  In addition, the interviewer codes whether the business was mainly manufacturing, retail trade, wholesale trade, or something else, requesting respondent help if necessary.  Survey staff then coded each employer's industry.

Through Round 5, respondent industry and occupation were coded using the 1990 Census code frames.  As part of the 2000 Decennial Census, the Census Bureau and BLS revised the industry and occupation code frames.  The 2002 Census codes frames are now available for all rounds. The move to the new frame maintains comparability with the Current Population Survey (CPS) and other federal surveys, which have adopted the new frame.  In addition, using historical code frames becomes increasingly problematic over time as new industries and occupations arise that are inadequately handled in the old frame.  At the same time, changing frames can introduce disruption into the longitudinal record; it may not always be appropriate to change frames whenever updates occur. 

A second change underlies the shift to the 2002 code frame.  While NORC had previously performed all coding to the 1990 code frames, the industry and occupation coding tasks were completed by the Census Bureau for the 2002 frames.  There are documented differences in coding practices across the two organizations, so house effects in coding are likely to surface in the data.  The process followed by the Census Bureau includes use of the respondents' reports of usual duties, title, etc., and contextual information on respondent income and education.  Problem cases are selected for manual review by an experienced coder or coding supervisor.  Rates of manual review are similar for the NLSY97 as for the CPS.  Wherever possible the Census Bureau has attempted to implement for this survey the coding procedures in place for the CPS.

Users should note that the 2002 frame differs considerably from the 1990 frame in organization, level of granularity, and other characteristics. Analyses of NLSY97 as well as CPS data indicate that jobs within a single category of one frame may disperse broadly to a variety of codes in the other frame.

Table 1 summarizes the industries reported by youths with employee jobs.

Table 1. Industry of NLSY97 Respondents at Current or Most Recent Employee Job, 2002 Codes

Industry of Job #01

Round 1

Round 2

Round 3

Round 4

Round 5

Round 6 Round 7 Round 8 Round 9 Round 10 Round 11
M F Total M F Total M F Total M F Total M F Total M F Total M F Total M F Total M F Total M F Total M F Total

Agriculture, Forestry & Fisheries

79

22

101

85

25

110

81

21

102

69

23

92

66

16

82

53

13 66 51 13 64 45 12 57 39 10 49 43 11 54 39 12 51

Mining

--

--

--

1

--

1

--

--

--

3

--

3

7

--

7

9 1 10 11 1 12 15 1 16 16 1 17 23 1 24 31 3 34
Utilities -- -- -- 3 1 4 4 1 5 9 -- 9 9 4 13 12 4 16 12 -- 12 8 1 9 12 3 15 12 3 15 17 7 24

Construction

111

24

135

195

24

219

219

11

230

289

26

315

339

25

364

402 28 430 433 25 458 464 32 496 472 37 509 478 29 507 473 34 507

Manufacturing

47

24

71

105

52

157

167

87

254

230

116

346

227

118

345

266 126 392 284 124 408 292 131 423 313 127 440 358 134 492 379 141 520

Wholesale Trade

13

8

21

27

18

45

58

23

81

66

23

89

52

34

86

79 35 114 100 35 135 115 45 160 95 46 141 103 46 149 117 51 168

Retail Trade

219

190

409

486

535

1021

623

707

1330

728

876

1604

716

841

1557

725 772 1497 666 740 1406 540 699 1239 505 625 1130 514 607 1121 461 532 993

Transportation & Warehousing

17

5

22

37

9

45

57

24

81

91

28

119

100

30

130

110 34 144 109 48 157 125 51 176 131 58 189 166 54 220 164 52 216

Information & Communication

61

25

86

69

48

117

60

57

117

72

65

137

81

68

149

70 63 133 84 64 148 74 74 148 70 75 145 79 91 170 84 68 152

Finance, Insurance & Real Estate

22

22

44

53

53

106

61

71

132

64

103

167

89

138

227

101 162 263 113 202 315 136 225 361 148 252 400 181 256 437 186 257 443

Professional & Related Services

99

55

154

178

122

300

212

171

383

296

222

518

282

238

520

316 287 603 309 299 608 343 289 632 367 321 688 414 375 789 426 371 797

Education, Health & Social Services

78

110

188

139

240

379

146

352

498

179

447

626

227

565

792

268 661 929 280 717 997 287 773 1060 285 856 1141 286 914 1200 278 937 1215

Entertainment, Accommodations & Food Services

420

382

802

798

812

1610

937

969

1906

960

1025

1985

864

946

1810

707 850 1557 627 728 1355 548 636 1184 483 563 1046 443 581 1024 399 542 942

Other Services

107

97

204

119

107

226

123

106

229

155

172

327

162

214

376

161 257 418 161 244 405 161 236 397 155 185 340 147 176 323 144 170 314
Public Administration 5 13 18 18 17 35 38 19 57 44 35 79 41 41 82 52 44 96 56 46 102 58 54 112 86 57 143 94 65 159 111 93 204
Active Duty Military -- -- -- 6 1 7 30 5 35 53 9 62 45 9 54 44 7 51 37 7 44 32 4 36 30 5 35 23 3 26 23 5 28
ACS Special Codes 13 9 22 6 13 19 9 18 27 8 8 16 8 6 14 10 10 20 14 12 26 4 6 10 11 8 19 20 6 26 11 2 13

Total working at an employee job

1291

986

2277

2325

2077

4402

2825

2632

5457

3316

3178

6494

3315

3293

6608

3385 3354 6739 3347 3305 6652 3247 3269 6516 3218 3229 6447 3384 3352 6736 3343 3277 6621
 
Note: This table is based on responses about the respondent's current or most recent industry at his or her current or most recent job (e.g., YEMP_INDCODE-2002.01). The universe is respondents who reported that their current or most recent job was a civilian employee-type job; military, freelance, and self-employment are not included. Some respondents reported a military occupation in the civilian question series. They may actually be civilians, or they may be members of the Armed Forces who reported their class of worker incorrectly.
 

Freelance Jobs

In rounds 1-3, NLSY97 youths not classified as self-employed (self-employed=job where the respondent is age 16 or older and usually earning $200 or more per week) described the type of work they performed.  NORC personnel coded these verbatim descriptions for release in the data set.  This information is located in variable FREELANCE_JOBS_COD.xx.  Because the Census codes are not appropriate for this freelance employment, the descriptions were classified using a separate coding frame with categories such as babysitting, mowing, pet care, and snow shoveling.  This information is located in variable FREELANCE_JOBS_NEWCOD.xx for rounds 1-5.  The reporting of freelance jobs was limited in round 4 to respondents born in 1983-84 and in round 5 to those born in 1984.  The coding of these jobs was changed beginning in round 3.  At that time the freelance codes were redone for rounds 1 and 2 to match the new coding system, which began in round 3.  Both the old and new codes are available for these rounds.  Starting in round 6, no freelance jobs section is included.

Self-Employment

For all freelance jobs reported in rounds 1-3 in which respondents are considered self-employed (age 16 or older and usually earn $200 or more per week), the survey asked about the business or industry classification of the job.  The series of questions determining the industry was similar to that asked for employee jobs.  Survey staff then coded the industry of each self-employed job using the 1990 Census industrial codes.

The structure of the questionnaire changed in round 4, based on the age of the respondent.  Older respondents (those born in 1980-82 for round 4 and those born in 1980-83 for round 5) reported self-employment jobs in the employee jobs section, answering industry questions like those listed above for employee jobs.  These jobs were coded the same way as employee-type jobs.  Younger respondents (those born in 1983-84 for round 4 and those born in 1984 for round 5) continued to list self-employment jobs in the freelance section.  If a freelance job met the earnings requirement for self-employment, the industry was coded using the 1990 Census codes.  Beginning in round 6, no freelance sections were included.  All self-employed jobs were reported and coded in the same way as employee jobs.

Comparison to Other NLS Surveys:  Industry is collected each year from NLSY79 respondents; however, the jobs must meet minimum hours worked and weeks worked requirements before this information is collected.  For the NLSY79, industry is coded using the 1970 (through 1993) and/or 1980 (1982-present) industrial classification codes. Industry is also coded using the 1970 and 1990 (for the CPS job only) codes for Children of the NLSY79 age 15 and older.  For the Mature and Young Women, industry has been coded using 1960, 1980, and 1990 systems.  The industries of Older and Young Men were recorded using 1960 codes for all years; in the final two Older Men surveys, industry was doublecoded using the 1980 system.  For more information, consult the appropriate cohort's User's Guide.

Survey Instruments:  These questions are found in the employment section of the Youth Questionnaire. Question names begin with YEMP- and roster items begin with YEMP_.

Related User's Guide Sections

Occupation

Main Area of Interest

Industry & Occupation
Supplemental Areas of Interest Training

 

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