The SIPP gathers information from a series of
panels, each with 14,000 to 37,000 households. Each panel lasts from 2.5 to 4 years. The SIPP sample is a multistage-
stratified sample of the U.S. civilian non-institutionalized population. The respondents are all household members 15 years or older. Each wave of interviews lasts four months. Interviews are conducted by personal visits and telephone calls. Certain core questions are asked in every survey. Respondents are asked whether or not they participate in the
labor force, what government programs they participated in, and about their incomes. Additional “topical modules” are added to the SIPP survey sometimes with questions on personal history, child care, wealth, program eligibility, child support, disability, school enrollment, taxes, and annual income. The Census Bureau sponsors the survey under the authority of
Title 13 of the United States Code, Section 182. The SIPP was developed from the Income Survey Development Program, conducted between 1977 and 1981, which developed
survey data collection strategies and instruments as well as data processing strategies for the SIPP.
Statistics Canada conducted an analogous survey, the
Survey of Labour and Income Dynamics (SLID), a longitudinal study following each of a panel of 15,000 households for 6 years, from 1993 until 2011. This was replaced by the cross-sectional Canadian Income Survey in 2012. == Content ==