Big Differences Among Young Children in Asian Subgroups Means Some Are More At Risk of Being Missed in the 2020 U.S. Census

Certain subgroups of Asian American young children face higher odds of being missed in the Census.

By Dr. William P. O’Hare

Nearly all the data measuring census accuracy for Asians in the U.S. Census focus on the entire Asian population, but it is important to recognize there are big differences among Asian subgroups. The population is vibrant with nearly 50 different ethnicities and more than 100 languages. Those differences play a huge role in the characteristics associated with the likelihood of being missed in the census.

The Population Reference Bureau created Hard-to-Count profiles for young children in 11 Asian subgroups which highlight the diversity of characteristics associated with the likelihood of being missed in the Census across these subgroups. In this blog, young children are defined as age 0 to 9. Children age 0 to 4 had the highest net undercount of any age group in the 2010 Census, but it is worth noting that ages 5 to 9 had the second-highest net undercount rate of any age group in the 2010 Census, so this age group experiences many of the same problems as the youngest children (ages 0 to 4).

Data for these groups are available at the Count All Kids website. Data were also produced for specifically data for California and New Jersey and can be obtained by contacting the author.

Table 1 below shows data for eight characteristics associated with the risk of being missed in the Census for young children in Asian subgroups. Data for All Children, Non-Hispanic White Alone young children, and all Asian young children provide points of comparison. The point of this table is to illustrate the great diversity of circumstances and characteristics among young Asian children. This underscores the importance of creating census outreach and promotional material that are tailored to these for specific groups.

As an example, let’s use poverty rates. The poverty rates range from a low of 5 percent of Asian Indians to 30 percent for the Hmong community. Other characteristics show similar levels of disparity. These differences mean a one-size-fits-all approach to census promotion and outreach is unlikely to persuade all within the population.

The data are provided here to help fashion more effective outreach and promotion strategies for the 2020 Census. Now that the data collection period for the 2020 Census is likely to be extended, there is an opportunity to re-visit outreach efforts.

Dr. William P. O’Hare is the President of O’Hare Data and Demographic Services LLC and Consultant to the Count All Kids Complete Count Committee. (billohare1@gmail.com)

For more census resources for the Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander community, visit CountUsin2020.org.

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Advancing Justice – AAJC
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