SupportingStatementPart A(1220-0164)

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National Compensation Survey

OMB: 1220-0164

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2010 Supporting Statement for the National Compensation Survey (Revision)


  1. Justification


Overview


This request is for the approval of earnings and benefit collection for the National Compensation Survey (NCS) 1220-0164. Under the NCS, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) conducts ongoing surveys of compensation and job characteristics. The NCS is the result of the integration of three former separate surveys: the Employment Cost Index (ECI), 1220-0038, the Employee Benefits Survey, (EBS), 1220-0084, and the Occupational Compensation Survey Program (OCSP), 1220-0007.


The NCS employs a primary sample unit (PSU) design to select metropolitan and other areas to represent the labor force. Choices are not random, but designed to yield a “balanced” collection of half-samples. For each half-sample, a “replicate” estimate is computed with the same formula for the regular or “full-sample” estimate, except that the final weights are adjusted. The BLS Handbook of Methods describes the sampling process in detail. The NCS chapter may be accessed with the following link: http://www.bls.gov/opub/hom/pdf/homch8.pdf.


Prior to 2007, the NCS sample of areas consisted of 80 metropolitan and 72 nonmetropolitan areas. In 2007 the NCS initiated a new sample of 152 areas, consisting of 117 metropolitan areas, 22 micropolitan areas, and 13 clusters of nonmetropolitan counties. In addition to producing data on wages and salaries for the Nation as a whole and for nine broad census divisions, locality data will be published for as many areas as meet publication criteria. Data from the 48 contiguous States will be used by the President’s Pay Agent to meet the BLS obligation under the Federal Employees Pay Comparability Act of 1990 (FEPCA), as incorporated in section 529 of Public Law 101-509. NCS will use the OMB area definitions as established through December 2003. To access, click on the following link: http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/bulletins/fy04/b04-03_appendix.pdf


The NCS determines the work level by classifying each job according to a point-factor method. In 2004, NCS replaced the nine factor method with four factors, giving each job some number of points based on these factors:


  1. Knowledge – the amount of knowledge required for the job

  2. Job controls and complexity – the type of direction received and the nature of the job

  3. Contacts – the nature and purpose of contacts within a job but outside the supervisory chain

  4. Physical environment – risks involved and physical demands


The four factor leveling method is the result of a joint effort of BLS and OPM undertaken at the request of the President’s Pay Agent. It simplified and modified the NCS procedures for classifying work levels. Tests showed the use of four factors produces more consistent work level occupational matching and has fewer decision points.


In approximately 50 percent of the establishments, the BLS collects additional data on employee benefits. These data include the incidence, costs, and provisions of the benefits. For establishments where benefits are collected, the BLS updates the wage, salary and benefit cost data quarterly. The updating allows for the publication of change in the cost of wages, benefits, and total compensation as well as quarterly levels estimates.


Field economist” is the BLS title for those who collect data from respondents. To collect NCS data, field economists interview respondents who represent the companies, organizations, and government units within the sample. Field economists conduct these interviews by visiting the company or by phone, or both. Other communication media, such as faxes, mail, websites, and e-mail are used to assist the process, depending on the wishes of the respondents.


When asking questions on earnings and benefits, field economists do not rely on a scripted interview. Instead, they ask probing questions to get the information. Field economists might need to ask different respondents for information in different ways. Some respondents will be experts in the field of compensation, while other respondents merely maintain pay and benefit records. Because of the different levels of respondent knowledge combined with the scope and complexity of NCS, data collection makes scripting an interview very difficult.


In the initial collection, the respondent does not complete the collection forms. The field economist asks for the needed information, and uses the collection forms as a note-taking device. This information is then entered into the computer database of the NCS collection system after the completion of the interview with the respondent. Respondents normally give a copy of a recent establishment payroll run either electronically or printed and those payroll data are either electronically reformatted or hand entered into our collection system by the field economist. NCS policy is to collect the data in whichever form is easiest for the respondents to provide and then reformat that data for our use.


When updating the data, the respondent may choose to send the data on forms that the BLS provides. The respondents may respond through e-mail, fax, mail, or phone. Many respondents will send copies of a recent payroll, benefits cost run, or billing statements for various benefits (mostly insurances) by e-mail, fax, or mail in place of using the forms. Respondents may wish to provide the information in a follow-up interview by phone each time they report data and for this option they can call in the information or wait to be called. In such cases, the field economists enter information on the appropriate forms or directly into the computer database.


The published compensation data include the following information:

  • Occupational earnings by union or non-union status

  • Occupational earnings by full or part time status

  • Occupational earnings by incentive or time based wages

  • Occupational earnings by establishment employment size

  • Occupational earnings by goods producing and service providing industries

  • Occupational earnings by mean, median, and quartiles

  • Occupational earnings by job level as defined by a point-factor job evaluation

  • Occupational earnings by locality, region, and the Nation

  • Employer cost of total compensation

  • Employer cost of benefits

  • Employee cost of selected benefits

  • Percent of employees participating in benefit plans

  • Provisions of benefit plans

  • Percent change in total compensation costs

  • Percent change in earnings

  • Percent change in selected benefits


The types of benefit information collected include:

  • Health, life, and disability insurance

  • Retirement plans

  • Leave information

  • Legally required benefits (Social Security, Medicare, workers’ compensation, and unemployment insurance)

  • Overtime, shift, and bonus pay

  • Other benefits, including child care, health saving accounts, and education assistance


Some of these benefits data are collected to track the emergence of new benefits over time. NCS also asks about the incidence of certain emerging benefits. The BLS only asks whether sampled occupations receive these benefits and periodically drops those that show no growth, supplementing them with other potentially growing benefits. In this revised NCS Supporting Statement, NCS is requesting approval to add two questions on domestic partner benefits to the National Compensation Survey (NCS) 1220-0164.


NCS is proposing adding two “yes/no/don’t know” questions on domestic partner benefits to the “Other Benefits” questions. It is estimated that 2 minutes will be added to respondent burden per establishment’s who are asked these questions. NCS would like to implement these changes with the September 2010 NCS collection quarter (which starts September 16, 2010). These questions will only be asked of wage and benefits sample members who offer defined benefit (DB) and/or health benefits to their employees. Currently in private industry DB plans are offered in 11% of establishments and health benefits to 63%. In State and local governments DB access is 84% and health benefits access is 88%.


The compensation data currently captured include information on details of benefit services received by employees and their families as well as restrictions and limits to the receipts of these services.


As compensation practices change so too must the NCS. This is accomplished through constant environmental scanning which after testing can result in survey changes when new benefits, provisions or practices are identified.


Examples of provision details in NCS include the following:

  • Managed care in health insurance

  • Cost sharing arrangements such as typical deductibles and copayments

  • Other health plan information such as coverage for hospitalization, alternatives to hospitalization, mental health, substance abuse treatment, surgical care, and physicians visits

  • Dental, vision, and prescription drug benefits

  • Levels of coverage for life insurance and disability plans

  • Pension plan eligibility, benefit formulas, survivor options, and disability provisions

  • Defined contribution retirement plan employee and employer contribution rates, investment choices, tax status of employee contributions, and disbursement options

  • Number of vacation days, sick days, and holidays


Frozen defined benefits pension plans is a currently rising practice that we are monitoring, and will test in the future.


  1. Necessity of the Information Collection


Data on various forms of compensation, including employers’ cost for wages and benefits, benefits incidence, and detailed characteristics of benefit plan provisions, are needed to meet the requirements of a number of Federal programs. Earnings data produced from the survey are used in the determination of locality pay and general increases for most Federal workers. The Department of Defense’s (DOD’s) new National Security Personnel System (NSPS) is considering the use of NCS data for locality pay and general wage increases. Other Federal government organizations investigating the use of NCS estimates for pay purposes include the Administrative Office of the United States Courts and the Government Accountability Office. Total compensation data are needed for the calculation of the ECI, a principal economic indicator used in determining monetary policy. As Federal Reserve Bank Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said "The Employment Cost Index is indispensable to understanding America's economy. It ensures the accuracy of the statistics on employers' compensation costs that we rely on for economic policy making and for successful business planning."


The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (formerly the Health Care Financing

Administration) uses the ECI to determine allowable increases in Medicare reimbursements for hospital and physician charges. The Employment Standards Administration uses the ECI to set benefit costs required by the Service Contract Act. The National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) uses NCS data in its research work. Other uses of ECI data include: macro-economic forecasting; collective bargaining and other pay determinations; estimating compensation in the National Income and Product Accounts done by the Bureau of Economic Analysis; contract cost escalation; and studies on the structure of employee compensation.


These estimates are also widely used by the private sector to determine the costs of earnings and benefits, for research in the field of labor economics, and in private contracts for wage escalation. They provide quarterly and annual change in total compensation costs, along with availability of benefit programs.


The collection of employee compensation data is authorized and mandated by several laws and regulations. Links to the appropriate sections of these laws, regulations, or documents listed below. These include:

a. The Bureau of Labor Statistics is authorized to make “... continuing studies of ... labor costs in manufacturing, mining, transportation, distribution, and other industries” under Title 29 of the U.S. Code (29 USC 2b).

http://law.onecle.com/uscode/29/2b.html


b. The Federal Employees Pay Comparability Act of 1990 directs the President’s Pay Agent to prepare “... a report that -- (A) compares rates of pay under the General Schedule with the rates of pay generally paid to non-Federal workers for the same levels of work within each pay locality, as determined on the basis of appropriate surveys that shall be conducted by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.” The Act further specifies that in addition to locality differentials being implemented, the 12-month change in the ECI for earnings and salaries for private industry workers minus 0.5 percentage points be used to adjust the General Schedule. (5 USC 5304) http://www.oscn.net/applications/OCISWeb/DeliverDocument.asp?CiteID=185083


c. The Ethics Reform Act of 1989 specifies that data from the ECI be used to adjust the pay of members of the House of Representatives and the Senate, Federal judges, and senior Government officials. (5 USC 5318)

http://www.oscn.net/applications/oscn/deliverdocument.asp?lookup=Next&listorder=439&dbCode=FDSTUS05&year=


d. Compensation of Members of Congress shall be adjusted by an amount, rounded to the nearest multiple of $100 (or if midway between multiples of $100, to the next higher multiple of $100), equal to the percentage of such annual rate which corresponds to the most recent percentage change in the ECI (relative to the date described in the next sentence), as determined under section 704(a)(1) of the Ethics Reform Act of 1989. (2 USC 31)

http://uscode.house.gov/download/pls/Title_02.txt


e. The ECI is designated a Principal Federal Economic Indicator under OMB Statistical Policy Directive No. 3. 2007 Release date attached: http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/inforeg/pei_calendar2007.pdf


  1. Uses of Information


A prominent use of the current NCS data is to determine changes in Federal workers’ pay, as mandated in the FEPCA of 1990.


Other important data users include:

  • Private firms that use the data in the administration and evaluation of the compensation packages they offer their workers

  • Researchers in academia and consulting


The Bureau continually examines compensation literature and maintains personal contact with relevant associations and researchers. The Department of Labor and outside groups have recently become very interested in domestic partner benefits and NCS is proposing to collect some data on this subject starting in September 2010. Currently, no other information is available on a probability basis that yields the scope of compensation data found in the NCS surveys. Research performed by outside consultants while the FEPCA of 1990 was developed showed there were no acceptable alternate sources for earnings data that could be used for adjusting Federal pay.


One of the chief products of the NCS is the ECI. The data produced by the ECI are the only source for measures of change in compensation in the broad civilian, non-Federal, and non-farm economy. Other surveys of change in compensation produce data that are valuable for specific purposes, but are limited in scope and coverage.


Another NCS product is the estimation of benefit incidence and detailed provisions. The NCS benefits are the only source of comprehensive data on employer-provided benefits that is based on a statistical sample and covers the broader economy. Other surveys of benefit provisions (mainly pension and health care plan analyses) are not based on a statistical sample, are limited to a tabulation of unweighted data, are not comprehensive in scope, and usually present a picture based mainly on plans of large employers.


There is continuing interest in using NCS data files for special research. Many academic, institutional, and government researchers are currently using these data, and other such efforts are in the planning stages. Ongoing examples of these efforts include: examining trends as indicators in health care cost increases and wage increases shown in NCS and how these differ among industries and occupations, analysis of the dispersion of employer-sponsored health insurance actuarial value in the NCS, and which occupational, wage, and firm characteristics are associated with a firm’s decision to offer health insurance?


3. Uses of Improved Information Technology


BLS field economists obtain data from respondents through personal interview, telephone, e-mail, and fax contacts. After the interview, BLS field economists enter these data into a database utilizing a customized computer application. The application is designed for use on both laptop and desktop personal computers, and runs in the Microsoft Windows operating system. Field economists are able to enter information for an establishment and perform a variety of data edits to check the validity of the entries, as this data capture system currently has approximately 650 total edits.


Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages (QCEW) is a relational database of business establishments linked longitudinally and based on the micro data submitted quarterly by States from Unemployment Insurance (UI) tax files. The QCEW serves as a sampling frame for the NCS and other establishment-based surveys. BLS Data elements on these QCEW files include information on monthly employment, quarterly wages, business name and addresses, industry classification, geocodes, and other administrative data. Every business establishment contains a unique identifier that allows for tracking of individual establishments at the micro level across quarters for the United States. The BLS uploads these data into its computer system before the field economist visits the establishment, thereby reducing the burden on respondents to provide this basic information.


The BLS allows responding establishments to provide a computer file of data, rather than recording data on paper. The NCS survey is currently using a program that allows for centralized control of data received over the Internet that helps facilitate data received electronically. This data can then be directly imported to the NCS system or the data can be reformatted by the system if needed. While field economists usually still visit the establishment during the first collection, respondents now can send initiation and updated data via the Internet, mail, or fax.


By the end of 2007 the NCS will introduce a Web-based system that will allow NCS respondents, using Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) encryption and the establishment’s schedule number, to upload data files to a secure BLS server and forwards those files to the assigned field economist.


  1. Effort to Identify Duplication


The NCS has eliminated the duplication that used to occur when the BLS had three separate surveys studying compensation. Each establishment is now contacted only one time (in each sample cycle) rather than possibly being visited for more than one survey. Therefore, the burden on respondents has been reduced significantly, especially for those large establishments that are selected in multiple samples.


In developing the NCS, the BLS has undertaken efforts to coordinate the NCS with other survey and other Federal data needs. For example, within the BLS, data collection is coordinated between the NCS and the Bureau’s Occupational Employment Statistics (OES) program. For larger selected establishments that are in both surveys sample the NCS program collects the data and it is then used for both surveys.


  1. Minimizing the Burden to Small Establishments


The NCS program is designed to provide compensation data that are representative of the national economy. Therefore, information is collected from establishments of all sizes. Any establishment with at least one employee is a potential respondent. Private industry and State and local government establishments are included in the sample for five years.


The aggregate collection burden on small establishments is significantly less than medium and large establishments. For all establishments, including small establishments, an optimum allocation design will be obtained by sorting establishments within the industry by employment size and sampling the industry with probability proportionate to the amount of employment contained in those industries and size classes. Therefore, larger firms will have a larger chance to be selected in the sample. The BLS also collects data on fewer occupations in small establishments. Furthermore, small establishments will have a smaller benefit collection burden because they tend to offer fewer benefits than larger establishments.1


6. Consequences of Not Collecting the Data or Less Frequent Data Collection


The consequences of not collecting the NCS would cause the loss of data series that:

  • Are needed to administer Federal workers’ pay and other programs

  • Are valuable tools to private sector compensation administrators

  • Provide data critical to analysis of the US economy


If collection were done less frequently, the following negative ramifications could occur:

  • Compensation change data, computed on a semiannual or annual basis instead of quarterly, would make it more difficult to identify the causes of any change in the price of labor in a timely manner.

  • The change would impair the ability of companies and government entities that use the ECI as a cost escalator for labor rates.


7. Special Circumstances


There are no special circumstances of the type described.


  1. Federal Register Notice/Outside Consultation


Federal Register Notice


Outside Consultation


The Bureau solicits input from data users, including survey respondents, on the types of compensation statistics they would like to see produced. To assist in these efforts, a marketing outreach program was developed with the goal of informing users about the NCS and gathering information on the types of statistics users find most valuable. The Bureau also obtains advice on its programs from the Business Research Advisory Council and the Federal Economic Statistics Advisory Committee. The latter provides members of the academic community the opportunity to have input on statistical issues. This Committee is a joint effort of the Bureau of Economic Analysis, the Census Bureau, and the BLS.


In addition, the Bureau speaks, attends, and staff exhibits at the annual WorldatWork, the Society for Human Resources Management, and American Society for Healthcare Human Resources Administration Conferences to describe and publicize the NCS program and products. Getting public feedback from the human resource community helps in survey design and publications.


In an FY 1999 customer preference survey, 72 percent of the respondents were “Very satisfied” with the overall service provided by the NCS program and 26 percent were “Satisfied.” Finally, an important part of the feedback the BLS receives comes from the survey respondents and their reactions to the type of data requested, the accessibility of the data, and the value of the results. Field economists relay feedback information from respondents to regional managers, who in turn consult with national office managers to assess respondents’ suggestions or concerns and act appropriately.


  1. Payments to Respondents


No payments or gifts will be provided to any respondents.


  1. BLS Confidentiality Policy


The Commissioner’s Order No. 1-06, “Confidential Nature of BLS Statistical Data” and the “Confidential Information Protection and Statistical Efficiency Act of 2002 (Title 5 of Public Law 107-347)” explains the Bureau’s policy on confidentiality. The Commissioner’s Order No. 1-06 states:


In conformance with existing law and Departmental regulations, it is the policy of the BLS that:

    1. Respondent identifiable information collected or maintained by, or under the auspices of, the BLS for exclusively statistical purposes and under a pledge of confidentiality shall be treated in a manner that will ensure that the information will be used only for statistical purposes and will be accessible only to authorized persons.

    2. Pre-release economic data, including embargoed data, prepared for release to the public will not be disclosed or used in an unauthorized manner before they officially have been released, and will be accessible only to authorized persons.


The following pledge of confidentiality is used on all materials provided to all non-government respondents:


"The Bureau of Labor Statistics, its employees, agents, and partner statistical agencies, will use the information you provide for statistical purposes only and will hold the information in confidence to the full extent permitted by law. In accordance with the Confidential Information Protection and Statistical Efficiency Act of 2002 (Title 5 of Public Law 107-347) and other applicable Federal laws, your responses will not be disclosed in identifiable form without your informed consent."


This statement appears on the private industry collection forms and is be on our new web collection site. For the NCS program, the pledge of confidentiality is not extended to State and local government entities, unless specifically requested, since the data they provide are a matter of public record.


In some instances, respondents are unable to provide certain data elements needed to complete the collection requirements. The data, however, may be available from a secondary source such as an insurer, union, or accounting firm. When this occurs it becomes necessary for the BLS to go to a secondary source for the information. In these cases, BLS requests verbal consent from the establishment to solicit the information from the secondary source (examples: union benefit fund or commercial payroll processing firm.)


11. Sensitive Questions


Aside from the sensitivity attached to payroll information, no other sensitive questions are asked during the survey.


12. Estimated Reporting Burden


Estimates of respondent burden are provided in this section for all activities associated with the NCS program. For the purposes of the discussion of respondent burden and BLS cost, collection is divided into two categories: initiations and updates. In an initiation, the respondent is contacted for the first time. The BLS field economist samples the jobs for study, collects the earnings and benefit information, and sets up the updating process. In an update, information is collected on the same jobs that were sampled in initiation. The field economist records any changes to employment characteristics or compensation since the initiation, or since the last update. Thus, updates generally take far less time than initiations.


Broadly stated, both private industry and State/local government establishments in the survey fall into one of following four categories with the percentage of establishments expected in each category over the three years.


1) Establishments that only provide earnings data, and the data are updated annually. These represent approximately 50 percent of establishments in the survey.


2) Establishments where both earnings and benefits data are collected, and data are updated quarterly. These represent about 50 percent of all establishments in the survey. The BLS collects data on earnings and benefit costs every quarter from these establishments.


3) Feasibility testing to determine the best ways to collect compensation. These represent about 10 percent of the estimated establishments in the NCS survey. Tests are intended to improve survey procedures and processes to produce more accurate data than those produced in the past, investigate compensation practices, and to help lower respondent burden.


4) Follow-up contacts to establishments to do record checks of the collected data. The NCS has a formal review policy where reviewers select approximately 5 percent of all establishments for recontact.

This relatively simple picture becomes more complex when taking into account the various types of data collected. The following list breaks the activities down into the types of collection.

(The “records check” entries below refer to checking back with the respondent, for quality assurance and measurement purposes, to verify a sample of data items collected.)


Activity (1a) - Initiation of establishments in the NCS sample where only earnings are collected.

Activity (1b) - Updates of establishments in the NCS sample where only earnings are collected. Data from these establishments are updated annually.

Activity (2a) - Initiation of establishments in the NCS sample where both earnings and benefits are collected.

Activity (2b) - Updating of establishments in the NCS sample where both earnings and benefits are collected. Data from these establishments are updated quarterly.


(Activities 2a and 2b will be - affected by the addition of the two domestic partner benefit questions.)

Activity (3) - Tests of compensation collection. These tests include studies of new ways to reduce respondent burden and improve the collection of compensation data through enhanced data coverage and data definitions.

Activity (4a) - Records check of earnings-only initiations.


Activity (4b) - Records check of earnings-only updates.


Activity (4c) - Records check of earnings/benefit initiations.


Activity (4d)- Records check of earnings/benefit updates.


Estimates of net respondent burden associated with these collection activities in FY 2008, FY 2009, and FY 2010 and broken out by affected publics (private sector, State and local governments) are provided on the following pages.


Table 1. Private sector sample burden by activity type for FY 2010; Revised FY 2010 Figures in Red, below other lines of data


Collection Activity

Number of
Respondents Per Activity (Net)

Responses
Per
Respondent

Total
Annual
Responses by Activity

Minutes
Per
Response

Total
Hours







Activity 1a—NCS earnings-only initiations

3,033

1

3,033

74

3,741

Activity 1b—Update of NCS
earnings data

12,726

1

12,726

20

4,242

Activity 2a—Initiation of NCS earnings/benefit data

3,032


1


3,032


250.5


12659

Activity 2b—Updates of NCS earnings/benefit data

11,582


3.35 (avg.)


38,800


38.5


24,904

Activity 3—Feasibility survey testing

3,037

1

3,037

60

3,037

Activity 4a—Records check of earnings-only initiations

152

1

152

15

38

Activity 4b—Records check of earnings-only updates

636

1

636

15

159

Activity 4c— Records check of earnings/benefits initiations

152

1

152

15

38

Activity 4d—Records check of earnings/benefit updates

579

3.35 (avg.)

1940

15

485

FY 2008-2010 Totals


34,929


63,508


49,303



Table 2. State and local government sample burden by activity type for FY 2010 (annual figures) Revised FY 2010 Figures in Red, below other lines of data


Collection Activity

Number of
Respondents

Per Activity (Net)

Responses
Per
Respondent

Total
Annual
Responses by Activity

Minutes
Per
Response

Total
Hours







Activity 1a—NCS earnings-only initiations

*


*


*

Activity 1b—Update of NCS
earnings data

2,164

1

2,164

20

721

Activity 2a—Initiation of NCS earnings/benefit data

*


*


*

Activity 2b—Updates of NCS earnings/benefit data

2,163


3.35 (avg.)


7,246


39.18


4,732


Activity 3—Feasibility survey testing

432

1

432

60

432

Activity 4a—Records check of earnings-only initiations

*


*


*

Activity 4b—Records check of earnings-only updates

108

1

108

15

27

Activity 4c— Records check of earnings/benefits initiations

*


*


*

Activity 4d—Records check of earnings/benefit updates

108

3.35 (avg.)

362

15

90

FY 2008-2010 Totals


4,975


10,312


6,002

* = activities not being done in the State and local government for this period.


The table below summarizes the data, including figures on the actual number of respondents to be contacted each year.


Table 3: Private sector average response and burden


Fiscal Year

Respondents (Number of individual establishments)

Average responses per year

Total # of

Responses

Average minutes per response

Total hours

FY 2010

34,929

1.81

63,508

46.58

49,303


Table 4: State and local government average responses and burden


Fiscal Year

Respondents (Number of individual establishments)

Average responses per year

Total # of

Responses

Average minutes per response

Total hours

FY 2010

4,974

2.07

10,312

34.92

6,002



When only earnings are collected, the BLS estimates a response rate of 78.0 percent at initiation for purposes of calculation of burden. When benefits are also collected, a response rate of 74.0 percent is expected. All estimates are based on studies of past experience.


The BLS estimates that 90 percent of those who respond at initiation will respond at updates for a survey collected once per year.


For surveys collected quarterly, the BLS estimates that 93 percent of establishments that provide initial data will continue to provide data.


The BLS estimates that NCS feasibility special studies will have a response rate of 85 percent. Finally, the BLS estimates that records check work will have a response rate approaching 100 percent of those who participate in each survey.


The BLS estimates that 1.23 hours of the respondent’s time will be required to complete initial collection for NCS earnings-only schedules. For NCS earnings and benefits schedules, an anticipated 4.18 hours of respondent time will be required for initial earnings collection: 1.23 hours for the completion of the earnings component and 2.95 hours for the completion of benefits. The BLS estimates that updates for the NCS schedules will take 20 minutes for establishments where only earnings are collected and 39 minutes for establishments where both earnings and benefits are collected.


The BLS estimates that follow-up contacts for records check will take 15 minutes. Because of the nature of a records check, the time required is not dependent on the time required for initial collection.

Table 5. Description and uses of NCS forms



The NCS has 14 different forms for data collection as different activities during data collection calls for unique forms, both private industry and government versions exist for 7 form types. Copies of these forms are included in this clearance package.


These forms are primarily used as note-taking devices by the field economists. The field economists ask probing questions that will vary depending on the knowledge level of the respondent. The forms provide the field economist with a list of the required information needed for the survey, not a list of questions. For the records check, the field economists will ask for specific items of data in a prescribed manner from data stored in the electronic data base. NCS considers the establishment data in the electronic data base the official copy of the establishment data for survey purposes.


The following table gives the burden level of each form. Since one respondent will often be asked information for multiple forms, the number of total respondents and responses is higher than the figures given in Tables 1-2. In those tables, a respondent who provided information for multiple forms would be counted as one respondent and one response. Table 6, on the next page counts such a situation as multiple respondents and multiple responses and relates forms to initiation and update data collection. Data on Table 6 are annualized averages for FY 2008, FY 2009, and FY 2010.


Revised FY 2010 Figures in Red


Form

Function

Activities used

Time

Establishment collection form (NCS Form 04-1G )

Government General Establishment Information; records check of this data

Earnings-only initiation (1a);

Earnings/benefit initiation (2a);

Records check earnings only initiation (4a); Records check earnings/benefit initiation (4c)

19 minutes for activities 1a and 2a.

5 minutes for activities 4a and 4c

Establishment collection form (NCS Form 04-1P)

Private Industry General Establishment Information; records check of this data

Earnings-only initiation (1a);

Earnings/benefit initiation (2a);

Records check earnings only initiation (4a); Records check earnings/benefit initiation (4c)

19 minutes for activities 1a and 2a.

5 minutes for activities 4a and 4c


Form

Function

Activities used

Time

Earnings form (NCS Form 04-2G)

Government Earnings data; records check of earnings data

Earnings-only initiation (1a);

Earnings/benefit initiation (2a);

Records check earnings only initiation (4a);

Records check earnings/benefit initiation (4c)

20 minutes for activities 1a, 2a.

5 minutes for activities 5a, 5c

Earnings form (NCS Form 04-2P)

Private Industry Earnings data; records check of earnings data

Earnings-only initiation (1a);

Earnings/benefit initiation (2a);

Records check earnings only initiation (4a);

Records check earnings/benefit initiation (4c)

20 minutes for activities 1a, 2a.

5 minutes for activities 4a, 4c

Wage only–Government (computer generated earnings update form)

Updating earnings data; records check of earnings data

Earnings-only update (1b);

Earnings/benefit update (2b);

Records check earnings only update (4b);

Records check earnings/benefit update (4d)

20 minutes for activities 1b, 2b.

5 minutes for activities 4b, and 4d

Wage only –Private Industry (computer generated earnings update form)

Updating earnings data; records check of earnings data

Earnings-only update (1b);

Earnings/benefit update (2b);

Records check earnings only update (4b);

Records check earnings/benefit update (4d)

20 minutes for activities 1b, 2b.

5 minutes for activities 4b, and 4d

Work Level Form

(NCS 04-3G)

Government Documenting work level of occupation; records check of this collection

Earnings-only initiation (1a);

Earnings/benefit initiation (2a);

Records check earnings only initiation (4a); Records check earnings/benefit initiation (4c)

25 minutes for activities 1a and 2a.

5 minutes for activities 4a and 4c

Work Level Form

(NCS 04-3P)

Private Industry Documenting work level of occupation; records check of this collection

Earnings-only initiation (1a);

Earnings/benefit initiation (2a);

Records check earnings only initiation (4a); Records check earnings/benefit initiation (4c)

25 minutes for activities 1a and 2a.

5 minutes for activities 4a and 4c

Work Schedule Form (NCS 04-4G)

Government Initiation collection of regular work schedule; records check of this collection

Earnings-only initiation (1a);

Earnings/benefit initiation (2a);

Records check earnings only initiation (4a); Records check earnings/benefit initiation (4c)

10 minutes for activities 1a and 2a.

2 minutes for activities 4a and 4c



Form

Function

Activities used

Time

Work Schedule Form (NCS 04-4P)

Private Industry Initiation collection of regular work schedule; records check of this collection

Earnings-only initiation (1a);

Earnings/benefit initiation (2a);

Records check earnings only initiation (4a); Records check earnings/benefit initiation (4c)

10 minutes for activities 1a and 2a.

2 minutes for activities 4a and 4c

Benefits Collection Form (NCS 04-5G)

Government Collection of benefits for new government units; records check of this collection

Earnings/benefit initiation (2a);

Records check earnings/benefit initiation (4c)

177minutes for activity 2a. 5 minutes for activity 4c

Benefits Collection Form (NCS 04-5P)

Private Industry Collection of benefits for new private industry establishments; records check of this collection

Earnings/benefit initiation (2a);

Records check earnings/benefit initiation (4c)

176.5 minutes for activity 2a. 5 minutes for activity 4c

Index benefits summary only- Government

Update of benefits data for all establishments; records check of this collection

Earnings/benefit update (2b);


Records check earnings/benefit initiation (4d)

19.19 minutes for activities 2b.

5 minutes for 4d

Index benefits summary only- Government

Update of benefits data for all establishments; records check of this collection

Earnings/benefit update (2b);


Records check earnings/benefit initiation (4d)

18.5 minutes for activities 2b.

5 minutes for 4d

Index wage and benefits- Government

Update of benefits data for all establishments; records check of this collection

Earnings/benefit update (2b);


Records check earnings/benefit initiation (4d)

39.19 minutes for activities 2b.

10 minutes for 4d

Index wage and benefits- Private industry

Update of benefits data for all establishments; records check of this collection

Earnings/benefit update (2b);


Records check earnings/benefit initiation (4d)

38.5 minutes for activities 2b.

10 minutes for 4d



Table 6: Annual respondent collection burden by form average of FY 2008-2010

Revised FY 2010 Figures in Red





Form

Total
Respondents Per Form

Frequency

Total Annual Responses

Avg. Minutes for the Predominant Form Use

Total Hours

Establishment collection form (NCS Form 04-1G)

*


*

19

*

Establishment collection form (NCS Form 04-1P)

6,065

Annual

6,065

19

1,921

Earnings form (NCS Form 04-2G)

*


*

20

*

Earnings form (NCS Form 04-2P)

6,065

Annual

6,065

20

2,022

Wage only–Government

2,272

Annual or quarterly

2,526

20

842

Wage only –Private Industry

15,042

Annual or quarterly

20,486

20

6,828

Work Level Form

(NCS Form 04-3G)

*


*

25

*

Work Level Form

(NCS FORM 04-3P)

6,065

Annual

6,065

25

2,527

Work Schedule Form (NCS 05-4G)

*


*

10

*

Work Schedule Form (NCS 04-4P)

6,065

Annual

6,065

10

1,011

Benefits Collection Form (NCS 04-5G)

*


*

177

*

Benefits Collection Form (NCS 04-5P)

3,032

Annual

3,032

178.5

9,020

Index benefits summary only- Government

108

Quarterly

362

19.19

116

Index benefits summary only- Private industry

2,316

Quarterly

7,760

18.5

2,393

Index wage and benefits- Government

2,055

Quarterly

6,884

39.19

4,496

Index wage and benefits- Private industry

9,266

Quarterly

31,040

38.5

19,917

Collection not tied to a specific form for private industry and government (testing, QA/QM, etc.)

5,204

Unknown

6,819

38

4,319

*Most NCS Government forms (NCS 04-XG), are only used for government sample initiations, but if any new metropolitan or non-metropolitan areas are added during collection period NCS Government initiation forms would be used.


Individual respondent cost per year (for all responses) is expected to be an average of $28.06 for FY 2008, $28.06 for 2009, and $28.06 for 2010. This amount is based on an average cost of $37.69 per hour per respondent. The estimate, based on past experience, is that 70 percent of reporting time comes from professional and related workers, and the remaining 30 percent comes from office and administrative support workers. Professional and related specialty earned an average of $44.48 per hour in total compensation; office and administrative support workers earned an average of $21.84 per hour in total compensation. (Hourly costs of earnings and benefits as measured by the Employer Cost for Employee Compensation data series for Civilian workers in March 2007.) http://www.bls.gov/news.release/pdf/ecec.pdf The figure of $37.69 is a weighted hourly average.


Estimated annualized cost to all respondents for all activities is $2,084,520 in FY 2010. These totals are based on an average hourly cost of $37.69 to the respondent.


  1. Cost Burdens to Respondents


There are no capital and start-up costs or operation and maintenance and purchase of service costs resulting from the collection of this information.


  1. Estimated Cost of the Survey


The estimated cost of the survey is $67,418,000 for FY 2010. The BLS anticipates some reduction in respondent burden and survey collection time per establishment over the NCS survey cycle for the following reasons:


  • The BLS is implementing technological changes.

  • The sample has been reduced.


15. Program Changes or Adjustments


Adding these two domestic partner questions is projected to add 240 hours of respondent burden. Total NCS burden hours in 2010 would be 55,305.


16. Plans for Tabulation, Statistical Use, and Publication


Reports are published each year for large metropolitan areas and smaller areas. Data collection for the various areas is staggered throughout the year. The time allotted for collection publication varies with the size of the area under study.


The reports contain tables of earnings by various levels of occupation classification (e.g., sales and office, sales related, and cashiers) and corresponding occupational work level. It is impossible to know in advance which particular series can be published for a specific area, due to the nature of the probability-proportional-to-size selection technique for occupations being used. In general, the more common an occupation, the greater the chance the BLS will be able to publish detailed data on that occupation.


Data also are classified by ownership (private or State and local government), industry, establishment size, union or nonunion status, full-time or part-time work schedule, and whether their pay was based on time or incentive.


Earnings information will also be published (both electronically and paper) for the U.S. and the 9 Census Divisions annually. In addition, data will be available for nationwide quarterly change in compensation. These data will be released shortly after the close of collection for each quarter. In FY 2008 ECI and ECEC data will be published on a locality basis for the first time. Finally, detailed information will be available annually on employer costs of benefits, the incidence of benefits, and benefit provisions.


Employee benefits news releases and publication have a large number of tabulations. Including tabulations linking of wage levels to benefit incidence rates, counts of establishments offering major benefits to at least one employee, Census division breakouts, and new benefit items.

All published estimates from the NCS are available on the BLS internet site, WWW.BLS.GOV. Included on this site are several query tools that allow users to indicate the type of data desired. Customized tabulations are returned.


Data will be adjusted for nonresponse. (Establishments may either refuse to provide any data or may refuse to provide data for certain occupations or benefits items.) The adjustment consists of revising the weights used to aggregate the individual establishments and occupations. Also, the BLS imputes missing items on earnings, benefits costs, participation rates, and provisions.


The BLS also adjusts the weights in a process known as benchmarking. This process adjusts weights to reflect changes in employment that occur between the compilation of the universe from which the sample is drawn and the reference date of publication.


In March 2006, NCS eliminated both severance pay and supplemental unemployment benefits (SUB) from the NCS survey. The combined cost for these two benefits accounted for about one-tenth of one percent of total compensation or about $0.04 per hour worked as shown in the June 2005 Employer Cost for Employee Compensation (ECEC) press release from BLS. Dropping these two benefits has virtually no impact on the Employment Cost Index (ECI) or ECEC data. At the same time, however, while various items (such as severance and SUB) alone contribute little to respondent burden, in the aggregate their elimination provides some relief.


The NCS had dual industrial coding of sample units for both North American Industry Classification System (NAICS)/Standard Industrial Classification (SIC), as well as dual coding occupational data for both the Standard Occupational Classification (SOC)/Occupational Classification System Manual (OCSM). The March 2004 Employer Costs for Employee Compensation (ECEC) news release was the first NCS publication to use NAICS and SOC coding; by the end of 2007 all NCS data series will be NAICS and SOC based.



A detailed description of the statistical procedures used in compiling the data is presented in section B


  1. Approval to not Display the OMB Expiration Date


Approval to not display the expiration date for OMB approval is not being sought.


18. Exceptions to the Certification Statement


No exceptions to the certification statement are requested.


1 For example, according to the most recent NCS Employee Benefits in Private Industry publication (March 2006), 88 percent of establishments of over 100 or more employee have health care benefits, as compared to 45 percent of establishments with fewer than one hundred employees. Just as strikingly, 90 percent of establishments with one hundred or more employees offered retirement benefits, as compared to 47 percent of those in establishments with fewer than one hundred employees.

http://www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/sp/ebsm0004.pdf



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