Survey Errors and Survey Costs


Book Description

The Wiley-Interscience Paperback Series consists of selected books that have been made more accessible to consumers in an effort to increase global appeal and general circulation. With these new unabridged softcover volumes, Wiley hopes to extend the lives of these works by making them available to future generations of statisticians, mathematicians, and scientists. "Survey Errors and Survey Costs is a well-written, well-presented, and highly readable text that should be on every error-conscious statistician’s bookshelf. Any courses that cover the theory and design of surveys should certainly have Survey Errors and Survey Costs on their reading lists." –Phil Edwards MEL, Aston University Science Park, UK Review in The Statistician, Vol. 40, No. 3, 1991 "This volume is an extremely valuable contribution to survey methodology. It has many virtues: First, it provides a framework in which survey errors can be segregated by sources. Second, Groves has skillfully synthesized existing knowledge, bringing together in an easily accessible form empirical knowledge from a variety of sources. Third, he has managed to integrate into a common framework the contributions of several disciplines. For example, the work of psychometricians and cognitive psychologists is made relevant to the research of econometricians as well as the field experience of sociologists. Finally, but not least, Groves has managed to present all this in a style that is accessible to a wide variety of readers ranging from survey specialists to policymakers." –Peter H. Rossi University of Massachusetts at Amherst Review in Journal of Official Statistics, January 1991







Cost Survey


Book Description













President's Private Sector Survey on Cost Control


Book Description

The Grace Commission in which 161 corporate, academic, and labor leaders participated was set up to survey the Federal Government's operations from a private sector viewpoint and to identify opportunities for cost savings and improved management efficiencies. With private sector management tenets in mind, PPSS reports contain 2,478 specific recommendations, covering 784 issues, whose implementation could result in net savings of $424.4 billion over three years and prevent the accumulation of $10.5 trillion of additional deficits over the 17 years to year 2000. The Report provides a timely look at Federal Government spending and its relationship to budget deficits.