| Survey Administration | Research Design | Data Analysis | Demographic/Economic Trends |
Demographic and Economic Data
Demographic and economic data are available from a variety of sources which can be viewed over time to ascertain trends.
Demographic and economic data can be obtained for the nation, states, metropolitan areas, cities, counties, townships, and census designated places in all 50 states.
Gliem and Gliem, LLC has had extensive experience in finding and formatting secondary data as per the client’s request. Some of the more popular categories are population numbers, projected population, race, age, sex, poverty, income, health indicators, population place estimates, commuting to work, net migration (people moving in and out), household and family population statistics, educational attainment, and unemployment. Agricultural data is also available.
An example of a population trend for Ohio would be the slow growth from April 2000 to July 2007 which is the most recent estimate. Ohio’s population was 11,353,145 on April 1, 2000 (Census 2000) and the newest estimate indicates Ohio’s population was 11,466, 917 on July 1, 2007. Ohio’s population places it seventh nationally but looking at the population change number tells another story. In approximately seven years, the population grew by 113,772, a 1.0% change, which places Ohio 47th nationally for population change ahead of Rhode Island, West Virginia, and North Dakota, respectively (U. S. Census Bureau).
Trends such as the example above can be found using a variety of secondary data sources available for different geographies.
Please contact us if you are interested in documenting trends for any geographic region or if you need statistics for a given year(s).



