Summary: | The Surveys of Consumer Attitudes and Behavior were initiated
in the late 1940s by the Survey Research Center of the University of Michigan,
Institute for Social Research, under the direction of George Katona and have
been carried out quarterly through 1977 and monthly thereafter. The purpose of
these surveys is to measure changes in consumer attitudes and expectations, to
understand why these changes occur, to evaluate how they relate to consumer
decisions to save, borrow, or make discretionary purchases, and to forecast
changes in aggregate consumer behavior. Changes in consumers' willingness to buy
are best assessed by making use of the answers to all questions asked in the
surveys, especially the open-ended questions that probe underlying reasons.
Nevertheless, in order to make available a summary measure of change in consumer
sentiment, the Survey Research Center uses the answers to selected questions to
calculate an Index of Consumer Sentiment. Each survey also probes a different
aspect of consumer confidence. The surveys use a national sample of dwelling
units selected by area probability sampling that is representative of the adult
population of the United States. |
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