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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Fed to revisit survey takers

Associated Press

WASHINGTON – The Federal Reserve is reaching out to Americans to get a more detailed picture of how the country’s economic debacles have affected household finances.

The Fed, which made the announcement Monday, is taking this step to update data it collected when the recession was just hitting, in late 2007.

“It may seem that everything that needs to be known about recent economic changes is already known,” said Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke.

“Certainly, we do have excellent data on the overall state of the economy. But we would benefit from a more detailed understanding of what has happened across the broad range of types of households,” he added. “For that, we need to look directly at changes for individual households.”

To that end, the National Opinion Research Center, a social science research organization at the University of Chicago, will attempt to go back and secure interviews with all 4,422 participants in the 2007 survey.

The Fed’s Survey of Consumer Finances are usually done every three years. Results from the updated research, which will be collected starting Saturday through Dec. 31, are expected to be available late next year, the Fed said.

In the first three months of this year, the recession had wiped out a staggering $1.3 trillion of Americans’ wealth as home values shrank and investments withered, the Fed said earlier this year in a separate quarterly report.

So far, the recession has snatched a net total of 6.5 million jobs, making it harder for people to keep up with payments on mortgages and other debts.