When the Bureau of Labor Statistics conducts a survey, it begins by partitioning the United States a

kazue72949lard

kazue72949lard

Answered question

2022-04-07

When the Bureau of Labor Statistics conducts a survey, it begins by partitioning the United States adult popula- tion into 2,007 groups called primary sampling units Assume that these primary sampling units all contain the same number of adults. If you randomly select one adult from each primary sampling unit, is the result a simple random sample? Why or why not?

Answer & Explanation

budd99055uruey

budd99055uruey

Beginner2022-04-08Added 16 answers

Simple random sampling is a type of sampling where some units are randomly selected from a population. The probability of the selection of each of the units is equal. In other words, simple random sampling is a type of sampling in which every unit of the population has an equal chance of being included in the sample
In this case, the population has been firstly divided into groups and then sampling has been done. It is not a result of simple random sampling because it is not possible to select more than one adult from each group which would have been possible in simple random sampling.

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