%0 Report %A Brown, J. David %A Heggeness, Misty L. %A Murray-Close, Marta %T Noncitizen Coverage and Its Effects on U.S. Population Statistics %D 2023 %8 2023 Aug %I Institute of Labor Economics (IZA) %C Bonn %7 IZA Discussion Paper %N 16391 %U https://www.iza.org/publications/dp16391 %X We produce 2020 population estimates using 31 administrative record (AR) sources. Our AR census national population estimate is 1.8% greater than the 2020 Demographic Analysis high estimate, 3.0% more than the 2020 Census count, and 3.6% higher than the vintage-2020 Population Estimates Program estimate. Inclusion of more noncitizens, especially those with unknown legal status, can explain the higher AR census estimate. About 19.8% of AR census noncitizens have addresses that cannot be linked to an address in the 2020 Census collection universe, compared to 5.7% of citizens, raising the possibility that the 2020 Census did not collect data for a significant fraction of noncitizens. We show differences in estimates by age, sex, Hispanic origin, geography, and socioeconomic characteristics symptomatic of the differences in noncitizen coverage. %K administrative records %K population estimates %K immigration %K noncitizen coverage