Employee Benefits in the United States
Data on access and participation in retirement and medical care benefits in private industry and state and local government, excluding farm, private household workers, self-employed, and Federal government workers. The data are from the
National Compensation Survey (NCS), which provides comprehensive measures of occupational
earnings, compensation cost trends, and incidence and provisions of employee benefit plans.
- Employee Benefits in Medium and Large Establishments
- Employee Benefits in Private Industry
- Employee Benefits in Small Private Industry Establishments
- Employee Benefits in State and Local Government
- 1990s
- Employee Benefits in Medium and Large Private Industry Establishments, 1991, USDL 92-764
- Employee Benefits in Small Private Industry Establishments, 1992, USDL: 94-42
- Employee Benefits in State and Local Governments, 1992, USDL: 94-73
- Employee Benefits in Medium and Large Private Establishments, 1993, USDL: 94-477
- Employee Benefits in State and Local Governments, 1994, USDL: 95-368
- Employee Benefits in Small Private Industry Establishments, 1994, USDL: 95-367
- Employee Benefits in Medium and Large Private Establishments, 1995, USDL: 97-246
- Employee Benefits in Small Private Industry Establishments, 1996, USDL: 98-240
- Employee Benefits in Medium and Large Private Establishments, 1997, USDL 99-02
- 2000s
- 2010s
- 2020s
In order to aid in the retrieval of information from this publication, significant tables, charts, and/or articles have been extracted and can be viewed individually or across a span of issues.
United States. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Employee Benefits in the United States. 1992-2024. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org/title/9643, accessed on November 18, 2025.