25) To the Extent That the Price or Nonprice Terms Applied to Insurance Companies Have Tightened or Eased over the Past Three Months (as Reflected in Your Responses to Questions 23 and 24), What Are the Most Important Reasons for the Change?| B. Possible Reasons for Easing | 6. Improvement in General Market Liquidity and Functioning. | Answer Type: First in Importance

Number of Respondents, Quarterly, Not Seasonally Adjusted

CTQ25B6MINR • Economic Data from Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED)

Latest Value

0.00

Year-over-Year Change

N/A%

Date Range

1/1/2012 - 4/1/2025

Summary

Tracks quarterly survey respondent count for specific economic research. Provides critical insight into data collection and statistical sampling methodology.

Analysis & Context

This economic indicator provides valuable insights into current market conditions and economic trends. The data is updated regularly by the Federal Reserve and represents one of the most reliable sources for economic analysis.

Understanding this metric helps economists, policymakers, and investors make informed decisions about economic conditions and future trends. The interactive chart above allows you to explore historical patterns and identify key trends over time.

About This Dataset

This metric represents the total number of participants in a quarterly economic survey. It helps researchers understand sample size and data reliability.

Methodology

Counted directly from survey participation records each quarter.

Historical Context

Used by economists to validate statistical significance of research findings.

Key Facts

  • Quarterly tracking of survey participants
  • Indicates research sample robustness
  • Critical for statistical validity

FAQs

Q: What does this series measure?

A: Tracks the number of survey participants each quarter. Helps validate research statistical significance.

Q: Why is respondent count important?

A: Larger sample sizes increase research reliability and reduce margin of error in economic studies.

Q: How often is this data updated?

A: Updated quarterly with the most recent survey participation numbers.

Q: Can sample size affect economic research?

A: Yes, larger samples provide more accurate representations of economic trends and behaviors.

Q: Are there limitations to this data?

A: Sample composition and response rates can impact overall research quality and representativeness.

Related Trends

37) To the Extent That the Price or Nonprice Terms Applied to Nonfinancial Corporations Have Tightened or Eased over the Past Three Months (as Reflected in Your Responses to Questions 35 and 36), What Are the Most Important Reasons for the Change?| A. Possible Reasons for Tightening | 7. Less-Aggressive Competition from Other Institutions. | Answer Type: 2nd Most Important

ALLQ37A72MINR

52) Over the Past Three Months, How Have the Terms Under Which High-Grade Corporate Bonds Are Funded Changed?| A. Terms for Average Clients | 4. Collateral Spreads Over Relevant Benchmark (Effective Financing Rates). | Answer Type: Eased Considerably

SFQ52A4ECNR

39) Over the Past Three Months, How Has the Volume of Mark and Collateral Disputes with Clients of Each of the Following Types Changed?| C. Trading Reits. | Answer Type: Increased Considerably

ALLQ39CICNR

53) Over the Past Three Months, How Has Demand for Funding of High-Grade Corporate Bonds by Your Institution's Clients Changed?| Answer Type: Remained Basically Unchanged

ALLQ53RBUNR

33) Considering the Entire Range of Transactions Facilitated by Your Institution for Such Clients, How Has the Use of Financial Leverage by Separately Managed Accounts Established with Investment Advisers Changed over the Past Three Months?| Answer Type: Increased Considerably

ALLQ33ICNR

62) Over the Past Three Months, How Have the Terms Under Which Agency RMBS Are Funded Changed?| B. Terms for Most Favored Clients, as a Consequence of Breadth, Duration And/or Extent of Relationship | 3. Haircuts. | Answer Type: Eased Somewhat

SFQ62B3ESNR

Citation

U.S. Federal Reserve, Number of Respondents (CTQ25B6MINR), retrieved from FRED.