%0 Journal Article %T The PSID in Research and Policy %A Timothy M. Smeeding %J The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science %@ 1552-3349 %D 2018 %R 10.1177/0002716218798802 %X The PSID has remained a valuable vehicle for evidence-based policy research for decades and should remain so for many more. In this short review, I cover major policy-related strengths from PSID research in the areas of event history analysis; mobility and volatility; cross national comparisons; health and health insurance; mobility into and out of poverty; the effects of parental income on children; and the use of the child development sample to broaden the PSID policy focus in new and interesting ways. I also include the emerging study of longer term intergenerational patterns of mobility and transfer, including across three generations. Finally, I take up the question of how PSID data and methods could be further improved to make the survey more valuable to public policy, focusing on administrative data linkages %K event history %K volatility %K mobility %K child development %K policy %K data linkages %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0002716218798802