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Papers Containing Keywords(s): 'establishment'

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Center for Economic Studies - 45

Longitudinal Business Database - 39

North American Industry Classification System - 33

Standard Industrial Classification - 30

Internal Revenue Service - 25

Metropolitan Statistical Area - 25

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 23

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 23

National Science Foundation - 21

Economic Census - 20

Ordinary Least Squares - 19

County Business Patterns - 17

Employer Identification Numbers - 16

Longitudinal Research Database - 16

Annual Survey of Manufactures - 15

Decennial Census - 14

Business Register - 14

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 13

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 12

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 12

Census of Manufactures - 12

Current Population Survey - 11

Service Annual Survey - 11

Small Business Administration - 10

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 10

Retail Trade - 9

Census of Retail Trade - 9

National Bureau of Economic Research - 9

Social Security Administration - 9

American Community Survey - 8

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 8

Characteristics of Business Owners - 8

Business Dynamics Statistics - 7

Wholesale Trade - 7

Disclosure Review Board - 7

Total Factor Productivity - 7

University of Maryland - 7

Census Bureau Longitudinal Business Database - 7

Federal Reserve System - 7

Special Sworn Status - 7

WECD - 7

Permanent Plant Number - 7

Census Bureau Business Register - 6

Department of Commerce - 6

University of Chicago - 6

Federal Reserve Bank - 6

Research Data Center - 6

Financial, Insurance and Real Estate Industries - 6

Consolidated Metropolitan Statistical Areas - 6

Quarterly Workforce Indicators - 5

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 5

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Survey of Business Owners - 5

Office of Management and Budget - 5

Kauffman Foundation - 5

Social Security - 5

Company Organization Survey - 5

Postal Service - 5

Core Based Statistical Area - 5

Educational Services - 4

Arts, Entertainment - 4

Herfindahl Hirschman Index - 4

Standard Occupational Classification - 4

Business Services - 4

Department of Homeland Security - 4

Public Administration - 4

International Trade Research Report - 4

American Economic Review - 4

National Establishment Time Series - 4

Wal-Mart - 4

Protected Identification Key - 3

Health Care and Social Assistance - 3

Technical Services - 3

Accommodation and Food Services - 3

Agriculture, Forestry - 3

IQR - 3

Occupational Employment Statistics - 3

Census of Manufacturing Firms - 3

American Economic Association - 3

Department of Economics - 3

Department of Agriculture - 3

Integrated Longitudinal Business Database - 3

Patent and Trademark Office - 3

Geographic Information Systems - 3

Chicago RDC - 3

Business Master File - 3

United States Census Bureau - 3

Generalized Method of Moments - 3

Census Bureau Center for Economic Studies - 3

Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago - 3

1940 Census - 3

employee - 28

employ - 28

enterprise - 28

employed - 27

sector - 27

workforce - 25

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manufacturing - 19

growth - 19

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proprietorship - 18

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recession - 14

company - 14

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entrepreneurship - 14

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production - 13

employment growth - 13

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economist - 11

aggregate - 10

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incorporated - 9

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merger - 9

econometric - 9

earnings - 8

occupation - 8

proprietor - 8

agency - 8

corporation - 8

discrimination - 8

corporate - 8

employment estimates - 7

hiring - 7

quarterly - 7

revenue - 7

rent - 7

retail - 7

wholesale - 7

macroeconomic - 7

economic census - 7

restaurant - 7

estimating - 7

segregation - 7

city - 7

minority - 7

employment dynamics - 6

industry growth - 6

economically - 6

industry employment - 6

franchising - 6

ethnicity - 6

hispanic - 6

population - 6

entrepreneurial - 6

statistical - 6

geographically - 6

microdata - 6

ethnic - 6

area - 6

neighborhood - 6

establishments data - 6

segregated - 6

turnover - 5

employment data - 5

employment statistics - 5

finance - 5

layoff - 5

consolidated - 5

retailer - 5

warehouse - 5

job growth - 5

heterogeneity - 5

spillover - 5

franchise - 5

estimates employment - 5

customer - 5

regional - 5

endogeneity - 5

relocation - 5

longitudinal - 4

bank - 4

salary - 4

opportunity - 4

productive - 4

productivity growth - 4

produce - 4

firms grow - 4

sectoral - 4

gdp - 4

efficiency - 4

growth employment - 4

wage industries - 4

manufacturer - 4

acquisition - 4

indian - 4

respondent - 4

franchisor - 4

franchise establishments - 4

rural - 4

data - 4

census bureau - 4

aggregation - 4

business data - 4

immigrant - 4

specialization - 4

relocate - 4

labor statistics - 4

employment changes - 4

urban - 4

black - 4

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manager - 4

profitability - 4

estimation - 4

employment flows - 4

trend - 3

trends employment - 3

employment trends - 3

banking - 3

shift - 3

industry productivity - 3

reallocation productivity - 3

innovation - 3

warehousing - 3

firms employment - 3

effect wages - 3

housing - 3

factory - 3

externality - 3

business survival - 3

franchised businesses - 3

nonemployer businesses - 3

data census - 3

woman - 3

founder - 3

report - 3

financial - 3

midwest - 3

ethnically - 3

businesses census - 3

employment wages - 3

firms size - 3

inventory - 3

business owners - 3

profit - 3

employing - 3

town - 3

firms census - 3

larger firms - 3

small firms - 3

district - 3

location - 3

locality - 3

retailing - 3

department - 3

econometrically - 3

regression - 3

discriminatory - 3

Viewing papers 1 through 10 of 86


  • Working Paper

    The Composition of Firm Workforces from 2006'2022: Findings from the Business Dynamics Statistics of Human Capital Experimental Product

    April 2025

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-25-20

    We introduce the Business Dynamics Statistics of Human Capital (BDS-HC) tables, a new Census Bureau experimental product that provides public-use statistics on the workforce composition of firms and its relationship to business dynamics. We use administrative W-2 filings to combine population-level worker demographic data with longitudinal business data to estimate the demographic and educational composition of nearly all non-farm employer businesses in the United States between 2006 and 2022. We use this newly constructed data to document the evolution of employment, entry, and exit of employers based on their workforce compositions. We also provide new statistics on the interaction between firm and worker characteristics, including the composition of workers at startup firms. We find substantial changes between 2006 and 2022 in the distribution of employers along several dimensions, primarily driven by changing workforce compositions within continuing firms rather than the reallocation of employment between firms. We also highlight systematic differences in the business dynamics of firms by their workforce compositions, suggesting that different groups of workers face different economic environments due to their employers.
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  • Working Paper

    Measuring the Business Dynamics of Firms that Received Pandemic Relief Funding: Findings from a New Experimental BDS Data Product

    January 2025

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-25-05

    This paper describes a new experimental data product from the U.S. Census Bureau's Center for Economic Studies: the Business Dynamics Statistics (BDS) of firms that received Small Business Administration (SBA) pandemic funding. This new product, BDS-SBA COVID, expands the set of currently published BDS tables by linking loan-level program participation data from SBA to internal business microdata at the U.S. Census Bureau. The linked programs include the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP), COVID Economic Injury Disaster Loans (COVID-EIDL), the Restaurant Revitalization Fund (RRF), and Shuttered Venue Operators Grants (SVOG). Using these linked data, we tabulate annual firm and establishment counts, measures of job creation and destruction, and establishment entry and exit for recipients and non-recipients of program funds in 2020-2021. We further stratify the tables by timing of loan receipt and loan size, and business characteristics including geography, industry sector, firm size, and firm age. We find that for the youngest firms that received PPP, the timing of receipt mattered. Receiving an early loan correlated with a lower job destruction rate compared to non-recipients and businesses that received a later loan. For the smallest firms, simply participating in PPP was associated with lower employment loss. The timing of PPP receipt was also related to establishment exit rates. For businesses of nearly all ages, those that received an early loan exited at a lower rate in 2022 than later loan recipients.
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  • Working Paper

    U.S. Worker Mobility Across Establishments within Firms: Scope, Prevalence, and Effects on Worker Earnings

    May 2024

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-24

    Multi-establishment firms account for around 60% of U.S. workers' primary employers, providing ample opportunity for workers to change their work location without changing their employer. Using U.S. matched employer-employee data, this paper analyzes workers' access to and use of such between-establishment job transitions, and estimates the effect on workers' earnings growth of greater access, as measured by proximity of employment at other within-firm establishments. While establishment transitions are not perfectly observed, we estimate that within-firm establishment transitions account for 7.8% percent of all job transitions and 18.2% of transitions originating from the largest firms. Using variation in worker's establishment locations within their firms' establishment network, we show that having a greater share of the firm's jobs in nearby establishments generates meaningful increases in workers' earnings: a worker at the 90th percentile of earnings gains from more proximate within-firm job opportunities can expect to enjoy 2% higher average earnings over the following five years than a worker at the 10th percentile with the same baseline earnings.
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  • Working Paper

    Productivity Dispersion and Structural Change in Retail Trade

    December 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-60R

    The retail sector has changed from a sector full of small firms to one dominated by large, national firms. We study how this transformation has impacted productivity levels, growth, and dispersion between 1987 and 2017. We describe this transformation using three overlapping phases: expansion (1980s and 1990s), consolidation (2000s), and stagnation (2010s). We document five findings that help us understand these phases. First, productivity growth was high during the consolidation phase but has fallen more recently. Second, entering establishments drove productivity growth during the expansion phase, but continuing establishments have increased in importance more recently. Third, national chains have more productive establishments than single-unit firms on average, but some single-unit establishments are highly productive. Fourth, productivity dispersion is significant and increasing over time. Finally, more productive firms pay higher wages and grow more quickly. Together, these results suggest that the increasing importance of large national retail firms has been an important driver of productivity and wage growth in the retail sector.
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  • Working Paper

    Local and National Concentration Trends in Jobs and Sales: The Role of Structural Transformation

    November 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-59

    National U.S. industrial concentration rose between 1992-2017. Simultaneously, the Herfindhahl Index of local (six-digit-NAICS by county) employment concentration fell. This divergence between national and local employment concentration is due to structural transformation. Both sales and employment concentration rose within industry-by-county cells. But activity shifted from concentrated Manufacturing towards relatively un-concentrated Services. A stronger between-sector shift in employment relative to sales explains the fall in local employment concentration. Had sectoral employment shares remained at their 1992 levels, average local employment concentration would have risen by 9% by 2017 rather than falling by 7%.
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  • Working Paper

    Opening the Black Box: Task and Skill Mix and Productivity Dispersion

    September 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-44

    An important gap in most empirical studies of establishment-level productivity is the limited information about workers' characteristics and their tasks. Skill-adjusted labor input measures have been shown to be important for aggregate productivity measurement. Moreover, the theoretical literature on differences in production technologies across businesses increasingly emphasizes the task content of production. Our ultimate objective is to open this black box of tasks and skills at the establishment-level by combining establishment-level data on occupations from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) with a restricted-access establishment-level productivity dataset created by the BLS-Census Bureau Collaborative Micro-productivity Project. We take a first step toward this objective by exploring the conceptual, specification, and measurement issues to be confronted. We provide suggestive empirical analysis of the relationship between within-industry dispersion in productivity and tasks and skills. We find that within-industry productivity dispersion is strongly positively related to within-industry task/skill dispersion.
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  • Working Paper

    Structural Change Within Versus Across Firms: Evidence from the United States

    June 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-19

    We document the role of intangible capital in manufacturing firms' substantial contribution to non-manufacturing employment growth from 1977-2019. Exploiting data on firms' 'auxiliary' establishments, we develop a novel measure of proprietary in-house knowledge and show that it is associated with increased growth and industry switching. We rationalize this reallocation in a model where irms combine physical and knowledge inputs as complements, and where producing the latter in-house confers a sector-neutral productivity advantage facilitating within-firm structural transformation. Consistent with the model, manufacturing firms with auxiliary employment pivot towards services in response to a plausibly exogenous decline in their physical input prices.
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  • Working Paper

    The Business Dynamics Statistics: Describing the Evolution of the U.S. Economy from 1978-2019

    October 2021

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-33

    The U.S. Census Bureau's Business Dynamics Statistics (BDS) provide annual measures of how many businesses begin, end, or continue their operations and the associated job creation and destruction. The BDS is a valuable resource for information on the U.S. economy because of its long time series (1978-2019), its complete coverage (all private sector, non-farm U.S. businesses), and its tabulations for both individual establishments and the firms that own and control them. In this paper, we use the publicly available BDS data to describe the dynamics of the economy over the past 40 years. We highlight the increasing concentration of employment at old and large firms and describe net job creation trends in the manufacturing, retail, information, food/accommodations, and healthcare industry sectors. We show how the spatial distribution of employment has changed, first moving away from the largest cities and then back again. Finally, we show long-run trends for a group of industries we classify as high-tech and explore how the share of employment at small and young firms has changed for this part of the economy.
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  • Working Paper

    Location, Location, Location

    October 2021

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-32R

    We use data from the Longitudinal Employer-Household Dynamics program to study the causal effects of location on earnings. Starting from a model with employer and employee fixed effects, we estimate the average earnings premiums associated with jobs in different commuting zones (CZs) and different CZ-industry pairs. About half of the variation in mean wages across CZs is attributable to differences in worker ability (as measured by their fixed effects); the other half is attributable to place effects. We show that the place effects from a richly specified cross sectional wage model overstate the causal effects of place (due to unobserved worker ability), while those from a model that simply adds person fixed effects understate the causal effects (due to unobserved heterogeneity in the premiums paid by different firms in the same CZ). Local industry agglomerations are associated with higher wages, but overall differences in industry composition and in CZ-specific returns to industries explain only a small fraction of average place effects. Estimating separate place effects for college and non-college workers, we find that the college wage gap is bigger in larger and higher-wage places, but that two-thirds of this variation is attributable to differences in the relative skills of the two groups in different places. Most of the remaining variation reflects the enhanced sorting of more educated workers to higher-paying industries in larger and higher-wage CZs. Finally, we find that local housing costs at least fully offset local pay premiums, implying that workers who move to larger CZs have no higher net-of-housing consumption.
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  • Working Paper

    Import Competition and Firms' Internal Networks

    September 2021

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-28

    Using administrative data on U.S. multisector firms, we document a cross-sectoral propagation of the import competition from China ('China shock') through firms' internal networks: Employment of an establishment in a given industry is negatively affected by China shock that hits establishments in other industries within the same firm. This indirect propagation channel impacts both manufacturing and non-manufacturing establishments, and it operates primarily through the establishment exit. We explore a range of explanations for our findings, highlighting the role of within-firm trade across sectors, scope of production, and establishment size. At the sectoral aggregate level, China shock that propagates through firms' internal networks has a sizable impact on industry-level employment dynamics.
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