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Papers Containing Keywords(s): 'earner'

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Frequently Occurring Concepts within this Search

Current Population Survey - 35

Internal Revenue Service - 29

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 27

Social Security - 23

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 23

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 21

Social Security Administration - 20

National Science Foundation - 18

American Community Survey - 17

Social Security Number - 17

Longitudinal Business Database - 16

North American Industry Classification System - 15

Protected Identification Key - 14

Disclosure Review Board - 14

W-2 - 14

Employer Identification Number - 14

Survey of Income and Program Participation - 14

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 11

PSID - 10

Ordinary Least Squares - 10

Detailed Earnings Records - 9

Decennial Census - 9

International Trade Research Report - 9

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 8

Business Register - 8

Cornell University - 8

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 7

Current Population Survey Annual Social and Economic Supplement - 7

National Bureau of Economic Research - 7

Center for Economic Studies - 7

Unemployment Insurance - 6

Census Numident - 6

Person Validation System - 6

Occupational Employment Statistics - 5

ASEC - 5

Federal Reserve Bank - 5

Personally Identifiable Information - 5

Initial Public Offering - 5

Metropolitan Statistical Area - 4

Standard Industrial Classification - 4

Federal Insurance Contributions Act - 4

AKM - 4

National Institute on Aging - 4

Census Bureau Business Register - 4

LEHD Program - 4

Individual Characteristics File - 3

Society of Labor Economists - 3

Temporary Assistance for Needy Families - 3

Adjusted Gross Income - 3

Research Data Center - 3

Special Sworn Status - 3

University of Toronto - 3

Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages - 3

Office of Management and Budget - 3

Earned Income Tax Credit - 3

Person Identification Validation System - 3

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 3

Center for Administrative Records Research - 3

Economic Census - 3

Pew Research Center - 3

Department of Labor - 3

Social and Economic Supplement - 3

Master Earnings File - 3

Kauffman Foundation - 3

Columbia University - 3

Harvard University - 3

Financial, Insurance and Real Estate Industries - 3

Quarterly Workforce Indicators - 3

Securities and Exchange Commission - 3

Journal of Economic Literature - 3

earnings - 43

employed - 35

labor - 34

employ - 32

salary - 27

employee - 24

earn - 23

household - 22

workforce - 19

recession - 18

entrepreneurship - 14

entrepreneur - 14

economist - 12

heterogeneity - 11

occupation - 11

payroll - 10

venture - 10

entrepreneurial - 10

tax - 9

irs - 9

employment earnings - 9

unemployed - 9

macroeconomic - 8

trend - 8

percentile - 8

population - 8

workers earnings - 8

respondent - 8

revenue - 7

earnings age - 7

poverty - 7

quarterly - 7

hiring - 7

earnings workers - 7

worker - 7

earnings growth - 7

woman - 6

recessionary - 6

women earnings - 6

econometric - 6

wage earnings - 6

endogeneity - 6

earnings employees - 6

survey - 6

employment wages - 6

job - 6

labor statistics - 6

socioeconomic - 6

tenure - 6

proprietor - 6

opportunity - 6

average - 6

hire - 5

earnings inequality - 5

filing - 5

wealth - 5

yearly - 5

unemployment rates - 5

retirement - 4

race - 4

disparity - 4

income distributions - 4

estimating - 4

spillover - 4

rent - 4

survey income - 4

founder - 4

turnover - 4

employment unemployment - 4

prospect - 4

income year - 4

census research - 4

census bureau - 4

corporation - 3

profit - 3

economically - 3

intergenerational - 3

volatility - 3

minority - 3

ethnicity - 3

distribution - 3

estimation - 3

regress - 3

incentive - 3

family - 3

parental - 3

marriage - 3

discrimination - 3

discrepancy - 3

taxpayer - 3

income data - 3

1040 - 3

gdp - 3

compensation - 3

wage gap - 3

clerical - 3

employment dynamics - 3

longitudinal employer - 3

state employment - 3

wages employment - 3

parent - 3

employment growth - 3

dependent - 3

divorced - 3

acquisition - 3

researcher - 3

startup - 3

ssa - 3

employing - 3

employment entrepreneurship - 3

welfare - 3

income individuals - 3

research census - 3

Viewing papers 1 through 10 of 62


  • Working Paper

    Driving the Gig Economy

    August 2024

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-42

    Using rich administrative tax data, we explore the effects of the introduction of online ridesharing platforms on entry, employment and earnings in the Taxi and Limousine Services industry. Ridesharing dramatically increased the pace of entry of workers into the industry. New entrants were more likely to be young, female, White and U.S. born, and to combine earnings from ridesharing with wage and salary earnings. Displaced workers have found ridesharing to be a substantially more attractive fallback option than driving a taxi. Ridesharing also affected the incumbent taxi driver workforce. The exit rates of low-earning taxi drivers increased following the introduction of ridesharing in their city; exit rates of high-earning taxi drivers were little affected. In cities without regulations limiting the size of the taxi fleet, both groups of drivers experienced earnings losses following the introduction of ridesharing. These losses were ameliorated or absent in more heavily regulated markets.
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  • Working Paper

    Employer Dominance and Worker Earnings in Finance

    August 2024

    Authors: Wenting Ma

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-41

    Large firms in the U.S. financial system achieve substantial economic gains. Their dominance sets them apart while also raising concerns about the suppression of worker earnings. Utilizing administrative data, this study reveals that the largest financial firms pay workers an average of 30.2% more than their smallest counterparts, significantly exceeding the 7.9% disparity in nonfinance sectors. This positive size-earnings relationship is consistently more pronounced in finance, even during the 2008 crisis or compared to the hightech sector. Evidence suggests that large financial firms' excessive gains, coupled with their workers' sought-after skills, explain this distinct relationship.
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  • Working Paper

    Interpreting Cohort Profiles of Lifecycle Earnings Volatility

    April 2024

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-21

    We present new estimates of earnings volatility over time and the lifecycle for men and women by race and human capital. Using a long panel of restricted-access administrative Social Security earnings linked to the Current Population Survey, we estimate volatility with both transparent summary measures, as well as decompositions into permanent and transitory components. From the late 1970s to the mid 1990s there is a strong negative trend in earnings volatility for both men and women. We show this is driven by a reduction in transitory variance. Starting in the mid 1990s there is relative stability in trends of male earnings volatility because of an increase in the variance of permanent shocks, especially among workers without a college education, and a more attenuated trend decline among women. Cohort analyses indicate a strong U-shape pattern of volatility over the working life, which comes from large permanent shocks early and later in the lifecycle. However, this U-shape shifted downward and leftward in more recent cohorts, the latter from the fanning out of lifecycle transitory volatility in younger cohorts. These patterns are more pronounced among White men and women compared to Black workers.
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  • Working Paper

    Granular Income Inequality and Mobility using IDDA: Exploring Patterns across Race and Ethnicity

    November 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-55

    Shifting earnings inequality among U.S. workers over the last five decades has been widely stud ied, but understanding how these shifts evolve across smaller groups has been difficult. Publicly available data sources typically only ensure representative data at high levels of aggregation, so they obscure many details of earnings distributions for smaller populations. We define and construct a set of granular statistics describing income distributions, income mobility and con ditional income growth for a large number of subnational groups in the U.S. for a two-decade period (1998-2019). In this paper, we use the resulting data to explore the evolution of income inequality and mobility for detailed groups defined by race and ethnicity. We find that patterns identified from the universe of tax filers and W-2 recipients that we observe differ in important ways from those that one might identify in public sources. The full set of statistics that we construct is available publicly as the Income Distributions and Dynamics in America, or IDDA, data set.
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  • Working Paper

    The Economic Geography of Lifecycle Human Capital Accumulation: The Competing Effects of Labor Markets and Childhood Environments

    November 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-54

    We examine how place shapes the production of human capital across the lifecycle. We ask: do those places that most effectively produce human capital in childhood also have local labor markets that do so in adulthood? We begin by modeling wages across place as driven by 1) location-specific wage premiums, 2) adult human capital accumulation due to local labor market exposure, and 3) childhood human capital accumulation. We construct estimates of location wage premiums using AKM style estimates of movers across US commuting zones and validate these estimates using evidence from plausibly exogenous out migration from New Orleans in response to Hurricane Katrina. Next, we examine differential earnings trajectories among movers to construct estimates of human capital accumulation due to labor market exposure. We validate these estimates using wage changes of multi-time movers. Finally, we estimate the impact of place on childhood human capital production using age variation in moves during childhood. Crucially, our estimates of location wage premiums and adult human capital accumulation allow us to construct estimates of the causal effect of place during childhood that are not confounded by correlated labor market exposure. Using these estimates, we show there is a tradeoff between those places that most effectively produce human capital in childhood and the local labor markets that do so in adulthood. We find that each 1-rank increase in earnings due to adult labor market exposure trades off with a 0.43 rank decrease in earnings due to the local childhood environment. This pattern is closely linked to city size, as adult human capital accumulation generally increases with city size, while childhood human capital accumulation falls. These divergent trajectories are associated with differences in both the physical structure of cities and the nature of social interaction therein. There is no tradeoff present in the largest cities, which provide greater exposure to high-wage earners and higher levels of local investment. Finally, we examine how these patterns are reflected in local rents. Location wage premia are heavily capitalized into rents, but the determinants of lifecycle human capital accumulation are not.
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  • Working Paper

    Labor Market Segmentation and the Distribution of Income: New Evidence from Internal Census Bureau Data

    August 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-41

    In this paper, we present new findings that validate earlier literature on the apparent segmentation of the US earnings distribution. Previous contributions posited that the observed distribution of earnings combined two or three distinct signals and was thus appropriately modeled as a finite mixture of distributions. Furthermore, each component in the mixture appeared to have distinct distributional features hinting at qualitatively distinct generating mechanisms behind each component, providing strong evidence for some form of labor market segmentation. This paper presents new findings that support these earlier conclusions using internal CPS ASEC data spanning a much longer study period from 1974 to 2016. The restricted-access internal data is not subject to the same level of top-coding as the public-use data that earlier contributions to the literature were based on. The evolution of the mixture components provides new insights about changes in the earnings distribution including earnings inequality. In addition, we correlate component membership with worker type to provide a tacit link to various theoretical explanations for labor market segmentation, while solving the problem of assigning observations to labor market segments a priori.
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  • Working Paper

    The Spillover Effects of Top Income Inequality

    June 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-29

    Top income inequality in the United States has increased considerably within occupations. This phenomenon has led to a search for a common explanation. We instead develop a theory where increases in income inequality originating within a few occupations can 'spill over' through consumption into others. We show theoretically that such spillovers occur when an occupation provides non divisible services to consumers, with physicians our prime example. Examining local income inequality across U.S. regions, the data suggest that such spillovers exist for physicians, dentists, and real estate agents. Estimated spillovers for other occupations are consistent with the predictions of our theory.
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  • Working Paper

    Same-Sex Couples and the Child Earnings Penalty

    May 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-25

    Existing work has shown that the entry of a child into a household results in a large and sustained increase in the earnings gap between male and female partners in opposite-sex couples. Potential reasons for this include work-life preferences, comparative advantage over earnings, and gender norms. We expand this analysis of the child penalty to examine earnings of individuals in same sex couples in the U.S. around the time their first child enters the household. Using linked survey and administrative data and event-study methodology, we confirm earlier work finding a child penalty for women in opposite-sex couples. We find this is true even when the female partner is the primary earner pre-parenthood, lending support to the importance of gender norms in opposite-sex couples. By contrast, in both female and male same-sex couples, earnings changes associated with child entry differ by the relative pre-parenthood earnings of the partners: secondary earners see an increase in earnings, while on average the earnings of primary and equal earners remain relatively constant. While this finding seems supportive of a norm related to equality within same-sex couples, transition analysis suggests a more complicated story.
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  • Working Paper

    Poach or Promote? Job Sorting and Gender Earnings Inequality across U.S. Industries

    April 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-23

    I outline the sociological theory that would predict that external labor markets ' those in which more positions are filled with new hires rather from firm-internal promotions ' heighten gender based discrimination and contribute to earnings inequality. I test this theory by treating industries as miniature labor markets within the US with varying levels of gender inequality and different hiring practices. Using high quality administrative data from 1985 to 2013, including detailed work histories from this period, I compare the earnings of alike men and women across industries with different levels of reliance on external markets at different times. I find that men experience greater unexplained earnings relative to women ' unexplained in that it is not accounted for by work history or observable demographic characteristics ' when a greater share of earnings increase events occur outside the firm.
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  • Working Paper

    Self-Employment Income Reporting on Surveys

    April 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-19

    We examine the relation between administrative income data and survey reports for self-employed and wage-earning respondents from 2000 - 2015. The self-employed report 40 percent more wages and self-employment income in the survey than in tax administrative records; this estimate nets out differences between these two sources that are also shared by wage-earners. We provide evidence that differential reporting incentives are an important explanation of the larger self-employed gap by exploiting a well-known artifact ' self-employed respondents exhibit substantial bunching at the first EITC kink in their administrative records. We do not observe the same behavior in their survey responses even after accounting for survey measurement concerns.
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