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Papers Containing Keywords(s): 'labor'

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Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 99

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American Economic Association - 5

Temporary Assistance for Needy Families - 5

Company Organization Survey - 5

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MIT Press - 5

Review of Economics and Statistics - 5

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Michigan Institute for Teaching and Research in Economics - 4

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General Accounting Office - 4

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Sloan Foundation - 4

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Federal Trade Commission - 4

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Securities and Exchange Commission - 3

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Department of Defense - 3

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University of Minnesota - 3

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Journal of Econometrics - 3

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employ - 134

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employment growth - 31

endogeneity - 30

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quarterly - 30

labor statistics - 30

hire - 28

layoff - 28

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earn - 25

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wage changes - 9

employee data - 9

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ethnicity - 8

wage effects - 8

wage gap - 8

unobserved - 8

spillover - 8

employment data - 8

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exogeneity - 8

declining - 8

worker wages - 8

agency - 8

earnings workers - 8

industry wages - 8

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wages production - 8

employment recession - 8

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innovation - 7

producing - 7

job growth - 7

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aggregate productivity - 7

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merger - 7

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accounting - 7

growth productivity - 7

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segregated - 7

data census - 7

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family - 6

parental - 6

maternal - 6

work census - 6

specialization - 6

compensation - 6

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immigration - 6

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exporter - 6

leverage - 6

factor productivity - 6

productivity estimates - 6

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venture - 6

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employment effects - 6

educated - 6

wage data - 6

productivity wage - 6

industry productivity - 6

productivity dispersion - 6

unemployment insurance - 6

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population - 6

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earnings growth - 6

regression - 6

wage regressions - 6

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workforce indicators - 6

plant productivity - 6

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productivity shocks - 5

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disability - 5

irs - 5

impact employment - 5

women earnings - 5

career - 5

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productivity dynamics - 5

gender - 5

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wage earnings - 5

medicaid - 5

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measures productivity - 5

firm dynamics - 5

tech - 5

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productivity impacts - 5

plant employment - 5

transition - 5

share - 5

opportunity - 5

census data - 5

manufacturing industries - 5

capital - 5

census research - 5

productivity plants - 5

plant - 5

household surveys - 4

2010 census - 4

relocate - 4

employment distribution - 4

autoregressive - 4

shock - 4

tariff - 4

relocating - 4

immigrant workers - 4

international trade - 4

sectoral - 4

outsourced - 4

exogenous - 4

eligibility - 4

researcher - 4

level productivity - 4

outsourcing - 4

rent - 4

regulation - 4

healthcare - 4

earnings employees - 4

wealth - 4

parent - 4

productivity differences - 4

manufacturing productivity - 4

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computer - 4

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price - 4

filing - 4

startup - 4

bankruptcy - 4

technical - 4

estimates productivity - 4

mobility - 4

taxpayer - 4

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matching - 4

residential - 4

inference - 4

network - 4

data - 4

agriculture - 4

manufacturing plants - 4

department - 4

plants industry - 4

suburb - 3

industry heterogeneity - 3

growth employment - 3

foreign - 3

monopolistically - 3

practices productivity - 3

employment entrepreneurship - 3

nonemployer businesses - 3

startups employees - 3

exemption - 3

enrolled - 3

town - 3

intergenerational - 3

volatility - 3

graduate - 3

study - 3

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percentile - 3

education - 3

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industry concentration - 3

residence - 3

medicare - 3

insurance employer - 3

insured - 3

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insurance premiums - 3

insurer - 3

birth - 3

pregnancy - 3

equilibrium - 3

productivity analysis - 3

firms productivity - 3

econometrically - 3

saving - 3

model - 3

ssa - 3

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founder - 3

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plants firms - 3

Viewing papers 11 through 20 of 250


  • Working Paper

    The China Shock Revisited: Job Reallocation and Industry Switching in U.S. Labor Markets

    October 2024

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-65

    Using confidential administrative data from the U.S. Census Bureau we revisit how the rise in Chinese import penetration has reshaped U.S. local labor markets. Local labor markets more exposed to the China shock experienced larger reallocation from manufacturing to services jobs. Most of this reallocation occurred within firms that simultaneously contracted manufacturing operations while expanding employment in services. Notably, about 40% of the manufacturing job loss effect is due to continuing establishments switching their primary activity from manufacturing to trade-related services such as research, management, and wholesale. The effects of Chinese import penetration vary by local labor market characteristics. In areas with high human capital, including much of the West Coast and large cities, job reallocation from manufacturing to services has been substantial. In areas with low human capital and a high initial manufacturing share, including much of the Midwest and the South, we find limited job reallocation. We estimate this differential response to the China shock accounts for half of the 1997-2007 job growth gap between these regions.
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  • Working Paper

    Entry Costs Rise with Growth

    October 2024

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-63

    Over time and across states in the U.S., the number of firms is more closely tied to overall employment than to output per worker. In many models of firm dynamics, trade, and growth with a free entry condition, these facts imply that the costs of creating a new firm increase sharply with productivity growth. This increase in entry costs can stem from the rising cost of labor used in entry and weak or negative knowledge spillovers from prior entry. Our findings suggest that productivity-enhancing policies will not induce firm entry, thereby limiting the total impact of such policies on welfare.
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  • Working Paper

    Garage Entrepreneurs or just Self-Employed? An Investigation into Nonemployer Entrepreneurship

    October 2024

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-61

    Nonemployers, businesses without employees, account for most businesses in the U.S. yet are poorly understood. We use restricted administrative and survey data to describe nonemployer dynamics, overall performance, and performance by demographic group. We find that eventual outcome ' migration to employer status, continuing as a nonemployer, or exit ' is closely related to receipt growth. We provide estimates of employment creation by firms that began as nonemployers and become employers (migrants), estimating that relative to all firms born in 1996, nonemployer migrants accounted for 3-17% of all net jobs in the seventh year after startup. Moreover, we find that migrants' employment creation declined by 54% for the cohorts born between 1996 to 2014. Our results are consistent with increased adjustment frictions in recent periods, and suggest accessibility to transformative entrepreneurship for everyday Americans has declined.
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  • Working Paper

    The Effect of Food Assistance Work Requirements on Labor Market Outcomes

    September 2024

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-54

    The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), formerly named the Food Stamp Program, has long been an integral part of the US social safety net. During US welfare reforms in the mid-1990s, SNAP eligibility became more restrictive with legislation citing a need to improve self-sufficiency of participating households. As a result, legislatures created two of these eligibility requirements: the General Work Requirement (GWR), which forces an adult to work to receive benefits, and the Able-Bodied Adult Without Dependents (ABAWD) work requirement, which requires certain adults to work a certain number of hours to receive benefits. Using restricted-access SNAP microdata from nine states, we exploit age cutoffs of the ABAWD work requirement and General Work Requirement (GWR) to estimate the effect of these policies on labor outcomes. We find that at the ABAWD age cutoff, there is no statistically significant evidence of a discontinuity across static and dynamic employment outcomes. At the GWR age cutoff, unemployed SNAP users and SNAP-eligible adults are on average more likely to leave the labor force than to continue to search for work.
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  • Working Paper

    Transitional Costs and the Decline of Coal: Worker-Level Evidence

    September 2024

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-53

    We examine the labor market impacts of the U.S. coal industry's decline using comprehensive administrative data on workers from 2005-2021. Coal workers most exposed to the industry's contraction experienced substantial earnings losses, equivalent to 1.6 years of predecline wages. These losses stem from both reduced employment duration (0.37 fewer years employed) and lower annual earnings (17 percent decline) between 2012-2019, relative to similar workers less exposed to coal's decline. Earnings reductions primarly occur when workers remain in local labor markets but are not employed in mining. While coal workers do not exhibit lower geographic mobility, relocation does not significantly mitigate their earnings losses.
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  • 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

    Contrasting the Local and National Demographic Incidence of Local Labor Demand Shocks

    July 2024

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-36

    This paper examines how spatial frictions that differ among heterogeneous workers and establishments shape the geographic and demographic incidence of alternative local labor demand shocks, with implications for the appropriate level of government at which to fund local economic initiatives. LEHD data featuring millions of job transitions facilitate estimation of a rich two-sided labor market assignment model. The model generates simulated forecasts of many alternative local demand shocks featuring different establishment compositions and local areas. Workers within 10 miles receive only 11.2% (6.6%) of nationwide welfare (employment) short-run gains, with at least 35.9% (62.0%) accruing to out-of-state workers, despite much larger per-worker impacts for the closest workers. Local incidence by demographic category is very sensitive to shock composition, but different shocks produce similar demographic incidence farther from the shock. Furthermore, the remaining heterogeneity in incidence at the state or national level can reverse patterns of heterogeneous demographic impacts at the local level. Overall, the results suggest that reduced-form approaches using distant locations as controls can produce accurate estimates of local shock impacts on local workers, but that the distribution of local impacts badly approximates shocks' statewide or national incidence.
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  • Working Paper

    Payroll Tax Incidence: Evidence from Unemployment Insurance

    June 2024

    Authors: Audrey Guo

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-35

    Economic models assume that payroll tax burdens fall fully on workers, but where does tax incidence fall when taxes are firm-specific and time-varying? Unemployment insurance in the United States has the key feature of varying both across employers and over time, creating the potential for labor demand responses if tax costs cannot be fully passed through to worker wages. Using state policy changes and administrative data of matched employer-employee job spells, I study how employment and earnings respond to unexpected payroll tax increases for highly exposed employers. I find significant drops in employment growth driven by lower hiring, and minimal evidence of passthrough to earnings. The negative employment effects are strongest for young workers and single-establishment firms.
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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

    The Impact of Immigration on Firms and Workers: Insights from the H-1B Lottery

    April 2024

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-19

    We study how random variation in the availability of highly educated, foreign-born workers impacts firm performance and recruitment behavior. We combine two rich data sources: 1) administrative employer-employee matched data from the US Census Bureau; and 2) firm level information on the first large-scale H-1B visa lottery in 2007. Using an event-study approach, we find that lottery wins lead to increases in firm hiring of college-educated, immigrant labor along with increases in scale and survival. These effects are stronger for small, skill-intensive, and high-productivity firms that participate in the lottery. We do not find evidence for displacement of native-born, college-educated workers at the firm level, on net. However, this result masks dynamics among more specific subgroups of incumbents that we further elucidate.
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