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Papers Containing Keywords(s): 'state'

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Center for Economic Studies - 21

American Community Survey - 16

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 14

Internal Revenue Service - 12

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 12

Longitudinal Business Database - 12

Protected Identification Key - 11

National Science Foundation - 10

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 10

Ordinary Least Squares - 10

Current Population Survey - 9

Decennial Census - 9

Longitudinal Research Database - 9

Social Security - 8

Social Security Administration - 8

Social Security Number - 8

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 7

North American Industry Classification System - 7

Department of Housing and Urban Development - 7

Census of Manufactures - 7

Standard Industrial Classification - 7

Survey of Income and Program Participation - 6

Personally Identifiable Information - 6

Metropolitan Statistical Area - 6

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 6

Housing and Urban Development - 6

Annual Survey of Manufactures - 6

Employer Identification Numbers - 6

Unemployment Insurance - 6

Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages - 5

2010 Census - 5

Economic Census - 5

Census Bureau Longitudinal Business Database - 5

Federal Reserve Bank - 4

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 4

Temporary Assistance for Needy Families - 4

Cornell University - 4

Energy Information Administration - 4

County Business Patterns - 4

Quarterly Workforce Indicators - 4

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 4

Journal of Economic Literature - 4

Environmental Protection Agency - 4

PSID - 3

Individual Taxpayer Identification Numbers - 3

Current Employment Statistics - 3

Total Factor Productivity - 3

National Institute on Aging - 3

Master Address File - 3

Person Validation System - 3

Census Household Composition Key - 3

Person Identification Validation System - 3

Disclosure Review Board - 3

American Housing Survey - 3

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 3

Census Bureau Business Register - 3

Business Register - 3

Business Dynamics Statistics - 3

Center for Administrative Records Research and Applications - 3

Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program - 3

Research Data Center - 3

Special Sworn Status - 3

Pollution Abatement Costs and Expenditures - 3

Retail Trade - 3

LEHD Program - 3

resident - 13

regional - 13

econometric - 11

estimating - 10

federal - 10

recession - 10

residential - 9

neighborhood - 9

population - 9

employ - 9

labor - 9

city - 9

region - 9

metropolitan - 9

housing - 8

geographically - 8

sector - 8

residence - 7

manufacturing - 7

employed - 7

home - 6

house - 6

economist - 6

payroll - 6

estimates employment - 6

employment estimates - 6

country - 6

market - 6

area - 6

rent - 6

poverty - 6

tax - 6

homeowner - 5

immigrant - 5

relocation - 5

census bureau - 5

relocate - 5

estimation - 5

workforce - 5

urban - 5

respondent - 5

coverage - 5

survey - 5

data - 5

agency - 5

expenditure - 5

emission - 5

regional economic - 5

rural - 5

environmental - 5

unobserved - 5

state employment - 5

disparity - 4

reside - 4

migrant - 4

census records - 4

gdp - 4

suburb - 4

citizen - 4

census data - 4

macroeconomic - 4

regulatory - 4

economic census - 4

district - 4

regulation - 4

rates employment - 4

insurance - 4

policy - 4

production - 4

pollution - 4

polluting - 4

growth - 4

impact - 4

renter - 3

hispanic - 3

mobility - 3

migration - 3

report - 3

unemployed - 3

record - 3

geography - 3

immigration - 3

location - 3

relocating - 3

locality - 3

midwest - 3

trend - 3

apartment - 3

taxation - 3

demand - 3

revenue - 3

subsidy - 3

industrial - 3

organizational - 3

job - 3

regressing - 3

enterprise - 3

incorporated - 3

social - 3

debt - 3

filing - 3

endogeneity - 3

census employment - 3

regulated - 3

indicator - 3

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statistical - 3

longitudinal - 3

economically - 3

environmental regulation - 3

estimates pollution - 3

compliance - 3

export - 3

exemption - 3

epa - 3

Viewing papers 11 through 20 of 51


  • Working Paper

    Immigration and the Demand for Urban Housing

    August 2021

    Authors: Miles M. Finney

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-23

    The immigrant population has grown dramatically in the US in the last fifty years. This study estimates housing demand among immigrants and discusses how immigration may be altering the structure of US urban areas. Immigrants are found to consume less housing per capita than native born US residents.
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  • Working Paper

    The Shifting of the Property Tax on Urban Renters: Evidence from New York State's Homestead Tax Option

    December 2020

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-20-43

    In 1981, New York State enabled their cities to adopt the Homestead Tax Option (HTO), which created a multi-tiered property tax system for rental properties in New York City, Buffalo, and Rochester. The HTO enabled these municipalities to impose a higher property tax rate on rental units in buildings with four or more units, compared to rental units in buildings with three or fewer units. Using restricted-use American Housing Survey data and historical property tax rates from each of these cities, we exploit within-unit across-time variation in property tax rates and rents to estimate the degree to which property taxes are shifted onto renters in the form of higher rents. We find that property owners shift approximately 14 percent of an increase in taxes onto renters. This study is the first to use within-unit across time variation in property taxes and rents to identify this shifting effect. Our estimated effect is measurably smaller than most previous studies, which often found shifting effects of over 60 percent.
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  • Working Paper

    How Does State-Level Carbon Pricing in the United States Affect Industrial Competitiveness?

    June 2020

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-20-21

    Pricing carbon emissions from an individual jurisdiction may harm the competitiveness of local firms, causing the leakage of emissions and economic activity to other regions. Past research concentrates on national carbon prices, but the impacts of subnational carbon prices could be more severe due to the openness of regional economies. We specify a flexible model to capture competition between a plant in a state with electric sector carbon pricing and plants in other states or countries without such pricing. Treating energy prices as a proxy for carbon prices, we estimate model parameters using confidential plant-level Census data, 1982'2011. We simulate the effects on manufacturing output and employment of carbon prices covering the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI) in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic regions. A carbon price of $10 per metric ton on electricity output reduces employment in the regulated region by 2.7 percent, and raises employment in nearby states by 0.8 percent, although these estimates do not account for revenue recycling in the RGGI region that could mitigate these employment changes. The effects on output are broadly similar. National employment falls just 0.1 percent, suggesting that domestic plants in other states as opposed to foreign facilities are the principal winners from state or regional carbon pricing.
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  • Working Paper

    Matching State Business Registration Records to Census Business Data

    January 2020

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-20-03

    We describe our methodology and results from matching state Business Registration Records (BRR) to Census business data. We use data from Massachusetts and California to develop methods and preliminary results that could be used to guide matching data for additional states. We obtain matches to Census business records for 45% of the Massachusetts BRR records and 40% of the California BRR records. We find higher match rates for incorporated businesses and businesses with higher startup-quality scores as assigned in Guzman and Stern (2018). Clerical reviews show that using relatively strict matching on address is important for match accuracy, while results are less sensitive to name matching strictness. Among matched BRR records, the modal timing of the first match to the BR is in the year in which the BRR record was filed. We use two sets of software to identify matches: SAS DQ Match and a machine-learning algorithm described in Cuffe and Goldschlag (2018). We find preliminary evidence that while the ML-based method yields more match results, SAS DQ tends to result in higher accuracy rates. To conclude, we provide suggestions on how to proceed with matching other states' data in light of our findings using these two states.
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  • Working Paper

    New Perspectives on the Decline of U.S. Manufacturing Employment

    April 2018

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-18-17

    We use relatively unexplored dimensions of US microdata to examine how US manufacturing employment has evolved across industries, rms, establishments, and regions. We show that these data provide support for both trade- and technology-based explanations of the overall decline of employment over this period, while also highlighting the di-culties of estimating an overall contribution for each mechanism. Toward that end, we discuss how further analysis of these trends might yield sharper insights.
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  • Working Paper

    The Distributional Effects of Minimum Wages: Evidence from Linked Survey and Administrative Data

    March 2018

    Working Paper Number:

    carra-2018-02

    States and localities are increasingly experimenting with higher minimum wages in response to rising income inequality and stagnant economic mobility, but commonly used public datasets offer limited opportunities to evaluate the extent to which such changes affect earnings growth. We use administrative earnings data from the Social Security Administration linked to the Current Population Survey to overcome important limitations of public data and estimate effects of the minimum wage on growth incidence curves and income mobility profiles, providing insight into how cross-sectional effects of the minimum wage on earnings persist over time. Under both approaches, we find that raising the minimum wage increases earnings growth at the bottom of the distribution, and those effects persist and indeed grow in magnitude over several years. This finding is robust to a variety of specifications, including alternatives commonly used in the literature on employment effects of the minimum wage. Instrumental variables and subsample analyses indicate that geographic mobility likely contributes to the effects we identify. Extrapolating from our estimates suggests that a minimum wage increase comparable in magnitude to the increase experienced in Seattle between 2013 and 2016 would have blunted some, but not nearly all, of the worst income losses suffered at the bottom of the income distribution during the Great Recession.
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  • Working Paper

    Just Passing Through: Characterizing U.S. Pass-Through Business Owners

    January 2017

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-69

    We investigate the use of administrative data on the owners of partnerships and S-corporations to develop new statistics that characterize business owners. Income from these types of entities is "passed through" to owners to be taxed on the owners' tax returns. The information returns associated with such pass-through entities (Form K1 records) make it possible to link individual owners to the businesses they own. These linkages can be leveraged to associate measures of the demographic and human capital characteristics of business owners with the characteristics of the businesses they own. This paper describes measurement issues associated with administrative records on these pass-through entities and their integration with other Census data products. In addition, we document a number of interesting trends in business ownership among pass-through entities. We show a substantial decline in both entry and exit with less churn among both owners and owned businesses. We also show that the owners of pass-through entities are older, more likely to be male, and more likely to be white compared to the working population.
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  • Working Paper

    Social Influence and the Consumer Bankruptcy Decision

    January 2017

    Authors: Jonathan Fisher

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-60

    I examine the influence of neighbors on the consumer bankruptcy decision using administrative bankruptcy records linked the 2000 Decennial Census. Two empirical strategies remove unobserved common factors that affect identification. The first strategy uses small geographical areas to isolate neighborhood effects, and the second strategy identifies the effect using past bankruptcy filers who moved states. The findings from both strategies reinforce each other and confirm the role of social influence on the bankruptcy decision. Having a past bankruptcy filer move into the block from a different state increases the likelihood of filing by 10 percent.
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  • Working Paper

    Local Labor Demand and Program Participation Dynamics

    November 2016

    Working Paper Number:

    carra-2016-10

    Estimates the effect of fluctuations in local labor conditions on the likelihood that existing participants are able to transition out of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). Our primary data are SNAP administrative records from New York (2007-2012) linked to the 2010 Census at the person-level. We further augment these data by linking to industry-specific labor market indicators at the county-level. We find that local labor markets matter for the length of time individuals spend on SNAP, but there is substantial heterogeneity in estimated effects across local industries. While employment growth in industries with small shares of SNAP participants has no impact on SNAP exits, growth in local industries with creases the likelihood that recipients exit the program. We also observe corresponding increases in entries when these industries experience localized contractions. Notably, estimated industry effects vary across race groups and parental status, with Black Alone non-Hispanic, Hispanic, and mothers benefiting the least from improvements in local labor market conditions.
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  • Working Paper

    A Loan by any Other Name: How State Policies Changed Advanced Tax Refund Payments

    June 2016

    Authors: Maggie R. Jones

    Working Paper Number:

    carra-2016-04

    In this work, I examine the impact of state-level regulation of Refund Anticipation Loans (RALs) on the increase in the use of Refund Anticipation Checks (RACs) and on taxpayer outcomes. Both RALs and RACs are products offered by tax-preparers that provide taxpayers with an earlier refund (in the case of a RAL) or a temporary bank account from which tax preparation fees can be deducted (in the case of a RAC). Each product is costly compared with the value of the refund, and they are often marketed to low-income taxpayers who may be liquidity constrained or unbanked. States have responded to the potentially predatory nature of RALs through regulation, leading to a switch to RACs. Using zip-code-level tax data, I examine the effects of various state-level policies on RAL activity and the transition of tax-preparers to RACs. I then specifically analyze New Jersey's interest rate cap on RALs, a regulation that was accompanied by greater enforcement of existing tax-preparer regulations. Employing an empirical strategy that uses variation in taxpayer location, which should be uninfluenced by tax preparers' decisions to provide these products and a state's decision to regulate them, I find increases in RAL and RAC use for taxpayers living near New Jersey's border with another state. Furthermore, I find that these same border taxpayers reported more social program use and more persons per household - a finding that is in line with the results of similar research into the effects of short-term borrowing on family finances.
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