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Papers Containing Keywords(s): 'expenditure'

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Center for Economic Studies - 70

Annual Survey of Manufactures - 68

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 49

Census of Manufactures - 48

Total Factor Productivity - 46

North American Industry Classification System - 46

Ordinary Least Squares - 45

National Science Foundation - 44

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 42

Longitudinal Research Database - 41

Longitudinal Business Database - 39

Standard Industrial Classification - 38

National Bureau of Economic Research - 37

Cobb-Douglas - 30

Environmental Protection Agency - 29

Current Population Survey - 25

Internal Revenue Service - 25

Economic Census - 23

Census of Manufacturing Firms - 22

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 20

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 20

Pollution Abatement Costs and Expenditures - 19

Federal Reserve Bank - 18

American Community Survey - 18

Medical Expenditure Panel Survey - 18

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 17

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 16

Business Register - 15

Census Bureau Longitudinal Business Database - 15

Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality - 15

Special Sworn Status - 14

Survey of Industrial Research and Development - 13

Disclosure Review Board - 13

Manufacturing Energy Consumption Survey - 13

Research Data Center - 12

PAOC - 12

Metropolitan Statistical Area - 11

Decennial Census - 11

Energy Information Administration - 11

National Ambient Air Quality Standards - 11

National Center for Health Statistics - 10

Federal Reserve System - 10

Generalized Method of Moments - 10

Social Security - 10

Journal of Economic Literature - 10

National Income and Product Accounts - 10

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 9

Census Bureau Business Register - 9

University of Chicago - 9

General Accounting Office - 9

Service Annual Survey - 9

Business Research and Development and Innovation Survey - 8

County Business Patterns - 8

Bureau of Labor - 8

Michigan Institute for Teaching and Research in Economics - 8

Department of Labor - 8

Survey of Manufacturing Technology - 8

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 7

Social Security Administration - 7

Protected Identification Key - 7

Employer Identification Numbers - 7

TFPQ - 7

New York University - 7

Department of Economics - 7

Council of Economic Advisers - 7

Census Bureau Center for Economic Studies - 7

National Academy of Sciences - 6

2010 Census - 6

Information and Communication Technology Survey - 6

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development - 6

Office of Management and Budget - 6

Fabricated Metal Products - 6

American Economic Review - 6

Boston Research Data Center - 6

Auxiliary Establishment Survey - 6

Department of Education - 5

New York Times - 5

Housing and Urban Development - 5

Social Security Number - 5

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W-2 - 5

UC Berkeley - 5

Duke University - 5

State Energy Data System - 5

Establishment Micro Properties - 5

University of Maryland - 5

COMPUSTAT - 5

TFPR - 5

Herfindahl Hirschman Index - 5

Urban Institute - 5

Review of Economics and Statistics - 5

Department of Agriculture - 5

Supreme Court - 5

American Economic Association - 5

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National Research Council - 5

Department of Commerce - 5

Financial, Insurance and Real Estate Industries - 5

Business R&D and Innovation Survey - 4

Securities and Exchange Commission - 4

Department of Housing and Urban Development - 4

Survey of Income and Program Participation - 4

Business Services - 4

Small Business Administration - 4

Department of Homeland Security - 4

European Commission - 4

Kauffman Foundation - 4

Characteristics of Business Owners - 4

Social and Economic Supplement - 4

Cornell University - 4

Administrative Records - 4

Wholesale Trade - 4

E32 - 4

Federal Trade Commission - 4

Cornell Institute for Social and Economic Research - 4

Toxics Release Inventory - 4

Labor Productivity - 4

Computer Network Use Supplement - 4

Electronic Data Interchange - 4

Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages - 3

Net Present Value - 3

Temporary Assistance for Needy Families - 3

Washington University - 3

NBER Summer Institute - 3

Business Dynamics Statistics - 3

Person Validation System - 3

Social Science Research Institute - 3

International Trade Commission - 3

2SLS - 3

Boston College - 3

National Institutes of Health - 3

Occupational Employment Statistics - 3

European Union - 3

Adjusted Gross Income - 3

Journal of Labor Economics - 3

University of Michigan - 3

Department of Justice - 3

Medicaid Services - 3

Ohio State University - 3

Center for Research in Security Prices - 3

Department of Energy - 3

Business Master File - 3

Journal of Political Economy - 3

Yale University - 3

Harvard University - 3

New England County Metropolitan - 3

Statistics Canada - 3

Schools Under Registration Review - 3

American Statistical Association - 3

Columbia University - 3

production - 64

econometric - 53

investment - 48

demand - 48

manufacturing - 46

growth - 46

estimating - 44

market - 39

revenue - 37

efficiency - 37

produce - 36

cost - 33

economist - 32

industrial - 31

consumption - 30

productivity growth - 26

depreciation - 26

estimation - 26

productive - 25

emission - 25

sector - 24

earnings - 23

epa - 23

regulation - 23

gdp - 22

labor - 22

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pollution - 22

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expense - 19

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manufacturer - 17

technology - 16

endogeneity - 16

subsidy - 16

workforce - 16

profit - 16

pollution abatement - 16

industry productivity - 16

healthcare - 16

insurance - 15

productivity estimates - 14

spillover - 14

productivity measures - 14

enterprise - 13

factory - 13

employ - 12

quarterly - 12

tax - 12

efficient - 12

investing - 12

pricing - 12

plant productivity - 12

abatement expenditures - 12

factor productivity - 11

labor productivity - 11

incentive - 11

financial - 11

invest - 11

costs pollution - 11

economic census - 11

coverage - 11

investment productivity - 10

welfare - 10

respondent - 10

medicaid - 10

aggregate - 10

policy - 10

price - 10

rate - 10

analysis productivity - 10

health insurance - 10

accounting - 10

environmental regulation - 10

socioeconomic - 9

budget - 9

poverty - 9

saving - 9

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employed - 9

regulated - 9

energy - 9

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estimates productivity - 9

environmental expenditures - 9

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endogenous - 8

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electricity - 8

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polluting industries - 8

irs - 8

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measures productivity - 8

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energy prices - 7

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organizational - 7

productivity analysis - 7

manufacturing productivity - 6

development - 6

housing - 6

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capital productivity - 6

economic growth - 6

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renewable - 6

fuel - 6

inflation - 6

productivity dispersion - 6

econometrically - 6

data - 6

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insurance plans - 6

report - 6

acquisition - 6

estimates production - 6

firms productivity - 6

census data - 6

rates productivity - 6

patent - 5

rent - 5

employment growth - 5

fiscal - 5

schooling - 5

corporate - 5

employee - 5

energy efficiency - 5

utility - 5

study - 5

research - 5

pollution regulation - 5

commodity - 5

wages productivity - 5

taxation - 5

state - 5

regional - 5

enrollee - 5

uninsured - 5

quantity - 5

dispersion productivity - 5

analysis - 5

product - 5

estimator - 5

tariff - 5

plants industry - 5

productivity impacts - 5

plant - 5

data census - 5

productivity shocks - 4

family - 4

corporation - 4

leverage - 4

disadvantaged - 4

gain - 4

productivity size - 4

practices productivity - 4

metropolitan - 4

city - 4

funding - 4

education - 4

microdata - 4

aggregate productivity - 4

research census - 4

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financing - 4

patenting - 4

exogeneity - 4

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trend - 4

taxpayer - 4

regional economic - 4

utilization - 4

health - 4

economic statistics - 4

dependent - 4

pension - 4

benefit - 4

imputation - 4

insurer - 4

regressing - 4

coverage employer - 4

use census - 4

resident - 4

merger - 4

inventory - 4

wholesale - 4

equilibrium - 4

management - 4

retiree - 4

manufacturing plants - 4

productivity differences - 4

industry concentration - 4

specialization - 4

census years - 4

computer - 4

observed productivity - 4

prospect - 3

disparity - 3

maternal - 3

sectoral - 3

residential - 3

exogenous - 3

export - 3

larger firms - 3

firms size - 3

school - 3

labor statistics - 3

level productivity - 3

outsourcing - 3

innovative - 3

occupation - 3

externality - 3

industry heterogeneity - 3

region - 3

regress - 3

technical - 3

statistician - 3

average - 3

imputed - 3

surveys censuses - 3

subsidized - 3

incorporated - 3

fund - 3

investor - 3

firm innovation - 3

census business - 3

geographically - 3

policymakers - 3

estimates employment - 3

insurance employer - 3

manager - 3

estimates pollution - 3

recessionary - 3

concentration - 3

industry output - 3

competitor - 3

aging - 3

substitute - 3

performance - 3

strategic - 3

Viewing papers 11 through 20 of 170


  • Working Paper

    School Equalization in the Shadow of Jim Crow: Causes and Consequences of Resource Disparity in Mississippi circa 1940

    May 2024

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-25

    A school finance equalization program established in Mississippi in 1920 failed to help many of the state's Black students'an outcome that was typical in the segregated U.S. South (Horace Mann Bond, 1934). In majority-Black school districts, local decision-makers overwhelmingly favored white schools when allotting funds from the state's preexisting per capita fund, and the resulting high expenditures on white students rendered these districts ineligible for the equalization program. Thus, while Black students residing in majority-white districts benefitted from increased spending and standards for Black schools, those in majority-Black districts continued to experience extremely low'and even worsening'school funding. We model the processes that led the so-called equalization policy to create disparities in schooling resources for Black students, and estimate effects on Black children using both a neighboring-counties design and an IV strategy. We find that local educational spending had large impacts on Black enrollment rates, as reported in the 1940 census, with Black educational attainment increasing in marginal spending. Finally, we link the 1940 and 2000 censuses to show that Black children exposed to higher levels of school expenditures had significantly more completed schooling and higher income late in life.
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  • Working Paper

    Collaborative Micro-productivity Project: Establishment-Level Productivity Dataset, 1972-2020

    December 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-65

    We describe the process for building the Collaborative Micro-productivity Project (CMP) microdata and calculating establishment-level productivity numbers. The documentation is for version 7 and the data cover the years 1972-2020. These data have been used in numerous research papers and are used to create the experimental public-use data product Dispersion Statistics on Productivity (DiSP).
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  • Working Paper

    Outsourcing Dynamism

    December 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-64

    This paper investigates the increasing importance of domestic outsourcing in U.S. manufacturing. Under domestic outsourcing, the agency is the employer of record for temporary workers, though they perform their tasks at the client business' premises. On a yearly basis, one in two manufacturing plants hires at least some of its workers through a temporary help agency. Furthermore, domestic outsourcing is becoming increasingly more important: the average share of revenue spent on such arrangements has gone up by 85 percent since 2006. We develop a methodology to transform reported expenses on temporary and leased workers into plant-level outsourced employment counts, using administrative data on the U.S. manufacturing sector. We find that domestic outsourcing is an important margin of adjustment that plants use to modify their workforce in response to productivity shocks. Plant-level outsourced employment adjusts more quickly and is twice as responsive as payroll employment. These micro implications have significant aggregate consequences. Without taking reallocations in outsourced employment into account, the measured pace at which jobs reallocate across workplaces is underestimated. On average, we omit the equivalent of 15 percent of payroll employment reallocations in each year. However, outsourced employment churns at a much higher rate compared to its payroll counterpart. Therefore, the omission of outsourced reallocations can rationalize 37 percent of the secular decline in the aggregate job reallocation rate. Lastly, the extent of mismeasurement varies with the business cycle; falling in downturns and increasing in upturns implying that the speed of economic recovery is underestimated.
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  • Working Paper

    The Impact of Industrial Opt-Out from Utility Sponsored Energy Efficiency Programs

    October 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-52

    Industry accounts for one-third of energy consumption in the US. Studies suggest that energy efficiency opportunities represent a potential energy resource for regulated utilities and have resulted in rate of return regulated demand-side management (DSM) and energy efficiency (EE) programs. However, many large customers are allowed to self-direct or opt-out. In the Carolinas (NC and SC), over half of industrial and large commercial customers have selected to opt out. Although these customers claim they invest in EE improvements when it is economic and cost-effective to do so, there is no mechanism to validate whether they actually achieved energy savings. This project examines the industrial energy efficiency between the program participants and non participants in the Carolinas by utilizing the non-public Census of Manufacturing data and the public list of firms that have chosen to opt out. We compare the relative energy efficiency between the stay-in and opt-out plants. The t-test results suggest opt-out plants are less efficient. However, the opt-out decisions are not random; large plants or plants belonging to large firms are more likely to opt out, possibly because they have more information and resources. We conduct a propensity score matching method to account for factors that could affect the opt-out decisions. We find that the opt-out plants perform at least as well or slightly better than the stay-in plants. The relative performance of the opt-out firms suggest that they may not need utility program resources to obtain similar levels of efficiency from the stay-in group.
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  • Working Paper

    Research and/or Development? Financial Frictions and Innovation Investment

    August 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-39

    U.S. firms have reduced their investment in scientific research ('R') compared to product development ('D'), raising questions about the returns to each type of investment, and about the reasons for this shift. We use Census data that disaggregates 'R' from 'D' to study how US firms adjust their innovation investments in response to an external increase in funding cost. Companies with greater demand for refinancing during the 2008 financial crisis, made larger cuts to R&D investment. This reduction in R&D is achieved almost entirely by reducing investment in research. Development remains essentially unchanged. If other firms patenting similar technologies must refinance, however, then Development investment declines. We interpret the latter result as evidence of technological competition: firms are reluctant to cut Development expenditures when that could place them at a disadvantage compared to potential rivals.
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  • Working Paper

    Technology Lock-In and Costs of Delayed Climate Policy

    July 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-33

    This paper studies the implications of current energy prices for future energy efficiency and climate policy. Using U.S. Census microdata and quasi-experimental variation in energy prices, we first show that manufacturing plants that open when electricity prices are low consume more energy throughout their lifetime, regardless of current electricity prices. We then estimate that a persistent bias of technological change toward energy can explain the long-term effects of entry-year electricity prices on energy intensity. Overall, this 'technology lock-in' implies that increasing entry-year electricity prices by 10% would decrease a plant's energy intensity of production by 3% throughout its lifetime.
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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

    Is Air Pollution Regulation Too Lenient? Evidence from US Offset Markets

    June 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-27R

    This paper describes a framework to estimate the marginal cost of air pollution regulation, then applies it to assess whether a large set of existing U.S. air pollution regulations have marginal benefits exceeding their marginal costs. The approach utilizes an important yet under-explored provision of the Clean Air Act requiring new or expanding plants to pay incumbents in the same or neighboring counties to reduce their pollution emissions. These "offset" regulations create several hundred decentralized, local markets for pollution that differ by pollutant and location. Economic theory and empirical tests suggest these market prices reveal information about the marginal cost of abatement for new or expanding firms. We compare estimates of the marginal benefit of abatement from leading air quality models to offset prices. We find that, for most regions and pollutants, the marginal benefits of pollution abatement exceed mean offset prices more than ten-fold. In at least one market, however, estimated marginal benefits are below offset prices.
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  • Working Paper

    The Characteristics and Geographic Distribution of Robot Hubs in U.S. Manufacturing Establishments

    March 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-14

    We use data from the Annual Survey of Manufactures to study the characteristics and geography of investments in robots across U.S. manufacturing establishments. We find that robotics adoption and robot intensity (the number of robots per employee) is much more strongly related to establishment size than age. We find that establishments that report having robotics have higher capital expenditures, including higher information technology (IT) capital expenditures. Also, establishments are more likely to have robotics if other establishments in the same Core-Based Statistical Area (CBSA) and industry also report having robotics. The distribution of robots is highly skewed across establishments' locations. Some locations, which we call Robot Hubs, have far more robots than one would expect even after accounting for industry and manufacturing employment. We characterize these Robot Hubs along several industry, demographic, and institutional dimensions. The presence of robot integrators and higher levels of union membership are positively correlated with being a Robot Hub.
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  • Working Paper

    Who's Most Exposed to International Shocks? Estimating Differences in Import Price Sensitivity across U.S. Demographic Groups

    March 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-13R

    Differences in consumption patterns across demographic groups mean that international price shocks differentially affect such groups. We construct import price indexes for U.S. households that vary by age, race, marital status, education, and urban status. Black households and urban households experienced significantly higher import price inflation from 1996-2018 compared to other groups, such as white households and rural households. Sensitivity to international price shocks varies widely, implying movements in exchange rates and foreign prices, both during our sample and during the Covid-19 pandemic, drove sizable differences in import price inflation ' and total inflation ' across households.
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