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Papers Containing Keywords(s): 'irs'

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Internal Revenue Service - 48

Protected Identification Key - 25

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 24

Social Security Number - 24

Current Population Survey - 23

Social Security - 19

American Community Survey - 18

Disclosure Review Board - 17

Social Security Administration - 17

Person Validation System - 15

North American Industry Classification System - 13

Earned Income Tax Credit - 13

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 12

W-2 - 12

National Bureau of Economic Research - 11

Decennial Census - 11

Employer Identification Numbers - 11

Center for Economic Studies - 10

Business Register - 10

Person Identification Validation System - 10

Adjusted Gross Income - 10

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 9

Personally Identifiable Information - 9

Center for Administrative Records Research and Applications - 9

Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program - 8

Survey of Income and Program Participation - 8

Master Address File - 7

Research Data Center - 7

County Business Patterns - 6

2010 Census - 6

Longitudinal Business Database - 6

Census Bureau Business Register - 6

Center for Administrative Records Research - 6

Census Numident - 6

Economic Census - 5

Quarterly Workforce Indicators - 5

Social and Economic Supplement - 5

Detailed Earnings Records - 5

Temporary Assistance for Needy Families - 5

Administrative Records - 5

Medical Expenditure Panel Survey - 5

Federal Insurance Contribution Act - 5

Annual Survey of Manufactures - 4

Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages - 4

Business Dynamics Statistics - 4

Department of Housing and Urban Development - 4

Indian Housing Information Center - 4

Master Earnings File - 4

ASEC - 4

Indian Health Service - 4

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 4

SSA Numident - 4

Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality - 4

Characteristics of Business Owners - 4

Urban Institute - 4

Standard Industrial Classification - 4

Service Annual Survey - 4

Total Factor Productivity - 3

Cobb-Douglas - 3

University of California Los Angeles - 3

Individual Characteristics File - 3

Small Business Administration - 3

CPS ASEC - 3

Computer Assisted Personal Interview - 3

Census Edited File - 3

University of Chicago - 3

Herfindahl Hirschman Index - 3

Data Management System - 3

Master Beneficiary Record - 3

Disability Insurance - 3

Federal Reserve Bank - 3

Federal Reserve System - 3

Department of Labor - 3

Some Other Race - 3

Limited Liability Company - 3

Current Population Survey Annual Social and Economic Supplement - 3

Census Bureau Master Address File - 3

Kauffman Foundation - 3

National Center for Health Statistics - 3

Individual Taxpayer Identification Numbers - 3

Federal Tax Information - 3

National Science Foundation - 3

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 3

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 3

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 3

Journal of Economic Literature - 3

tax - 31

filing - 17

taxpayer - 17

survey - 16

respondent - 16

earnings - 15

payroll - 14

revenue - 14

1040 - 14

record - 11

employed - 11

federal - 10

taxable - 9

earner - 9

welfare - 9

population - 8

enrollment - 8

census data - 8

agency - 8

expenditure - 8

taxation - 8

report - 7

census bureau - 7

workforce - 7

quarterly - 7

exemption - 7

economist - 7

ethnicity - 6

hispanic - 6

socioeconomic - 6

income data - 6

data - 6

poverty - 6

coverage - 6

dependent - 6

employee - 6

incentive - 6

insurance - 6

ssa - 6

ethnic - 5

use census - 5

eligibility - 5

employ - 5

assessed - 5

family - 5

imputation - 5

labor - 5

survey income - 5

salary - 5

firms census - 5

statistical - 4

percentile - 4

family income - 4

enrolled - 4

employment data - 4

disparity - 4

enterprise - 4

proprietorship - 4

income households - 4

eligible - 4

child - 4

recession - 4

medicaid - 4

medicare - 4

healthcare - 4

earn - 4

microdata - 4

state - 3

disclosure - 3

financial - 3

work census - 3

employment statistics - 3

employee data - 3

incorporated - 3

borrower - 3

loan - 3

bank - 3

banking - 3

information - 3

disadvantaged - 3

household income - 3

income children - 3

minority - 3

surveys censuses - 3

immigrant - 3

records census - 3

racial - 3

estimating - 3

income survey - 3

income distributions - 3

wage earnings - 3

census use - 3

lending - 3

poorer - 3

census linked - 3

subsidy - 3

census records - 3

datasets - 3

uninsured - 3

data census - 3

insured - 3

health insurance - 3

retirement - 3

pension - 3

Viewing papers 11 through 20 of 51


  • Working Paper

    The Changing Nature of Pollution, Income, and Environmental Inequality in the United States

    January 2024

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-04

    This paper uses administrative tax records linked to Census demographic data and high-resolution measures of fine small particulate (PM2.5) exposure to study the evolution of the Black-White pollution exposure gap over the past 40 years. In doing so, we focus on the various ways in which income may have contributed to these changes using a statistical decomposition. We decompose the overall change in the Black-White PM2.5 exposure gap into (1) components that stem from rank-preserving compression in the overall pollution distribution and (2) changes that stem from a reordering of Black and White households within the pollution distribution. We find a significant narrowing of the Black-White PM2.5 exposure gap over this time period that is overwhelmingly driven by rank-preserving changes rather than positional changes. However, the relative positions of Black and White households at the upper end of the pollution distribution have meaningfully shifted in the most recent years.
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  • Working Paper

    The Icing on the Cake: The Effects of Monetary Incentives on Income Data Quality in the SIPP

    January 2024

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-03

    Accurate measurement of key income variables plays a crucial role in economic research and policy decision-making. However, the presence of item nonresponse and measurement error in survey data can cause biased estimates. These biases can subsequently lead to sub-optimal policy decisions and inefficient allocation of resources. While there have been various studies documenting item nonresponse and measurement error in economic data, there have not been many studies investigating interventions that could reduce item nonresponse and measurement error. In our research, we investigate the impact of monetary incentives on reducing item nonresponse and measurement error for labor and investment income in the Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP). Our study utilizes a randomized incentive experiment in Waves 1 and 2 of the 2014 SIPP, which allows us to assess the effectiveness of incentives in reducing item nonresponse and measurement error. We find that households receiving incentives had item nonresponse rates that are 1.3 percentage points lower for earnings and 1.5 percentage points lower for Social Security income. Measurement error was 6.31 percentage points lower at the intensive margin for interest income, and 16.48 percentage points lower for dividend income compared to non-incentive recipient households. These findings provide valuable insights for data producers and users and highlight the importance of implementing strategies to improve data quality in economic research.
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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

    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 Demographics of the Recipients of the First Economic Impact Payment

    May 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-24

    Starting in April 2020, the federal government began to distribute Economic Impact Payments (EIPs) in response to the health and economic crisis caused by COVID-19. More than 160 million payments were disbursed. We produce statistics concerning the receipt of EIPs by individuals and households across key demographic subgroups. We find that payments went out particularly quickly to households with children and lower-income households, and the rate of receipt was quite high for individuals over age 60, likely due to a coordinated effort to issue payments automatically to Social Security recipients. We disaggregate statistics by race/ethnicity to document whether racial disparities arose in EIP disbursement. Receipt rates were high overall, with limited differences across racial/ethnic subgroups. We provide a set of detailed counts in tables for use by the public.
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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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  • Working Paper

    Universal Preschool Lottery Admissions and Its Effects on Long-Run Earnings and Outcomes

    March 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-09

    We use an admissions lottery to estimate the effect of a universal (non-means tested) preschool program on students' long-run earnings, income, marital status, fertility and geographic mobility. We observe long-run outcomes by linking both admitted and non-admitted individuals to confidential administrative data including tax records. Funding for this preschool program comes from an Indigenous organization, which grants Indigenous students admissions preference and free tuition. We find treated children have between 5 to 6 percent higher earnings as young adults. The results are strongest for individuals from the lower half of the household income distribution in childhood. Likely mechanisms include high-quality teachers and curriculum.
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  • Working Paper

    Full Report of the Comparisons of Administrative Record Rosters to Census Self-Responses and NRFU Household Member Responses

    March 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-08

    One of the U.S. Census Bureau's innovations in the 2020 U.S. Census was the use of administrative records (AR) to create household rosters for enumerating some addresses when a self response was not available but high-quality ARs were. The goal was to reduce the cost of fieldwork during the Nonresponse Followup operation (NRFU). The original plan had NRFU beginning in mid-May and continuing through late July 2020. However, the COVID-19 pandemic forced the delay of NRFU and caused the Internal Revenue Service to postpone the income tax filing deadline, resulting in an interruption in the delivery of ARs to the U.S. Census Bureau. The delays were not anticipated when U.S. Census Bureau staff conducted the research on AR enumeration with the 2010 Census data in preparation for the 2020 Census or during the fine tuning of plans for using ARs during the 2018 End-to-End Census Test. These circumstances raised questions about whether the quality of the AR household rosters was high enough for use in enumeration. To aid in investigating the concern about the quality of the AR rosters, our analyses compared AR rosters to self-response rosters and NRFU household member responses at addresses where both ARs and a self-response were available.
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  • Working Paper

    The Long-run Effects of the 1930s Redlining Maps on Children

    December 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-56

    We estimate the long-run effects of the 1930s Home Owners Loan Corporation (HOLC) redlining maps by linking children in the full count 1940 Census to 1) the universe of IRS tax data in 1974 and 1979 and 2) the long form 2000 Census. We use two identification strategies to estimate the potential long-run effects of differential access to credit along HOLC boundaries. The first strategy compares cross-boundary differences along HOLC boundaries to a comparison group of boundaries that had statistically similar pre-existing differences as the actual boundaries. A second approach only uses boundaries that were least likely to have been chosen by the HOLC based on our statistical model. We find that children living on the lower-graded side of HOLC boundaries had significantly lower levels of educational attainment, reduced income in adulthood, and lived in neighborhoods during adulthood characterized by lower educational attainment, higher poverty rates, and higher rates of single-headed households.
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  • Working Paper

    Introducing the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey-Insurance Component with Administrative Records (MEPS-ICAR): Description, Data Construction Methodology, and Quality Assessment

    August 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-29

    This report introduces a new dataset, the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey-Insurance Component with Administrative Records (MEPS-ICAR), consisting of MEPS-IC survey data on establishments and their health insurance benefits packages linked to Decennial Census data and administrative tax records on MEPS-IC establishments' workforces. These data include new measures of the characteristics of MEPS-IC establishments' parent firms, employee turnover, the full distribution of MEPS-IC workers' personal and family incomes, the geographic locations where those workers live, and improved workforce demographic detail. Next, this report details the methods used for producing the MEPS-ICAR. Broadly, the linking process begins by matching establishments' parent firms to their workforces using identifiers appearing in tax records. The linking process concludes by matching establishments to their own workforces by identifying the subset of their parent firm's workforce that best matches the expected size, total payroll, and residential geographic distribution of the establishment's workforce. Finally, this report presents statistics characterizing the match rate and the MEPS-ICAR data itself. Key results include that match rates are consistently high (exceeding 90%) across nearly all data subgroups and that the matched data exhibit a reasonable distribution of employment, payroll, and worker commute distances relative to expectations and external benchmarks. Notably, employment measures derived from tax records, but not used in the match itself, correspond with high fidelity to the employment levels that establishments report in the MEPS-IC. Cumulatively, the construction of the MEPS-ICAR significantly expands the capabilities of the MEPS-IC and presents many opportunities for analysts.
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