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Papers Containing Keywords(s): 'aggregate'

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Center for Economic Studies - 37

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 28

Annual Survey of Manufactures - 26

North American Industry Classification System - 26

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 24

Longitudinal Business Database - 24

Census of Manufactures - 22

Standard Industrial Classification - 19

National Science Foundation - 18

Longitudinal Research Database - 18

Internal Revenue Service - 17

National Bureau of Economic Research - 17

Total Factor Productivity - 16

Ordinary Least Squares - 14

Economic Census - 13

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 11

Federal Reserve Bank - 11

Business Register - 10

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 9

Current Population Survey - 9

Census Bureau Business Register - 8

Employer Identification Numbers - 8

Census Bureau Longitudinal Business Database - 8

Cobb-Douglas - 7

Social Security Administration - 7

Metropolitan Statistical Area - 7

American Community Survey - 7

Research Data Center - 7

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 7

Special Sworn Status - 7

Disclosure Review Board - 6

Census of Manufacturing Firms - 6

Census Bureau Center for Economic Studies - 6

Postal Service - 6

Business Dynamics Statistics - 6

Service Annual Survey - 6

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 6

Permanent Plant Number - 6

Federal Reserve System - 5

National Income and Product Accounts - 5

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 5

Duke University - 5

County Business Patterns - 5

University of Maryland - 4

TFPQ - 4

NBER Summer Institute - 4

Quarterly Workforce Indicators - 4

University of Chicago - 4

Michigan Institute for Teaching and Research in Economics - 4

Cornell University - 4

Securities and Exchange Commission - 4

Establishment Micro Properties - 4

Fabricated Metal Products - 4

Statistics Canada - 4

Generalized Method of Moments - 4

Survey of Income and Program Participation - 3

Social Security - 3

Longitudinal Firm Trade Transactions Database - 3

Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages - 3

IQR - 3

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 3

International Trade Research Report - 3

State Energy Data System - 3

2010 Census - 3

Administrative Records - 3

Decennial Census - 3

Federal Trade Commission - 3

Wholesale Trade - 3

Department of Homeland Security - 3

macroeconomic - 23

estimating - 20

aggregation - 20

recession - 19

statistical - 18

sector - 18

manufacturing - 17

survey - 17

quarterly - 16

production - 16

estimation - 15

economist - 14

data - 14

growth - 14

gdp - 13

microdata - 13

econometric - 13

industrial - 13

sale - 12

expenditure - 11

labor - 11

revenue - 10

aggregate productivity - 10

market - 10

payroll - 10

report - 10

establishment - 10

respondent - 9

data census - 9

agency - 9

regression - 9

earnings - 8

analysis - 8

productivity growth - 7

productivity measures - 7

measures productivity - 7

productive - 7

employ - 7

demand - 7

endogeneity - 7

enterprise - 7

company - 7

average - 6

census bureau - 6

autoregressive - 6

workforce - 6

produce - 6

statistician - 6

datasets - 6

record - 6

shock - 6

disclosure - 6

empirical - 6

efficiency - 5

estimates productivity - 5

factor productivity - 5

employed - 5

database - 5

economic census - 5

utilization - 5

merger - 5

acquisition - 5

investment - 5

incorporated - 5

statistical agencies - 5

imputation - 4

population - 4

estimator - 4

salary - 4

regress - 4

consumption - 4

productivity dynamics - 4

level productivity - 4

analyst - 4

forecast - 4

indicator - 4

employee - 4

manufacturer - 4

accounting - 4

growth productivity - 4

quantity - 4

classified - 4

reporting - 4

researcher - 4

census data - 4

employment growth - 4

employment dynamics - 4

imputation model - 3

survey data - 3

2010 census - 3

census disclosure - 3

estimates employment - 3

country - 3

federal - 3

research census - 3

industry productivity - 3

productivity size - 3

firms productivity - 3

manufacturing productivity - 3

spillover - 3

regional - 3

employment statistics - 3

economic statistics - 3

classification - 3

surveys censuses - 3

firms census - 3

business data - 3

use census - 3

endogenous - 3

employment count - 3

impact - 3

economically - 3

econometrician - 3

productivity shocks - 3

fluctuation - 3

shift - 3

trend - 3

expense - 3

confidentiality - 3

publicly - 3

businesses census - 3

turnover - 3

longitudinal - 3

industrial classification - 3

Viewing papers 21 through 30 of 63


  • Working Paper

    Slow to Hire, Quick to Fire: Employment Dynamics with Asymmetric Responses to News

    January 2017

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-15

    Concave hiring rules imply that firms respond more to bad shocks than to good shocks. They provide a united explanation for several seemingly unrelated facts about employment growth in macro and micro data. In particular, they generate countercyclical movement in both aggregate conditional 'macro' volatility and cross-sectional 'micro' volatility as well as negative skewness in the cross section and in the time series at different level of aggregation. Concave establishment level responses of employment growth to TFP shocks estimated from Census data induce significant skewness, movements in volatility and amplification of bad aggregate shocks.
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  • Working Paper

    R&D, Attrition and Multiple Imputation in BRDIS

    January 2017

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-13

    Multiple imputation in business establishment surveys like BRDIS, an annual business survey in which some companies are sampled every year or multiple years, may enhance the estimates of total R&D in addition to helping researchers estimate models with subpopulations of small sample size. Considering a panel of BRDIS companies throughout the years 2008 to 2013 linked to LBD data, this paper uses the conclusions obtained with missing data visualization and other explorations to come up with a strategy to conduct multiple imputation appropriate to address the item nonresponse in R&D expenditures. Because survey design characteristics are behind much of the item and unit nonresponse, multiple imputation of missing data in BRDIS changes the estimates of total R&D significantly and alters the conclusions reached by models of the determinants of R&D investment obtained with complete case analysis.
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  • Working Paper

    Firm Leverage, Consumer Demand, and Employment Losses during the Great Recession

    January 2017

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-01

    We argue that firms' balance sheets were instrumental in the propagation of consumer demand shocks during the Great Recession. Using establishment-level data, we show that establishments of more highly levered firms exhibit a significantly larger decline in employment in response to a drop in consumer demand. These results are not driven by firms being less productive, having expanded too much prior to the Great Recession, or being generally more sensitive to fluctuations in either aggregate employment or house prices. At the county level, we find that counties with more highly levered firms experience significantly larger job losses in response to county-wide consumer demand shocks. Thus, firms' balance sheets also matter for aggregate employment. Our research suggests a possible role for employment policies that target firms directly besides conventional stimulus.
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  • Working Paper

    Revisiting the Effects of Unemployment Insurance Extensions on Unemployment: A Measurement Error-Corrected Regression Discontinuity Approach

    March 2016

    Working Paper Number:

    carra-2016-01

    The extension of Unemployment Insurance (UI) benefits was a key policy response to the Great Recession. However, these benefit extensions may have had detrimental labor market effects. While evidence on the individual labor supply response indicates small effects on unemployment, recent work by Hagedorn et al. (2015) uses a county border pair identification strategy to find that the total effects inclusive of effects on labor demand are substantially larger. By focusing on variation within border county pairs, this identification strategy requires counties in the pairs to be similar in terms of unobservable factors. We explore this assumption using an alternative regression discontinuity approach that controls for changes in unobservables by distance to the border. To do so, we must account for measurement error induced by using county-level aggregates. These new results provide no evidence of a large change in unemployment induced by differences in UI generosity across state boundaries. Further analysis suggests that individuals respond to UI benefit differences across boundaries by targeting job search in high-benefit states, thereby raising concerns of treatment spillovers in this setting. Taken together, these two results suggest that the effect of UI benefit extensions on unemployment remains an open question.
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  • Working Paper

    Using Partially Synthetic Microdata to Protect Sensitive Cells in Business Statistics

    February 2016

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-16-10

    We describe and analyze a method that blends records from both observed and synthetic microdata into public-use tabulations on establishment statistics. The resulting tables use synthetic data only in potentially sensitive cells. We describe different algorithms, and present preliminary results when applied to the Census Bureau's Business Dynamics Statistics and Synthetic Longitudinal Business Database, highlighting accuracy and protection afforded by the method when compared to existing public-use tabulations (with suppressions).
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  • Working Paper

    Are firm-level idiosyncratic shocks important for U.S. aggregate volatility?

    January 2016

    Authors: Chen Yeh

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-16-47

    This paper assesses the quantitative impact of firm-level idiosyncratic shocks on aggregate volatility in the U.S. economy and provides a microfoundation for the negative relationship between firm-level volatility and size. I argue that the role of firm-specific shocks through the granular channel plays a fairly limited role in the U.S. economy. Using a novel, comprehensive data set compiled from several sources of the U.S. Census Bureau, I find that the granular com-ponent accounts at most for 15.5% of the variation in aggregate sales growth which is about half found by previous studies. To bridge the gap between previous findings and mine, I show that my quantitative results require deviations from Gibrat's law in which firm-level volatility and size are negatively related. I find that firm-level volatility declines at a substantially higher rate in size than previously found. Hence, the largest firms in the economy cannot be driving a sub-stantial fraction of macroeconomic volatility. I show that the explanatory power of granularity gets cut by at least half whenever the size-variance relationship, as estimated in the micro-level data, is taken into account. To uncover the economic mechanism behind this phenomenon, I construct an analytically tractable framework featuring random growth and a Kimball aggrega-tor. Under this setup, larger firms respond less to productivity shocks as the elasticity of demand is decreasing in size. Additionally, the model predicts a positive (negative) relationship between firm-level mark-ups (growth) and size. I confirm the predictions of the model by estimating size-varying price elasticities on unique product-level data from the Census of Manufactures (CM) and structurally estimating mark-ups using plant-level information from the Annual Survey of Manufactures (ASM).
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  • Working Paper

    Allocation of Company Research and Development Expenditures to Industries Using a Tobit Model

    November 2015

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-15-42

    This paper uses Census microdata and a regression-based approach to assign multi-division firms' pre-2008 Research and Development (R&D) expenditures to more than one industry. Since multi-division firms conduct R&D in more than one industry, assigning R&D to corresponding industries provides a more accurate representation of where R&D actually takes place and provides a consistent time-series with the National Science Foundation R&D by line of business information. Firm R&D is allocated to industries on the basis of observed industry payroll, as befits the historic importance of payroll in Census assignments of firms to industry. The results demonstrate that the method of assigning R&D to industries on the basis of payroll works well in earlier years, but becomes less effective over time as firms outsource their manufacturing function.
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  • Working Paper

    HOW IMPORTANT ARE SECTORAL SHOCKS

    September 2014

    Authors: Enghin Atalay

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-14-31

    I quantify the contribution of sectoral shocks to business cycle fluctuations in aggregate output. I develop a multi-industry general equilibrium model in which each industry employs the material and capital goods produced by other sectors, and then estimate this model using data on U.S. industries sales, output prices, and input choices. Maximum likelihood estimates indicate that industry-specific shocks account for nearly two-thirds of the volatility of aggregate output, substantially larger than previously assessed. Identification of the relative importance of industry-specific shocks comes primarily from data on industries intermediate input purchases, data that earlier estimations of multi-industry models have ignored.
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  • Working Paper

    IMPROVING THE SYNTHETIC LONGITUDINAL BUSINESS DATABASE

    February 2014

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-14-12

    In most countries, national statistical agencies do not release establishment-level business microdata, because doing so represents too large a risk to establishments' confidentiality. Agencies potentially can manage these risks by releasing synthetic microdata, i.e., individual establishment records simulated from statistical models de- signed to mimic the joint distribution of the underlying observed data. Previously, we used this approach to generate a public-use version'now available for public use'of the U. S. Census Bureau's Longitudinal Business Database (LBD), a longitudinal cen- sus of establishments dating back to 1976. While the synthetic LBD has proven to be a useful product, we now seek to improve and expand it by using new synthesis models and adding features. This article describes our efforts to create the second generation of the SynLBD, including synthesis procedures that we believe could be replicated in other contexts.
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  • Working Paper

    LOOKING BACK ON THREE YEARS OF USING THE SYNTHETIC LBD BETA

    February 2014

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-14-11

    Distributions of business data are typically much more skewed than those for household or individual data and public knowledge of the underlying units is greater. As a results, national statistical offices (NSOs) rarely release establishment or firm-level business microdata due to the risk to respondent confidentiality. One potential approach for overcoming these risks is to release synthetic data where the establishment data are simulated from statistical models designed to mimic the distributions of the real underlying microdata. The US Census Bureau's Center for Economic Studies in collaboration with Duke University, the National Institute of Statistical Sciences, and Cornell University made available a synthetic public use file for the Longitudinal Business Database (LBD) comprising more than 20 million records for all business establishment with paid employees dating back to 1976. The resulting product, dubbed the SynLBD, was released in 2010 and is the first-ever comprehensive business microdata set publicly released in the United States including data on establishments employment and payroll, birth and death years, and industrial classification. This pa- per documents the scope of projects that have requested and used the SynLBD.
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