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Papers Containing Keywords(s): 'employee'

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Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 102

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 67

Longitudinal Business Database - 65

Current Population Survey - 60

North American Industry Classification System - 59

Employer Identification Numbers - 49

National Science Foundation - 49

Internal Revenue Service - 47

Center for Economic Studies - 47

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 44

Ordinary Least Squares - 39

Standard Industrial Classification - 36

Quarterly Workforce Indicators - 35

Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages - 35

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 33

Social Security Administration - 32

American Community Survey - 30

Business Register - 27

Unemployment Insurance - 27

Decennial Census - 26

Metropolitan Statistical Area - 26

National Bureau of Economic Research - 25

Protected Identification Key - 23

Cornell University - 23

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 21

Social Security - 21

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 21

Annual Survey of Manufactures - 20

Economic Census - 20

LEHD Program - 20

Federal Reserve Bank - 19

Social Security Number - 19

International Trade Research Report - 19

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 19

Census of Manufactures - 18

Disclosure Review Board - 18

Department of Labor - 18

Research Data Center - 18

Survey of Income and Program Participation - 18

AKM - 17

Local Employment Dynamics - 17

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 16

Service Annual Survey - 15

Individual Characteristics File - 15

Business Dynamics Statistics - 15

Employment History File - 15

Federal Reserve System - 14

County Business Patterns - 14

National Institute on Aging - 14

Longitudinal Research Database - 14

Total Factor Productivity - 13

University of Chicago - 13

Census Bureau Business Register - 12

Employer Characteristics File - 11

Cornell Institute for Social and Economic Research - 11

Special Sworn Status - 11

American Economic Review - 11

Financial, Insurance and Real Estate Industries - 11

Census Bureau Longitudinal Business Database - 10

Department of Homeland Security - 10

Retail Trade - 10

National Longitudinal Survey of Youth - 9

Census of Manufacturing Firms - 9

Business Employment Dynamics - 9

University of Michigan - 8

Successor Predecessor File - 8

Characteristics of Business Owners - 8

Business Register Bridge - 8

Labor Turnover Survey - 8

Occupational Employment Statistics - 8

Employer-Household Dynamics - 8

Office of Personnel Management - 8

University of Maryland - 8

PSID - 8

Technical Services - 7

W-2 - 7

Census Numident - 7

JOLTS - 7

Journal of Labor Economics - 7

Core Based Statistical Area - 7

Kauffman Foundation - 7

Herfindahl Hirschman Index - 6

Educational Services - 6

American Economic Association - 6

Survey of Business Owners - 6

Department of Economics - 6

Census Industry Code - 6

Columbia University - 6

Master Address File - 6

Board of Governors - 6

2010 Census - 6

Quarterly Journal of Economics - 6

Journal of Political Economy - 6

Small Business Administration - 6

Securities and Exchange Commission - 5

Office of Management and Budget - 5

Michigan Institute for Teaching and Research in Economics - 5

Boston College - 5

Standard Occupational Classification - 5

Review of Economics and Statistics - 5

Composite Person Record - 5

Federal Tax Information - 5

Department of Health and Human Services - 5

Urban Institute - 5

North American Industry Classi - 5

Harvard University - 5

Business Master File - 5

Probability Density Function - 5

New York Times - 5

Postal Service - 5

Journal of Economic Literature - 5

Department of Commerce - 5

Russell Sage Foundation - 5

Permanent Plant Number - 5

Company Organization Survey - 4

Center for Research in Security Prices - 4

Person Validation System - 4

Agriculture, Forestry - 4

Health Care and Social Assistance - 4

Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation - 4

CDF - 4

Cumulative Density Function - 4

Census Bureau Business Dynamics Statistics - 4

Accommodation and Food Services - 4

MIT Press - 4

Cobb-Douglas - 4

Business Services - 4

Professional Services - 4

Medical Expenditure Panel Survey - 4

University of Minnesota - 4

Journal of Economic Perspectives - 4

BLS Handbook of Methods - 4

University of Toronto - 4

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development - 4

Wholesale Trade - 4

Public Administration - 4

Integrated Longitudinal Business Database - 4

Department of Defense - 4

Bureau of Labor - 4

Sloan Foundation - 4

American Housing Survey - 4

Census 2000 - 4

Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago - 4

American Statistical Association - 4

Census of Retail Trade - 4

1940 Census - 4

Sample Edited Detail File - 4

Computer Assisted Telephone Interviews and Computer Assisted Personal Interviews - 4

CATI - 4

WECD - 4

National Employer Survey - 4

Federal Trade Commission - 3

NBER Summer Institute - 3

National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics - 3

Annual Business Survey - 3

Data Management System - 3

Council of Economic Advisers - 3

Management and Organizational Practices Survey - 3

DOB - 3

Arts, Entertainment - 3

Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality - 3

United States Census Bureau - 3

Federal Insurance Contribution Act - 3

Disability Insurance - 3

Health and Retirement Study - 3

UC Berkeley - 3

Federal Reserve Board of Governors - 3

National Income and Product Accounts - 3

Information and Communication Technology Survey - 3

Initial Public Offering - 3

Indian Health Service - 3

HHS - 3

Ohio State University - 3

Current Employment Statistics - 3

Society of Labor Economists - 3

Housing and Urban Development - 3

Journal of Econometrics - 3

Kauffman Firm Survey - 3

Generalized Method of Moments - 3

National Research Council - 3

Computer Assisted Personal Interview - 3

Consolidated Metropolitan Statistical Areas - 3

Survey of Manufacturing Technology - 3

employed - 119

employ - 106

workforce - 101

labor - 80

worker - 69

payroll - 59

earnings - 58

job - 38

hiring - 37

workplace - 33

hire - 30

salary - 30

economist - 29

recession - 28

establishment - 28

tenure - 28

employing - 27

survey - 26

earner - 25

econometric - 25

employment dynamics - 25

occupation - 24

organizational - 23

entrepreneurship - 22

census employment - 22

entrepreneur - 21

longitudinal employer - 20

company - 19

agency - 19

industrial - 19

employment statistics - 18

enterprise - 17

earn - 17

longitudinal - 17

employment growth - 17

quarterly - 17

employee data - 17

venture - 17

layoff - 16

turnover - 16

employment data - 16

census bureau - 15

incentive - 15

manufacturing - 15

employer household - 15

labor statistics - 14

entrepreneurial - 14

heterogeneity - 13

production - 13

corporation - 12

corporate - 12

unemployed - 12

employment estimates - 12

growth - 12

bias - 12

proprietorship - 12

employment earnings - 11

shift - 11

employment wages - 11

compensation - 11

ownership - 11

disclosure - 10

acquisition - 10

revenue - 10

endogeneity - 10

workers earnings - 10

estimating - 10

discrimination - 10

manager - 10

employment count - 10

report - 10

data - 10

effect wages - 9

earnings employees - 9

profit - 9

work census - 9

immigrant - 9

earnings workers - 9

wage industries - 9

wage data - 9

workforce indicators - 9

estimates employment - 9

data census - 9

founder - 9

wages employment - 9

clerical - 9

economic census - 9

employment flows - 9

statistical - 9

census data - 8

executive - 8

proprietor - 8

department - 8

labor markets - 8

finance - 8

unemployment rates - 8

opportunity - 8

matching - 8

associate - 8

wage variation - 8

sale - 8

aging - 8

merger - 7

incorporated - 7

investment - 7

employment effects - 7

worker demographics - 7

worker wages - 7

gdp - 7

woman - 7

microdata - 7

productive - 7

owner - 7

macroeconomic - 7

research census - 7

segregation - 7

record - 6

shareholder - 6

trend - 6

irs - 6

rent - 6

earnings growth - 6

estimation - 6

wage effects - 6

respondent - 6

employment measures - 6

union - 6

labor productivity - 6

startup - 6

prospect - 6

startups employees - 6

ethnicity - 6

measures employment - 6

sector - 6

recessionary - 6

minority - 6

effects employment - 5

wage earnings - 5

takeover - 5

investor - 5

employment trends - 5

imputation - 5

leverage - 5

earnings age - 5

expenditure - 5

statistician - 5

industry wages - 5

wage differences - 5

earnings inequality - 5

wage changes - 5

insurance - 5

retirement - 5

metropolitan - 5

accounting - 5

startup firms - 5

employment changes - 5

industry employment - 5

regression - 5

wage regressions - 5

rates employment - 5

residential - 5

hispanic - 5

specialization - 5

managerial - 5

employment production - 5

technological - 5

unobserved - 4

relocation - 4

trends employment - 4

export - 4

financial - 4

exogeneity - 4

tax - 4

impact employment - 4

transition - 4

immigration - 4

outsourcing - 4

analysis - 4

aggregate - 4

productivity differences - 4

efficiency - 4

federal - 4

medicaid - 4

ssa - 4

census research - 4

decline - 4

state employment - 4

gender - 4

job growth - 4

rural - 4

population - 4

censuses surveys - 4

researcher - 4

unemployment insurance - 4

owned businesses - 4

business data - 4

endogenous - 4

employees startups - 4

employment entrepreneurship - 4

socioeconomic - 4

wages productivity - 4

segregated - 4

technology - 4

information census - 3

database - 3

subsidiary - 3

firm data - 3

wage gap - 3

earnings gap - 3

market - 3

spillover - 3

employment distribution - 3

younger firms - 3

firms employment - 3

firms age - 3

firms size - 3

migrant - 3

immigrant workers - 3

expense - 3

outsourced - 3

econometrician - 3

women earnings - 3

wage growth - 3

reporting - 3

stock - 3

coverage employer - 3

linked census - 3

household surveys - 3

datasets - 3

housing - 3

regress - 3

recession employment - 3

innovation - 3

competitor - 3

funding - 3

firms young - 3

demand - 3

growth employment - 3

profitability - 3

use census - 3

nonemployer businesses - 3

career - 3

contract - 3

business owners - 3

heterogeneous - 3

residence - 3

business startups - 3

ethnic - 3

partnership - 3

customer - 3

establishments data - 3

management - 3

performance - 3

pension - 3

network - 3

insured - 3

insurance employer - 3

white - 3

racial - 3

surveys censuses - 3

citizen - 3

educated - 3

franchising - 3

econometrically - 3

model - 3

poverty - 3

paper census - 3

firm growth - 3

firms plants - 3

Viewing papers 21 through 30 of 170


  • Working Paper

    Opening the Black Box: Task and Skill Mix and Productivity Dispersion

    September 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-44

    An important gap in most empirical studies of establishment-level productivity is the limited information about workers' characteristics and their tasks. Skill-adjusted labor input measures have been shown to be important for aggregate productivity measurement. Moreover, the theoretical literature on differences in production technologies across businesses increasingly emphasizes the task content of production. Our ultimate objective is to open this black box of tasks and skills at the establishment-level by combining establishment-level data on occupations from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) with a restricted-access establishment-level productivity dataset created by the BLS-Census Bureau Collaborative Micro-productivity Project. We take a first step toward this objective by exploring the conceptual, specification, and measurement issues to be confronted. We provide suggestive empirical analysis of the relationship between within-industry dispersion in productivity and tasks and skills. We find that within-industry productivity dispersion is strongly positively related to within-industry task/skill dispersion.
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  • Working Paper

    Trade Liberalization and Labor-Market Outcomes: Evidence from US Matched Employer-Employee Data

    September 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-42

    We use matched employer-employee data to examine outcomes among workers initially employed within and outside manufacturing after trade liberalization with China. We find that exposure to this shock operates predominantly through workers' counties (versus industries), that larger own industry and downstream exposure typically reduce relative earnings, and that greater upstream exposure often raises them. The latter is particularly important outside manufacturing: while we find substantial and persistent predicted declines in relative earnings among manufacturing workers, those outside manufacturing are generally predicted to experience relative earnings gains. Investigation of employment reactions indicates they account for a small share of the earnings effect.
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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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  • Working Paper

    Shareholder Power and the Decline of Labor

    May 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-17

    Shareholder power in the US grew over recent decades due to a steep rise in concentrated institutional ownership. Using establishment-level data from the US Census Bureau's Longitudinal Business Database for 1982-2015, this paper examines the impact of increases in concentrated institutional ownership on employment, wages, shareholder returns, and labor productivity. Consistent with theory of the firm based on conflicts of interests between shareholders and stakeholders, we find that establishments of firms that experience an increase in ownership by larger and more concentrated institutional shareholders have lower employment and wages. This result holds in both panel regressions with establishment fixed effects and a difference-in-differences design that exploits large increases in concentrated institutional ownership, and is robust to controls for industry and local shocks. The result is more pronounced in industries where labor is relatively less unionized, in more monopsonistic local labor markets, and for dedicated and activist institutional shareholders. The labor losses are accompanied by higher shareholder returns but no improvements in labor productivity, suggesting that shareholder power mainly reallocates rents away from workers. Our results imply that the rise in concentrated institutional ownership could explain about a quarter of the secular decline in the aggregate labor share.
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  • Working Paper

    Employer Concentration and Labor Force Participation

    March 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-08

    This paper examines the association between employer concentration and labor outcomes (labor force participation and employment). It uses restricted data from the U.S. Census Bureau's Longitudinal Business Database to estimate, at the county level, to what extent more concentrated labor markets have lower labor force participation rates and lower employment. The analysis also examines whether unionization rates and education levels mediate these associations.
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  • Working Paper

    Finding Needles in Haystacks: Multiple-Imputation Record Linkage Using Machine Learning

    November 2021

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-35

    This paper considers the problem of record linkage between a household-level survey and an establishment-level frame in the absence of unique identifiers. Linkage between frames in this setting is challenging because the distribution of employment across establishments is highly skewed. To address these difficulties, this paper develops a probabilistic record linkage methodology that combines machine learning (ML) with multiple imputation (MI). This ML-MI methodology is applied to link survey respondents in the Health and Retirement Study to their workplaces in the Census Business Register. The linked data reveal new evidence that non-sampling errors in household survey data are correlated with respondents' workplace characteristics.
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  • Working Paper

    Location, Location, Location

    October 2021

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-32R

    We use data from the Longitudinal Employer-Household Dynamics program to study the causal effects of location on earnings. Starting from a model with employer and employee fixed effects, we estimate the average earnings premiums associated with jobs in different commuting zones (CZs) and different CZ-industry pairs. About half of the variation in mean wages across CZs is attributable to differences in worker ability (as measured by their fixed effects); the other half is attributable to place effects. We show that the place effects from a richly specified cross sectional wage model overstate the causal effects of place (due to unobserved worker ability), while those from a model that simply adds person fixed effects understate the causal effects (due to unobserved heterogeneity in the premiums paid by different firms in the same CZ). Local industry agglomerations are associated with higher wages, but overall differences in industry composition and in CZ-specific returns to industries explain only a small fraction of average place effects. Estimating separate place effects for college and non-college workers, we find that the college wage gap is bigger in larger and higher-wage places, but that two-thirds of this variation is attributable to differences in the relative skills of the two groups in different places. Most of the remaining variation reflects the enhanced sorting of more educated workers to higher-paying industries in larger and higher-wage CZs. Finally, we find that local housing costs at least fully offset local pay premiums, implying that workers who move to larger CZs have no higher net-of-housing consumption.
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  • Working Paper

    Pay, Productivity and Management

    September 2021

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-31

    Using confidential Census matched employer-employee earnings data we find that employees at more productive firms, and firms with more structured management practices, have substantially higher pay, both on average and across every percentile of the pay distribution. This pay-performance relationship is particularly strong amongst higher paid employees, with a doubling of firm productivity associated with 11% more pay for the highest-paid employee (likely the CEO) compared to 4.7% for the median worker. This pay-performance link holds in public and private firms, although it is almost twice as strong in public firms for the highest-paid employees. Top pay volatility is also strongly related to productivity and structured management, suggesting this performance-pay relationship arises from more aggressive monitoring and incentive practices for top earners.
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  • Working Paper

    Cyclical Worker Flows: Cleansing vs. Sullying

    May 2021

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-10

    Do recessions speed up or impede productivity-enhancing reallocation? To investigate this question, we use U.S. linked employer-employee data to examine how worker flows contribute to productivity growth over the business cycle. We find that in expansions high-productivity firms grow faster primarily by hiring workers away from lower-productivity firms. The rate at which job-to-job flows move workers up the productivity ladder is highly procyclical. Productivity growth slows during recessions when this job ladder collapses. In contrast, flows into nonemployment from low productivity firms disproportionately increase in recessions, which leads to an increase in productivity growth. We thus find evidence of both sullying and cleansing effects of recessions, but the timing of these effects differs. The cleansing effect dominates early in downturns but the sullying effect lingers well into the economic recovery.
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  • Working Paper

    Female Executives and the Motherhood Penalty

    January 2021

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-03

    Childbirth and subsequent breaks from the labor market are a primary reason why the average earnings of women is lower than that of men. This paper uses linked survey and administrative data from the United States to investigate whether the sex composition of executives at the firm, defined as the top earners, affects the earnings and employment outcomes of new mothers. We begin by documenting that (i) the male-female earnings gap is smaller in industries in which a larger share of executives are women, and (ii) the male-female earnings gap has declined more in industries that have experienced larger increases in the share of executives who are female. Despite these cross-sectional and longitudinal correlations, we find no evidence that the sex composition of the executives at the firm has a causal effect on the childbirth and motherhood penalties that impact women's earnings and employment.
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