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Papers Containing Keywords(s): 'sector'

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Center for Economic Studies - 76

Longitudinal Business Database - 71

North American Industry Classification System - 68

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 56

Standard Industrial Classification - 53

Annual Survey of Manufactures - 45

Economic Census - 38

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 36

National Science Foundation - 34

Longitudinal Research Database - 32

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 29

Total Factor Productivity - 27

Internal Revenue Service - 27

Ordinary Least Squares - 27

Employer Identification Numbers - 27

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 26

County Business Patterns - 26

Business Dynamics Statistics - 23

National Bureau of Economic Research - 22

Census Bureau Business Register - 21

Census of Manufactures - 21

Business Register - 20

Federal Reserve Bank - 16

Metropolitan Statistical Area - 16

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 16

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 16

Federal Reserve System - 15

Retail Trade - 15

Disclosure Review Board - 15

Special Sworn Status - 15

Current Population Survey - 14

Census Bureau Longitudinal Business Database - 14

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development - 14

Cobb-Douglas - 13

Census of Manufacturing Firms - 13

Social Security Administration - 12

Kauffman Foundation - 12

Research Data Center - 12

Permanent Plant Number - 12

American Community Survey - 11

Financial, Insurance and Real Estate Industries - 11

Small Business Administration - 11

Service Annual Survey - 11

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 10

Wholesale Trade - 9

Department of Homeland Security - 9

United States Census Bureau - 8

Technical Services - 8

Decennial Census - 8

Herfindahl Hirschman Index - 8

Patent and Trademark Office - 8

IQR - 7

Census of Retail Trade - 7

Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages - 7

Longitudinal Firm Trade Transactions Database - 7

Characteristics of Business Owners - 7

Postal Service - 7

Arts, Entertainment - 7

Accommodation and Food Services - 7

Survey of Industrial Research and Development - 7

National Income and Product Accounts - 7

Company Organization Survey - 7

Herfindahl-Hirschman - 7

Department of Agriculture - 7

Occupational Employment Statistics - 6

Business Research and Development and Innovation Survey - 6

Cell Mean Public Use - 6

Department of Commerce - 6

University of Maryland - 6

COMPUSTAT - 6

University of Chicago - 6

Educational Services - 6

Board of Governors - 6

Quarterly Workforce Indicators - 5

Office of Management and Budget - 5

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 5

Health Care and Social Assistance - 5

International Standard Industrial Classification - 5

Business Services - 5

Generalized Method of Moments - 5

Census Bureau Center for Economic Studies - 5

Retirement History Survey - 5

Public Administration - 5

Harmonized System - 5

Census Bureau Business Dynamics Statistics - 5

Social Security - 5

Journal of Economic Literature - 5

Protected Identification Key - 4

Integrated Longitudinal Business Database - 4

Business R&D and Innovation Survey - 4

National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics - 4

Insurance Information Institute - 4

Foreign Direct Investment - 4

TFPQ - 4

New York University - 4

Energy Information Administration - 4

Manufacturing Energy Consumption Survey - 4

Environmental Protection Agency - 4

Securities and Exchange Commission - 4

Department of Economics - 4

Information and Communication Technology Survey - 4

North American Industry Classi - 4

American Economic Association - 4

Economic Research Service - 4

Local Employment Dynamics - 4

2010 Census - 4

Census of Services - 4

E32 - 4

Business Employment Dynamics - 4

World Bank - 4

Administrative Records - 4

Cornell University - 3

Unemployment Insurance - 3

Ohio State University - 3

North American Free Trade Agreement - 3

Management and Organizational Practices Survey - 3

Paycheck Protection Program - 3

World Trade Organization - 3

Agriculture, Forestry - 3

COVID-19 - 3

IBM - 3

Princeton University - 3

Professional Services - 3

TFPR - 3

Federal Reserve Board of Governors - 3

Sloan Foundation - 3

Core Based Statistical Area - 3

Labor Productivity - 3

National Establishment Time Series - 3

Yale University - 3

University of California Los Angeles - 3

VAR - 3

Survey of Business Owners - 3

Business Master File - 3

Value Added - 3

Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation - 3

American Economic Review - 3

Consolidated Metropolitan Statistical Areas - 3

New England County Metropolitan - 3

Wal-Mart - 3

American Statistical Association - 3

manufacturing - 66

growth - 64

production - 60

industrial - 59

market - 37

enterprise - 36

sale - 34

econometric - 33

recession - 33

establishment - 27

macroeconomic - 26

gdp - 26

investment - 26

revenue - 25

labor - 24

expenditure - 24

employ - 22

company - 22

produce - 22

regional - 22

productivity growth - 21

economist - 20

innovation - 18

sectoral - 18

entrepreneurship - 18

aggregate - 18

efficiency - 18

quarterly - 17

growth productivity - 17

employment growth - 16

industry productivity - 16

demand - 15

productive - 15

manufacturer - 15

region - 15

estimating - 15

technological - 14

factor productivity - 14

factory - 14

trend - 13

payroll - 13

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export - 13

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economically - 13

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employed - 12

technology - 12

earnings - 12

industry growth - 12

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multinational - 11

survey - 11

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metropolitan - 11

firms grow - 11

geographically - 11

agriculture - 11

wholesale - 10

retail - 10

depreciation - 10

finance - 10

microdata - 10

aggregate productivity - 10

firms productivity - 10

specialization - 10

agency - 10

entrepreneurial - 10

commodity - 10

regional economic - 10

inventory - 9

productivity dispersion - 9

report - 9

financial - 9

corporation - 9

firm growth - 9

growth firms - 9

productivity measures - 9

economic census - 9

data - 9

import - 8

statistical - 8

externality - 8

productivity dynamics - 8

industry concentration - 8

state - 8

geography - 8

job - 8

longitudinal - 8

regional industry - 8

diversification - 8

warehouse - 7

respondent - 7

census bureau - 7

profitability - 7

incorporated - 7

producing - 7

growth employment - 7

proprietor - 7

accounting - 7

data census - 7

outsourcing - 7

regional industries - 7

aggregation - 7

commerce - 6

dispersion productivity - 6

retailer - 6

productivity estimates - 6

patent - 6

stock - 6

patenting - 6

warehousing - 6

development - 6

larger firms - 6

profit - 6

labor productivity - 6

consumption - 6

worker - 6

midwest - 6

job growth - 6

agricultural - 6

merger - 6

employee - 6

firms census - 6

record - 6

regression - 6

industry output - 6

endogeneity - 6

country - 5

subsidiary - 5

tariff - 5

foreign - 5

manufacturing productivity - 5

bank - 5

city - 5

firms size - 5

firm dynamics - 5

declining - 5

firms young - 5

reallocation productivity - 5

population - 5

heterogeneity - 5

classified - 5

industrial classification - 5

classification - 5

datasets - 5

estimation - 5

cluster - 5

measures productivity - 5

productivity size - 5

industry employment - 5

indian - 5

estimates productivity - 5

efficient - 5

study - 5

turnover - 5

employment data - 5

agglomeration economies - 5

agglomeration - 5

grocery - 4

international trade - 4

innovation productivity - 4

globalization - 4

industry wages - 4

relocation - 4

labor statistics - 4

level productivity - 4

consolidated - 4

employment trends - 4

occupation - 4

utilization - 4

classifying - 4

energy - 4

industry heterogeneity - 4

industry variation - 4

plants industry - 4

productivity analysis - 4

monopolistically - 4

firms employment - 4

employment dynamics - 4

farm - 4

rural - 4

startup - 4

small businesses - 4

small firms - 4

analysis productivity - 4

decline - 4

younger firms - 4

quantity - 4

gain - 4

locality - 4

electricity - 4

research - 4

department - 4

technical - 4

product - 4

recessionary - 3

disparity - 3

exporter - 3

supplier - 3

imported - 3

importer - 3

multinational firms - 3

prevalence - 3

invention - 3

investment productivity - 3

productivity shocks - 3

prospect - 3

innovating - 3

innovate - 3

invest - 3

banking - 3

impact - 3

leverage - 3

economic growth - 3

decade - 3

corporate - 3

salary - 3

percentile - 3

employment earnings - 3

productivity increases - 3

regressing - 3

productivity variation - 3

employment estimates - 3

federal - 3

fuel - 3

location - 3

outsourced - 3

employment statistics - 3

tech - 3

rates productivity - 3

venture - 3

business survival - 3

incentive - 3

businesses grow - 3

manager - 3

statistician - 3

business data - 3

management - 3

geographic - 3

estimates employment - 3

rates employment - 3

productivity differences - 3

manufacturing industries - 3

sourcing - 3

shock - 3

startup firms - 3

innovative - 3

restructuring - 3

econometrically - 3

energy efficiency - 3

researcher - 3

shift - 3

regulation - 3

analyst - 3

employment changes - 3

innovator - 3

minority - 3

businesses census - 3

census use - 3

industrialized - 3

productivity plants - 3

census years - 3

layoff - 3

establishments data - 3

employment flows - 3

Viewing papers 31 through 40 of 150


  • Working Paper

    Import Competition and Firms' Internal Networks

    September 2021

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-28

    Using administrative data on U.S. multisector firms, we document a cross-sectoral propagation of the import competition from China ('China shock') through firms' internal networks: Employment of an establishment in a given industry is negatively affected by China shock that hits establishments in other industries within the same firm. This indirect propagation channel impacts both manufacturing and non-manufacturing establishments, and it operates primarily through the establishment exit. We explore a range of explanations for our findings, highlighting the role of within-firm trade across sectors, scope of production, and establishment size. At the sectoral aggregate level, China shock that propagates through firms' internal networks has a sizable impact on industry-level employment dynamics.
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  • Working Paper

    Productivity Dispersion, Entry, and Growth in U.S. Manufacturing Industries

    August 2021

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-21

    Within-industry productivity dispersion is pervasive and exhibits substantial variation across countries, industries, and time. We build on prior research that explores the hypothesis that periods of innovation are initially associated with a surge in business start-ups, followed by increased experimentation that leads to rising dispersion potentially with declining aggregate productivity growth, and then a shakeout process that results in higher productivity growth and declining productivity dispersion. Using novel detailed industry-level data on total factor productivity and labor productivity dispersion from the Dispersion Statistics on Productivity along with novel measures of entry rates from the Business Dynamics Statistics and productivity growth data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics for U.S. manufacturing industries, we find support for this hypothesis, especially for the high-tech industries.
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  • Working Paper

    A Note on the Locational Determinants of the Agricultural Supply Chain

    July 2021

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-16

    Over the past several decades, an increasing share of the agricultural supply chain is located beyond the farmgate, implying that some set of economic factors are influencing the location decisions of food and agricultural establishments. We explore the location decisions of several food and agricultural industries for employer and non-employer establishments by expanding on the empirical implications of Carpenter et al. (2021)'s demand threshold models. While Carpenter et al. (2021) focus on methods to estimate these industries' demand thresholds using restricted access data, we focus on expanding the interpretations of their empirical research and explore additional industries along the agricultural supply chain using their refined methods. Results highlight the influential role of the Land Grant University system for specific establishment types, the importance of diverse industries within local economies, and the changing rurality of the agricultural supply chain.
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  • Working Paper

    High Frequency Business Dynamics in the United States During the COVID-19 Pandemic

    March 2021

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-06

    Existing small businesses experienced very sharp declines in activity, business sentiment, and expectations early in the pandemic. While there has been some recovery since the early days of the pandemic, small businesses continued to exhibit indicators of negative growth, business sentiment, and expectations through the first week of January 2021. These findings are from a unique high frequency, real time survey of small employer businesses, the Census Bureau's Small Business Pulse Survey (SBPS). Findings from the SBPS show substantial variation across sectors in the outcomes for small businesses. Small businesses in Accommodation and Food Services have been hit especially hard relative to those Finance and Insurance. However, even in Finance and Insurance small businesses exhibit indicators of negative growth, business sentiment, and expectations for all weeks from late April 2020 through the first week of 2021. While existing small businesses have fared poorly, after an initial decline, there has been a surge in new business applications based on the high frequency, real time Business Formation Statistics (BFS). Most of these applications are for likely nonemployers that are out of scope for the SBPS. However, there has also been a surge in new applications for likely employers. The surge in applications has been especially apparent in Retail Trade (and especially Non-store Retailers). We compare and contrast the patterns from these two new high frequency data products that provide novel insights into the distinct patterns of dynamics for existing small businesses relative to new business formations.
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  • Working Paper

    Business Dynamics on American Indian Reservations: Evidence from Longitudinal Datasets

    November 2020

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-20-38

    We use confidential US Census Bureau data to analyze the difference in business establishment dynamics by geographic location on or off of American Indian reservations over the period of the Great Recession, and subsequent recovery (2007-2016). We geocoded U.S. Census Bureau's Longitudinal Business Database, a dataset with records of all employer business establishments in the U.S. for location in an American Indian Reservation and used it to examine whether there are differences in business establishment survival rates over time by virtue of their location. We find that business establishments located on American Indian reservations have higher survival rates than establishments located in comparable counties. These results are particularly strong for the education, arts and entertainment, wholesale and retail, and public administration industries. While we are not fully able to explain this result, it is consistent with the business establishments being positively selected with respect to survival given the large obstacles necessary to start a business on a reservation in the first place. Alternatively, there may be certain safeguards in a reservation economy that protect business establishments from external economic shocks.
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  • Working Paper

    United States Earnings Dynamics: Inequality, Mobility, and Volatility

    September 2020

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-20-29

    Using data from the Census Bureau's Longitudinal Employer-Household Dynamics (LEHD) infrastructure files, we study changes over time and across sub-national populations in the distribution of real labor earnings. We consider four large MSAs (Detroit, Los Angeles, New York, and San Francisco) for the period 1998 to 2017, with particular attention paid to the subperiods before, during, and after the Great Recession. For the four large MSAs we analyze, there are clear national trends represented in each of the local areas, the most prominent of which is the increase in the share of earnings accruing to workers at the top of the earnings distribution in 2017 compared with 1998. However, the magnitude of these trends varies across MSAs, with New York and San Francisco showing relatively large increases and Los Angeles somewhere in the middle relative to Detroit whose total real earnings distribution is relatively stable over the period. Our results contribute to the emerging literature on differences between national and regional economic outcomes, exemplifying what will be possible with a new data exploration tool'the Earnings and Mobility Statistics (EAMS) web application'currently under development at the U.S. Census Bureau.
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  • Working Paper

    Between Firm Changes in Earnings Inequality: The Dominant Role of Industry Effects

    February 2020

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-20-08

    We find that most of the rising between firm earnings inequality that dominates the overall increase in inequality in the U.S. is accounted for by industry effects. These industry effects stem from rising inter-industry earnings differentials and not from changing distribution of employment across industries. We also find the rising inter-industry earnings differentials are almost completely accounted for by occupation effects. These results link together the key findings from separate components of the recent literature: one focuses on firm effects and the other on occupation effects. The link via industry effects challenges conventional wisdom.
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  • Working Paper

    Statistics on the Small Business Administration's Scale-Up America Program

    April 2019

    Authors: C.J. Krizan

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-19-11

    This paper attempts to quantify the difference in performance, of 'treated' (program participant) and 'non-treated' (non-participant) firms in SBA's Scale-Up initiative. I combine data from the SBA with administrative data housed at Census using a combination of numeric and name and address matching techniques. My results show that after controlling for available observable characteristics, a positive correlation exists between participation in the Scale-Up initiative and firm growth. However, publicly available survey results have shown that entrepreneurs have a variety of goals in-mind when they start their businesses. Two prominent, and potentially contradictory ones are work-life balance and greater income. That means that not all firms may want to grow and I am unable to completely control for owner motivations. Finally, I do not find a statistically significant relationship between participation in Scale-Up and firm survival once other business characteristics are accounted for.
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  • Working Paper

    The Management and Organizational Practices Survey (MOPS): Collection and Processing

    December 2018

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-18-51

    The U.S. Census Bureau partnered with a team of external researchers to conduct the first-ever large-scale survey of management practices in the United States, the Management and Organizational Practices Survey (MOPS), for reference year 2010. With the help of the research team, the Census Bureau expanded and improved the survey for a second wave for reference year 2015. The MOPS is a supplement to the Annual Survey of Manufacturing (ASM), and so the collection and processing strategy for the MOPS built on the methodology for the ASM, while differing on key dimensions to address the unique nature of management relative to other business data. This paper provides detail on the mail strategy pursued for the MOPS, the collection methods for paper and electronic responses, the processing and estimation procedures, and the official Census Bureau data releases. This detail is useful for all those who have interest in using the MOPS for research purposes, those wishing to understand the MOPS data more deeply, and those with an interest in survey methodology.
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  • Working Paper

    Reservation Nonemployer and Employer Establishments: Data from U.S. Census Longitudinal Business Databases

    December 2018

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-18-50

    The presence of businesses on American Indian reservations has been difficult to analyze due to limited data. Akee, Mykerezi, and Todd (AMT; 2017) geocoded confidential data from the U.S. Census Longitudinal Business Database to identify whether employer establishments were located on or off American Indian reservations and then compared federally recognized reservations and nearby county areas with respect to their per capita number of employers and jobs. We use their methods and the U.S. Census Integrated Longitudinal Business Database to develop parallel results for nonemployer establishments and for the combination of employer and nonemployer establishments. Similar to AMT's findings, we find that reservations and nearby county areas have a similar sectoral distribution of nonemployer and nonemployer-plus-employer establishments, but reservations have significantly fewer of them in nearly all sectors, especially when the area population is below 15,000. By contrast to AMT, the average size of reservation nonemployer establishments, as measured by revenue (instead of the jobs measure AMT used for employers), is smaller than the size of nonemployers in nearby county areas, and this is true in most industries as well. The most significant exception is in the retail sector. Geographic and demographic factors, such as population density and per capita income, statistically account for only a small portion of these differences. However, when we assume that nonemployer establishments create the equivalent of one job and use combined employer-plus-nonemployer jobs to measure establishment size, the employer job numbers dominate and we parallel AMT's finding that, due to large job counts in the Arts/Entertainment/Recreation and Public Administration sectors, reservations on average have slightly more jobs per resident than nearby county areas.
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