CREAT: Census Research Exploration and Analysis Tool

Papers Containing Keywords(s): 'census employment'

The following papers contain search terms that you selected. From the papers listed below, you can navigate to the PDF, the profile page for that working paper, or see all the working papers written by an author. You can also explore tags, keywords, and authors that occur frequently within these papers.
Click here to search again

Frequently Occurring Concepts within this Search

Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages - 32

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 31

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 26

Quarterly Workforce Indicators - 24

Current Population Survey - 19

North American Industry Classification System - 18

Unemployment Insurance - 18

American Community Survey - 16

Local Employment Dynamics - 16

Employer Identification Numbers - 15

Internal Revenue Service - 13

Protected Identification Key - 12

Social Security Administration - 12

Center for Economic Studies - 12

National Science Foundation - 11

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 11

Survey of Income and Program Participation - 11

Business Register - 11

Employer Characteristics File - 10

Decennial Census - 10

Social Security Number - 10

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 9

Research Data Center - 9

Metropolitan Statistical Area - 8

Service Annual Survey - 8

Standard Industrial Classification - 8

Longitudinal Business Database - 8

Cornell University - 8

Business Employment Dynamics - 8

Census Bureau Business Register - 7

Master Address File - 7

Individual Characteristics File - 7

Core Based Statistical Area - 7

Successor Predecessor File - 7

Disclosure Review Board - 7

University of Chicago - 6

2010 Census - 6

Employment History File - 6

Office of Personnel Management - 6

Labor Turnover Survey - 6

Social Security - 5

Composite Person Record - 5

American Economic Review - 5

Business Master File - 5

American Housing Survey - 5

JOLTS - 5

LEHD Program - 5

CDF - 4

Cumulative Density Function - 4

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 4

National Institute on Aging - 4

Federal Tax Information - 4

County Business Patterns - 4

Ordinary Least Squares - 4

PSID - 4

National Bureau of Economic Research - 4

Business Register Bridge - 4

Business Dynamics Statistics - 4

Economic Census - 4

Cornell Institute for Social and Economic Research - 4

Department of Labor - 4

Retail Trade - 3

Employer-Household Dynamics - 3

Census Numident - 3

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 3

Federal Reserve System - 3

International Trade Research Report - 3

Journal of Labor Economics - 3

Probability Density Function - 3

Current Employment Statistics - 3

Viewing papers 31 through 36 of 36


  • Working Paper

    An Analysis of Key Differences in Micro Data: Results from the Business List Comparison Project

    September 2008

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-08-28

    The Bureau of Labor Statistics and the Bureau of the Census each maintain a business register, a universe of all U.S. business establishments and their characteristics, created from independent sources. Both registers serve critical functions such as supplying aggregate data inputs for certain national statistics generated by the Bureau of Economic Analysis. This paper examines key micro-level differences across these two business registers.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Employment that is not covered by state unemployment insurance Laws

    April 2007

    Authors: David W. Stevens

    Working Paper Number:

    tp-2007-04

    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Gross Job Flows for the U.S. Manufacturing Sector: Measurement from the Longitudinal Research Database

    December 2006

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-06-30

    Measures of job creation and destruction are now produced regularly by the U.S. statistical agencies. The Bureau of Labor Statistics releases via the Business Employment Dynamics (BED) on a quarterly basis measures of job creation and destruction for the U.S. nonfarm business sector and related disaggregation by industrial sector and size class. The U.S. Census Bureau has developed the Longitudinal Business Database (LBD) covering the nonfarm business sector that has been used to produce research analysis and special tabulations including tabulations of job creation and destruction. Both of these data programs build upon the measurement methods and data analysis of job creation and destruction measures from the Longitudinal Research Database (LRD) developed and published by Davis, Haltiwanger and Schuh (1996). In this paper, the LRD based estimates of job creation and destruction are updated and made available for consistent annual and quarterly series from 1972-1998. While the BED and LBD programs are more comprehensive in scope than the LRD, the extensive development of the LRD permits the construction of measures of job creation and destruction for a rich array of employer characteristics including industry, size, business age, ownership structure, location and wage structure. The updated series that are released with this working paper provide measures along each of these dimensions. The paper describes in detail the changes in the processing of the Annual Survey of Manufactures over the 1972-1998 period that are important to incorporate by users of the LRD at Census Research Data Centers as well as users of products from the LRD such as job creation and destruction.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Confidentiality Protection in the Census Bureau Quarterly Workforce Indicators

    February 2006

    Working Paper Number:

    tp-2006-02

    The QuarterlyWorkforce Indicators are new estimates developed by the Census Bureau's Longitudinal Employer-Household Dynamics Program as a part of its Local Employment Dynamics partnership with 37 state Labor Market Information offices. These data provide detailed quarterly statistics on employment, accessions, layoffs, hires, separations, full-quarter employment (and related flows), job creations, job destructions, and earnings (for flow and stock categories of workers). The data are released for NAICS industries (and 4-digit SICs) at the county, workforce investment board, and metropolitan area levels of geography. The confidential microdata - unemployment insurance wage records, ES-202 establishment employment, and Title 13 demographic and economic information - are protected using a permanent multiplicative noise distortion factor. This factor distorts all input sums, counts, differences and ratios. The released statistics are analytically valid - measures are unbiased and time series properties are preserved. The confidentiality protection is manifested in the release of some statistics that are flagged as "significantly distorted to preserve confidentiality." These statistics differ from the undistorted statistics by a significant proportion. Even for the significantly distorted statistics, the data remain analytically valid for time series properties. The released data can be aggregated; however, published aggregates are less distorted than custom postrelease aggregates. In addition to the multiplicative noise distortion, confidentiality protection is provided by the estimation process for the QWIs, which multiply imputes all missing data (including missing establishment, given UI account, in the UI wage record data) and dynamically re-weights the establishment data to provide state-level comparability with the BLS's Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    The LEHD Infrastructure Files and the Creation of the Quarterly Workforce Indicators

    January 2006

    Working Paper Number:

    tp-2006-01

    The Longitudinal Employer-Household Dynamics (LEHD) Program at the U.S. Census Bureau, with the support of several national research agencies, has built a set of infrastructure files using administrative data provided by state agencies, enhanced with information from other administrative data sources, demographic and economic (business) surveys and censuses. The LEHD Infrastructure Files provide a detailed and comprehensive picture of workers, employers, and their interaction in the U.S. economy. Beginning in 2003 and building on this infrastructure, the Census Bureau has published the Quarterly Workforce Indicators (QWI), a new collection of data series that offers unprecedented detail on the local dynamics of labor markets. Despite the fine detail, confidentiality is maintained due to the application of state-of-the-art confidentiality protection methods. This article describes how the input files are compiled and combined to create the infrastructure files. We describe the multiple imputation methods used to impute in missing data and the statistical matching techniques used to combine and edit data when a direct identifier match requires improvement. Both of these innovations are crucial to the success of the final product. Finally, we pay special attention to the details of the confidentiality protection system used to protect the identity and micro data values of the underlying entities used to form the published estimates. We provide a brief description of public-use and restricted-access data files with pointers to further documentation for researchers interested in using these data.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    The Measurement of Human Capital in the U.S. Economy

    April 2002

    Working Paper Number:

    tp-2002-09

    We develop a new approach to measuring human capital that permits the distinction of both observable and unobservable dimensions of skill by associating human capital with the portable part of an individual's wage rate. Using new large-scale, integrated employer-employee data containing information on 68 million individuals and 3.6 million firms, we explain a very large proportion (84%) of the total variation in wages rates and attribute substantial variation to both individual and employer heterogeneity. While the wage distribution remained largely unchanged between 1992-1997, we document a pronounced right shift in the overall distribution of human capital. Most workers entering our sample, while less experienced, were otherwise more highly skilled, a difference which can be attributed almost exclusively to unobservables. Nevertheless, compared to exiters and continuers, entrants exhibited a greater tendency to match to firms paying below average internal wages. Firms reduced employment shares of low skilled workers and increased employment shares of high skilled workers in virtually every industry. Our results strongly suggest that the distribution of human capital will continue to shift to the right, implying a continuing up-skilling of the employed labor force.
    View Full Paper PDF