CREAT: Census Research Exploration and Analysis Tool

Papers Containing Keywords(s): 'financial'

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

Longitudinal Business Database - 38

North American Industry Classification System - 19

Ordinary Least Squares - 19

Federal Reserve Bank - 19

Center for Economic Studies - 19

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 18

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 17

Internal Revenue Service - 17

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 16

Annual Survey of Manufactures - 15

National Science Foundation - 15

Standard Industrial Classification - 15

Characteristics of Business Owners - 14

National Bureau of Economic Research - 13

Total Factor Productivity - 13

Federal Reserve System - 12

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 11

Business Dynamics Statistics - 11

Small Business Administration - 11

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 11

Employer Identification Numbers - 10

Longitudinal Research Database - 9

Survey of Business Owners - 8

Current Population Survey - 8

Census Bureau Longitudinal Business Database - 8

Kauffman Foundation - 8

Census of Manufactures - 8

Census of Manufacturing Firms - 6

Metropolitan Statistical Area - 6

Boston College - 6

Initial Public Offering - 5

Department of Homeland Security - 5

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 5

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 5

Census Bureau Business Register - 5

Center for Research in Security Prices - 5

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development - 5

Decennial Census - 5

Board of Governors - 5

Economic Census - 5

Survey of Income and Program Participation - 5

Business Register - 4

County Business Patterns - 4

National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics - 4

American Community Survey - 4

Protected Identification Key - 4

General Accounting Office - 4

New York University - 4

Disclosure Review Board - 4

World Bank - 4

2010 Census - 4

Kauffman Firm Survey - 4

University of California Los Angeles - 4

Social Security Administration - 4

COMPUSTAT - 4

Bureau of Labor - 4

Survey of Industrial Research and Development - 3

Social Security - 3

Business R&D and Innovation Survey - 3

National Income and Product Accounts - 3

University of Maryland - 3

Securities and Exchange Commission - 3

Annual Survey of Entrepreneurs - 3

Journal of Economic Literature - 3

Ohio State University - 3

PSID - 3

Financial, Insurance and Real Estate Industries - 3

E32 - 3

Longitudinal Firm Trade Transactions Database - 3

Federal Trade Commission - 3

Social Security Number - 3

Center for Administrative Records Research - 3

Duke University - 3

Michigan Institute for Teaching and Research in Economics - 3

Harvard Business School - 3

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 3

Special Sworn Status - 3

Russell Sage Foundation - 3

finance - 39

investment - 31

financing - 27

loan - 23

debt - 23

entrepreneur - 21

market - 21

recession - 21

entrepreneurship - 20

lending - 20

bank - 20

leverage - 18

lender - 17

equity - 16

borrowing - 16

investor - 15

bankruptcy - 15

banking - 14

earnings - 13

corporation - 13

entrepreneurial - 13

macroeconomic - 12

venture - 12

invest - 12

enterprise - 12

borrower - 12

investing - 11

company - 11

stock - 11

credit - 11

revenue - 11

expenditure - 11

sale - 11

borrow - 10

funding - 9

fund - 9

minority - 9

econometric - 9

sector - 9

liquidation - 9

creditor - 9

economically - 9

accounting - 9

employed - 8

depreciation - 8

collateral - 8

acquisition - 8

economist - 7

wealth - 7

security - 6

bankrupt - 6

growth - 6

mortgage - 6

quarterly - 6

saving - 6

filing - 6

capital - 6

proprietorship - 6

profitability - 5

shareholder - 5

shock - 5

black - 5

debtor - 5

retirement - 5

expense - 5

employ - 5

proprietor - 5

asset - 4

innovation - 4

gdp - 4

employee - 4

corporate - 4

profit - 4

earn - 4

merger - 4

trading - 4

characteristics businesses - 4

cost - 4

contract - 4

owned businesses - 4

hispanic - 4

ownership - 4

takeover - 4

incorporated - 3

impact - 3

earner - 3

patent - 3

patenting - 3

survey - 3

disclosure - 3

agency - 3

younger firms - 3

production - 3

industrial - 3

institutional - 3

firms size - 3

socioeconomic - 3

spillover - 3

export - 3

black business - 3

regulation - 3

regional - 3

recession exposure - 3

neighborhood - 3

record - 3

demand - 3

endogeneity - 3

estimation - 3

labor - 3

opportunity - 3

plant investment - 3

acquirer - 3

establishment - 3

endowment - 3

estimating - 3

ethnicity - 3

welfare - 3

medicare - 3

retiree - 3

immigrant - 3

asian - 3

immigrant entrepreneurs - 3

Viewing papers 31 through 40 of 75


  • Working Paper

    Declining Dynamism, Allocative Efficiency, and the Productivity Slowdown

    January 2017

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-17

    A large literature documents declining measures of business dynamism including high-growth young firm activity and job reallocation. A distinct literature describes a slowdown in the pace of aggregate labor productivity growth. We relate these patterns by studying changes in productivity growth from the late 1990s to the mid 2000s using firm-level data. We find that diminished allocative efficiency gains can account for the productivity slowdown in a manner that interacts with the within firm productivity growth distribution. The evidence suggests that the decline in dynamism is reason for concern and sheds light on debates about the causes of slowing productivity growth.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Do Firms Mitigate or Magnify Capital Misallocation? Evidence from Plant-Level Data

    January 2017

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-14

    Almost two thirds of the cross-plant dispersion in marginal revenue products of capital occurs across plants within the same firm rather than between firms. Even though firms allocate investment very differently across their plants, they do not equalize marginal revenue products across their plants. We reconcile these findings in a model of multi-plant firms, physical adjustment costs and credit constraints. Credit constrained multi-plant firms can utilize internal capital markets by concentrating internal funds on investment projects in only a few of their plants in a given period and rotating funds to another set of plants in the future. The resulting increase in within-firm dispersion of marginal revenue products of capital is hence not a symptom of misallocation within the firm, but rather actions taken by the firm to mitigate external credit constraints and adjustment costs of capital. Economies with multi-plant firms produce more aggregate output despite higher dispersion in marginal revenue products of capital compared to economies with single-plant firms. Because emerging economies are predominantly populated by single-plant firms, the gains from reducing their distortions to the level of developed are larger than previously thought.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Small Business Growth and Failure during the Great Recession: The Role of House Prices, Race & Gender

    November 2016

    Working Paper Number:

    carra-2016-08

    Using 2002-2011 data from the Longitudinal Business Database linked to the 2002 and 2007 Survey of Business Owners, this paper explores whether (through a collateral channel) the rise in home prices over the early 2000's and their subsequent fall associated with the Great Recession had differential impacts on business performance across owner race, ethnicity and gender. We find that the employment growth rate of minority-owned firms, particularly black and Hispanic-owned firms, is more sensitive to changes in house prices than is that of their nonminority-owned counterparts.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Asset Allocation in Bankruptcy

    February 2016

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-16-13

    This paper investigates the consequences of liquidation and reorganization on the allocation and subsequent utilization of assets in bankruptcy. We identify 129,000 bankrupt establishments and construct a novel dataset that tracks the occupancy, employment and wages paid at real estate assets over time. Using the random assignment of judges to bankruptcy cases as a natural experiment that forces some firms into liquidation, we find that even after accounting for reallocation, the long-run utilization of assets of liquidated firms is lower relative to assets of reorganized firms. These effects are concentrated in thin markets with few potential users, in areas with low access to finance, and in areas with low economic growth. The results highlight that different bankruptcy approaches affect asset allocation and utilization particularly when search frictions and financial frictions are present.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Research Funding and Regional Economies

    January 2016

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-16-32

    Public support of research typically relies on the notion that universities are engines of economic development, and that university research is a primary driver of high wage localized economic activity. Yet the evidence supporting that notion is based on aggregate descriptive data, rather than detailed links at the level of individual transactions. Here we use new micro-data from three countries - France, Spain and the United States - to examine one mechanism whereby such economic activity is generated, namely purchases from regional businesses. We show that grant funds are more likely to be expended at businesses physically closer to universities than at those farther away. In addition, if a vendor has been a supplier to a grant once, that vendor is subsequently more likely to be a vendor on the same or related grants. Firms behave in a way that is consistent with the notion that propinquity is good for business; if a firm supplies a research grant at a university in a given year it is more likely to open an establishment near that university in subsequent years than other firms.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    The Impact of Bank Credit on Labor Reallocation and Aggregate Industry Productivity

    January 2016

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-16-26

    Using a difference-in-difference methodology, we find that the state-level deregulation of local U.S. banking markets leads to significant increases in the reallocation of labor within local industries towards small firms with higher marginal products of labor. Using plant-level data, we propose and examine an approach that quantifies the industry productivity gains from labor reallocation and find that these gains are economically important. Our analysis suggests that labor reallocation is a significant channel through which local banking markets affect the aggregate productivity and performance of local industries.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Wealth, Tastes, and Entrepreneurial Choice

    October 2015

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-15-34

    The nonpecuniary benefits of managing a small business are a first order consideration for many nascent entrepreneurs, yet the preference for business ownership is mostly ignored in models of entrepreneurship and occupational choice. In this paper, we study a population with varying entrepreneurial tastes and wealth in a simple general equilibrium model of occupational choice. This choice yields several important results: (1) entrepreneurship can be thought of as a normal good, generating wealth effects independent of any financing constraints; (2) nonpecuniary entrepreneurs select into small-scale firms; and (3) subsidies designed to stimulate more business entry can have regressive distributional effects. Despite abstracting from other important considerations such as risk, financing constraints, and innovation, we show that nonpecuniary compensation is particularly relevant in discussions of small businesses.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Collateral Values and Corporate Employment

    September 2015

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-15-30R

    We examine the impact of real estate collateral values on corporate employment. Our empirical strategy exploits regional variation in local real estate price growth, firm-level data on real estate holdings, as well as establishment-level data on employment and the location of firms' operations from the U.S. Census Bureau. Over the period from 1993 until 2006, we show that a typical U.S. publicly-traded firm increases employment expenditures by $0.10 per $1 increase in collateral. We show this additional hiring is funded through debt issues and the effects are stronger for firms likely to be financially constrained. These firms increase employment at establishments outside of their core industry focus and away from the location of real estate holdings, leading to regional spillover effects. We document how shocks to collateral values influence labor allocation within firms and how these effects show up in the aggregate.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Job Creation, Small vs. Large vs. Young, and the SBA

    September 2015

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-15-24

    Analyzing a list of all Small Business Administration (SBA) loans in 1991 to 2009 linked with annual information on all U.S. employers from 1976 to 2012, we apply detailed matching and regression methods to estimate the variation in SBA loan effects on job creation and firm survival across firm age and size groups. The estimated number of jobs created per million dollars of loans within the small business sector generally increases with size and decreases in age. The results suggest that the growth of small, mature firms is least financially constrained, and that faster growing firms experience the greatest financial constraints to growth. The estimated association between survival and loan amount is larger for younger and smaller firms facing the 'valley of death.'
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    OWNER CHARACTERISTICS AND FIRM PERFORMANCE DURING THE GREAT RECESSION

    September 2014

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-14-36

    Minority owned businesses are an increasing important component of the U.S. economy, growing at twice the rate of all U.S. businesses between 2002 and 2007. However, a growing literature indicates that minority-owned businesses may have been especially impacted by the Great Recession. As house prices declined, foreclosures fell disproportionately on urban minority neighborhoods and one of the sources of credit for business owners was severely constrained. Using 2002-2011 data from the Longitudinal Business Database linked to the 2002 Survey of Business Owners, this paper adds to the literature by examining the employment growth and survival of minority and women employer businesses during the last decade, including the Great Recession. At first glance, our preliminary findings suggest that black and women-owned businesses underperform white, male-owned businesses, that Asian-owned businesses outperform other groups, and that Hispanic-owned businesses outperform non-Hispanic ones in regards to employment growth. However, when we look only at continuing firms, black-owned businesses outperform white-owned businesses in terms of employment growth. At the same time, we also find that the recession appears to have impacted black-owned and Hispanic-owned businesses more severely than their counterparts, in terms of employment growth as well as survival. This is also the case for continuing black and Hispanic-owned firms.
    View Full Paper PDF