CREAT: Census Research Exploration and Analysis Tool

Papers Containing Keywords(s): 'labor'

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 Employer Household Dynamics - 99

Current Population Survey - 96

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 94

Center for Economic Studies - 79

North American Industry Classification System - 74

Ordinary Least Squares - 72

Longitudinal Business Database - 71

Standard Industrial Classification - 58

National Science Foundation - 58

Internal Revenue Service - 56

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 55

American Community Survey - 51

Annual Survey of Manufactures - 49

National Bureau of Economic Research - 48

Employer Identification Numbers - 40

Longitudinal Research Database - 40

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 40

Social Security Administration - 37

Census of Manufactures - 35

Decennial Census - 34

Total Factor Productivity - 34

Metropolitan Statistical Area - 32

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 30

Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages - 29

Social Security - 29

Federal Reserve Bank - 29

Economic Census - 28

Survey of Income and Program Participation - 28

Unemployment Insurance - 27

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 26

Social Security Number - 25

Protected Identification Key - 25

Cornell University - 25

Quarterly Workforce Indicators - 23

Disclosure Review Board - 23

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 21

Business Register - 20

Department of Labor - 20

Census of Manufacturing Firms - 19

W-2 - 18

PSID - 18

Census Bureau Business Register - 17

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 17

Census Bureau Longitudinal Business Database - 17

University of Maryland - 17

Cobb-Douglas - 17

LEHD Program - 17

Business Dynamics Statistics - 16

International Trade Research Report - 16

National Institute on Aging - 16

AKM - 15

Federal Reserve System - 15

County Business Patterns - 14

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development - 14

Cornell Institute for Social and Economic Research - 14

Individual Characteristics File - 13

Labor Turnover Survey - 13

American Economic Review - 13

Local Employment Dynamics - 12

Special Sworn Status - 11

JOLTS - 11

Research Data Center - 11

Journal of Economic Literature - 11

National Longitudinal Survey of Youth - 10

NBER Summer Institute - 10

Business Employment Dynamics - 10

Employment History File - 10

Employer Characteristics File - 10

2010 Census - 10

University of Chicago - 10

WECD - 10

Financial, Insurance and Real Estate Industries - 9

Department of Economics - 9

Person Validation System - 9

Labor Productivity - 9

Journal of Political Economy - 9

Generalized Method of Moments - 8

Occupational Employment Statistics - 8

Retail Trade - 8

Harvard University - 8

New York Times - 8

Survey of Manufacturing Technology - 8

Journal of Human Resources - 8

Urban Institute - 7

Heckscher-Ohlin - 7

Herfindahl Hirschman Index - 7

Detailed Earnings Records - 7

Department of Homeland Security - 7

New York University - 7

North American Industry Classi - 7

Quarterly Journal of Economics - 7

Office of Management and Budget - 6

Census Numident - 6

Standard Occupational Classification - 6

National Establishment Time Series - 6

Census Bureau Center for Economic Studies - 6

Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program - 6

Board of Governors - 6

Columbia University - 6

Council of Economic Advisers - 6

Earned Income Tax Credit - 6

Kauffman Foundation - 6

1940 Census - 6

Journal of Labor Economics - 6

World Bank - 6

Service Annual Survey - 6

Permanent Plant Number - 6

BLS Handbook of Methods - 6

Department of Commerce - 6

Technical Services - 5

National Center for Health Statistics - 5

Successor Predecessor File - 5

VAR - 5

North American Free Trade Agreement - 5

World Trade Organization - 5

National Employer Survey - 5

Survey of Business Owners - 5

Society of Labor Economists - 5

ASEC - 5

Current Population Survey Annual Social and Economic Supplement - 5

National Income and Product Accounts - 5

Wholesale Trade - 5

Census Industry Code - 5

IQR - 5

TFPQ - 5

CDF - 5

American Economic Association - 5

Temporary Assistance for Needy Families - 5

Company Organization Survey - 5

Retirement History Survey - 5

Current Employment Statistics - 5

Center for Administrative Records Research - 5

Business Register Bridge - 5

Sample Edited Detail File - 5

MIT Press - 5

Review of Economics and Statistics - 5

Characteristics of Business Owners - 4

Postal Service - 4

Health and Retirement Study - 4

Brookings Institution - 4

Agriculture, Forestry - 4

Michigan Institute for Teaching and Research in Economics - 4

COVID-19 - 4

Russell Sage Foundation - 4

Harmonized System - 4

General Accounting Office - 4

Integrated Longitudinal Business Database - 4

Department of Agriculture - 4

Sloan Foundation - 4

Social Security Disability Insurance - 4

Employer-Household Dynamics - 4

Federal Trade Commission - 4

Supreme Court - 4

Personally Identifiable Information - 4

Master Address File - 4

Federal Reserve Board of Governors - 4

Social and Economic Supplement - 4

Value Added - 4

Person Identification Validation System - 4

Center for Administrative Records Research and Applications - 4

Regional Economic Information System - 4

Department of Health and Human Services - 4

Geographic Information Systems - 4

IZA - 4

Public Use Micro Sample - 4

Medical Expenditure Panel Survey - 4

United States Census Bureau - 4

Computer Network Use Supplement - 4

American Statistical Association - 4

Consolidated Metropolitan Statistical Areas - 4

Cambridge University Press - 4

Electronic Data Interchange - 4

Accommodation and Food Services - 3

Educational Services - 3

Health Care and Social Assistance - 3

University of Toronto - 3

Integrated Public Use Microdata Series - 3

Stanford University - 3

E32 - 3

International Trade Commission - 3

Core Based Statistical Area - 3

Composite Person Record - 3

George Mason University - 3

Indian Health Service - 3

Department of Justice - 3

Boston College - 3

Duke University - 3

Individual Taxpayer Identification Numbers - 3

Data Management System - 3

Disability Insurance - 3

2SLS - 3

UC Berkeley - 3

Census Bureau Business Dynamics Statistics - 3

Pew Research Center - 3

Public Administration - 3

Stern School of Business - 3

Securities and Exchange Commission - 3

Medicaid Services - 3

Department of Defense - 3

Administrative Records - 3

Economic Research Service - 3

Small Business Administration - 3

University of Minnesota - 3

Housing and Urban Development - 3

Environmental Protection Agency - 3

Establishment Micro Properties - 3

Journal of Econometrics - 3

Business Master File - 3

Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality - 3

employ - 134

employed - 131

workforce - 122

recession - 83

employee - 80

worker - 76

earnings - 68

payroll - 62

job - 56

economist - 49

manufacturing - 49

industrial - 45

growth - 45

econometric - 43

production - 43

hiring - 42

unemployed - 42

salary - 41

macroeconomic - 39

employment dynamics - 37

earner - 34

occupation - 32

demand - 31

employment growth - 31

endogeneity - 30

heterogeneity - 30

quarterly - 30

labor statistics - 30

hire - 28

layoff - 28

workplace - 27

earn - 25

estimating - 25

market - 24

labor productivity - 24

sector - 23

labor markets - 23

establishment - 23

expenditure - 22

longitudinal - 22

unemployment rates - 22

trend - 21

survey - 20

shift - 20

employing - 20

tenure - 20

turnover - 19

gdp - 19

census bureau - 18

economically - 18

census employment - 18

longitudinal employer - 17

entrepreneurship - 17

productive - 17

estimation - 17

discrimination - 16

productivity growth - 16

revenue - 16

welfare - 16

employer household - 16

endogenous - 15

incentive - 15

estimates employment - 15

employment statistics - 14

export - 14

factory - 14

recessionary - 14

regress - 14

poverty - 13

employment wages - 13

union - 13

enrollment - 12

disparity - 12

segregation - 12

trends employment - 12

employment trends - 12

immigrant - 12

entrepreneur - 12

research census - 12

efficiency - 12

econometrician - 12

effect wages - 12

produce - 12

employment unemployment - 12

economic census - 12

employment flows - 12

employment estimates - 11

investment - 11

workers earnings - 11

retirement - 11

aggregate - 11

regressing - 11

wage growth - 11

wages productivity - 11

recession employment - 11

metropolitan - 11

employment changes - 11

technology - 11

technological - 11

aging - 11

relocation - 10

migrant - 10

decline - 10

increase employment - 10

employment earnings - 10

decade - 10

sale - 10

insurance - 10

wage differences - 10

wage industries - 10

employment count - 10

trends labor - 10

statistical - 9

report - 9

disadvantaged - 9

race - 9

employment production - 9

migration - 9

import - 9

enterprise - 9

tax - 9

state - 9

woman - 9

productivity measures - 9

profit - 9

manufacturer - 9

state employment - 9

industry employment - 9

wage changes - 9

employee data - 9

organizational - 9

bias - 8

socioeconomic - 8

ethnicity - 8

wage effects - 8

wage gap - 8

unobserved - 8

spillover - 8

employment data - 8

worker demographics - 8

benefit - 8

exogeneity - 8

declining - 8

worker wages - 8

agency - 8

earnings workers - 8

industry wages - 8

earnings inequality - 8

minority - 8

effects employment - 8

wages production - 8

employment recession - 8

wage variation - 8

finance - 8

mother - 7

racial - 7

innovation - 7

producing - 7

job growth - 7

entrepreneurial - 7

proprietorship - 7

aggregate productivity - 7

housing - 7

merger - 7

federal - 7

accounting - 7

growth productivity - 7

proprietor - 7

regional - 7

segregated - 7

data census - 7

respondent - 6

family - 6

parental - 6

maternal - 6

work census - 6

specialization - 6

compensation - 6

regressors - 6

hispanic - 6

immigration - 6

migrate - 6

exporter - 6

leverage - 6

factor productivity - 6

productivity estimates - 6

productivity size - 6

venture - 6

resident - 6

employment effects - 6

educated - 6

wage data - 6

productivity wage - 6

industry productivity - 6

productivity dispersion - 6

unemployment insurance - 6

ethnic - 6

population - 6

wages employment - 6

clerical - 6

earnings growth - 6

regression - 6

wage regressions - 6

productivity increases - 6

measures employment - 6

employment measures - 6

company - 6

workforce indicators - 6

plant productivity - 6

subsidy - 5

black - 5

white - 5

urban - 5

city - 5

neighborhood - 5

productivity shocks - 5

migrating - 5

exporting - 5

multinational - 5

development - 5

gain - 5

eligible - 5

disability - 5

irs - 5

impact employment - 5

women earnings - 5

career - 5

corporate - 5

productivity dynamics - 5

gender - 5

moving - 5

coverage - 5

wage earnings - 5

medicaid - 5

monopolistic - 5

measures productivity - 5

firm dynamics - 5

tech - 5

earnings age - 5

productivity impacts - 5

plant employment - 5

transition - 5

share - 5

opportunity - 5

census data - 5

manufacturing industries - 5

capital - 5

census research - 5

productivity plants - 5

plant - 5

household surveys - 4

2010 census - 4

relocate - 4

employment distribution - 4

autoregressive - 4

shock - 4

tariff - 4

relocating - 4

immigrant workers - 4

international trade - 4

sectoral - 4

outsourced - 4

exogenous - 4

eligibility - 4

researcher - 4

level productivity - 4

outsourcing - 4

rent - 4

regulation - 4

healthcare - 4

earnings employees - 4

wealth - 4

parent - 4

productivity differences - 4

manufacturing productivity - 4

firms employment - 4

rates productivity - 4

computer - 4

associate - 4

price - 4

filing - 4

startup - 4

bankruptcy - 4

technical - 4

estimates productivity - 4

mobility - 4

taxpayer - 4

supplier - 4

rural - 4

matching - 4

residential - 4

inference - 4

network - 4

data - 4

agriculture - 4

manufacturing plants - 4

department - 4

plants industry - 4

suburb - 3

industry heterogeneity - 3

growth employment - 3

foreign - 3

monopolistically - 3

practices productivity - 3

employment entrepreneurship - 3

nonemployer businesses - 3

startups employees - 3

exemption - 3

enrolled - 3

town - 3

intergenerational - 3

volatility - 3

graduate - 3

study - 3

expense - 3

percentile - 3

education - 3

wholesale - 3

industry concentration - 3

residence - 3

medicare - 3

insurance employer - 3

insured - 3

health insurance - 3

insurance premiums - 3

insurer - 3

birth - 3

pregnancy - 3

equilibrium - 3

productivity analysis - 3

firms productivity - 3

econometrically - 3

saving - 3

model - 3

ssa - 3

coverage employer - 3

fertility - 3

cohort - 3

firms grow - 3

dispersion productivity - 3

founder - 3

capital productivity - 3

fluctuation - 3

income year - 3

substitute - 3

financial - 3

acquisition - 3

bank - 3

schooling - 3

lender - 3

debt - 3

firms plants - 3

heterogeneous - 3

average - 3

reallocation productivity - 3

analysis - 3

empirical - 3

elasticity - 3

discriminatory - 3

plants firms - 3

Viewing papers 41 through 50 of 250


  • Working Paper

    The Alpha Beta Gamma of the Labor Market

    April 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-10

    Using a large panel dataset of US workers, we calibrate a search-theoretic model of the labor market, where workers are heterogeneous with respect to the parameters governing their employment transitions. We first approximate heterogeneity with a discrete number of latent types, and then calibrate type-specific parameters by matching type-specific moments. Heterogeneity is well approximated by 3 types: as, 's and ?s. Workers of type a find employment quickly because they have large gains from trade, and stick to their jobs because their productivity is similar across jobs. Workers of type ? find employment slowly because they have small gains from trade, and are unlikely to stick to their job because they keep searching for jobs in the right tail of the productivity distribution. During the Great Recession, the magnitude and persistence of aggregate unemployment is caused by ?s, who are vulnerable to shocks and, once displaced, they cycle through multiple unemployment spells before finding stable employment.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • 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.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Can Displaced Labor Be Retrained? Evidence from Quasi-Random Assignment to Trade Adjustment Assistance

    February 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-05

    The extent to which workers adjust to labor market disruptions in light of increasing pressure from trade and automation commands widespread concern. Yet little is known about efforts that deliberately target the adjustment process. This project studies 20 years of worker-level earnings and re-employment responses to Trade Adjustment Assistance (TAA)'a large social insurance program that couples retraining incentives with extended unemployment insurance (UI) for displaced workers. I estimate causal effects from the quasi-random assignment of TAA cases to investigators of varying approval leniencies. Using employer-employee matched Census data on 300,000 workers, I find TAA approved workers have $50,000 greater cumulative earnings ten years out'driven by both higher incomes and greater labor force participation. Yet annual returns fully depreciate over the same period. In the most disrupted regions, workers are more likely to switch industries and move to labor markets with better opportunities in response to TAA. Combined with evidence that sustained returns are delivered by training rather than UI transfers, the results imply a potentially important role for human capital in overcoming adjustment frictions.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Run Effects of Military Service: Evidence from the 911 Attacks

    November 2021

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-36

    We investigate the effect of military service on labor market, health and family formation outcomes, leveraging differential changes in enlistment rates brought about by the September 11th attacks (911). Using restricted microdata, we identify hundreds of 'high service" counties in which certain birth-county cohorts exhibit large enlistment responses to 911. We find that individuals born into high service counties between 1977 and 1983 (aged 18-24 at the time of the attack), enlisted at nearly twice the rate of earlier birth cohorts (older than 24 at the time of the attack). These high service birth-county cohorts experienced a 10% increase in wages, decreased unemployment and impacts on other labor market measures as well as key household formation measures including marriage and fertility. We also find increases in the hospitalization and mortality rates. Labor market benefits outweigh mortality costs at standard discount rates.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    The Business Dynamics Statistics: Describing the Evolution of the U.S. Economy from 1978-2019

    October 2021

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-33

    The U.S. Census Bureau's Business Dynamics Statistics (BDS) provide annual measures of how many businesses begin, end, or continue their operations and the associated job creation and destruction. The BDS is a valuable resource for information on the U.S. economy because of its long time series (1978-2019), its complete coverage (all private sector, non-farm U.S. businesses), and its tabulations for both individual establishments and the firms that own and control them. In this paper, we use the publicly available BDS data to describe the dynamics of the economy over the past 40 years. We highlight the increasing concentration of employment at old and large firms and describe net job creation trends in the manufacturing, retail, information, food/accommodations, and healthcare industry sectors. We show how the spatial distribution of employment has changed, first moving away from the largest cities and then back again. Finally, we show long-run trends for a group of industries we classify as high-tech and explore how the share of employment at small and young firms has changed for this part of the economy.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • 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.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Earnings Inequality and Immobility for Hispanics and Asians: An Examination of Variation Across Subgroups

    September 2021

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-30

    Our analysis provides the rst disaggregated examination of earnings inequality and immobility within the Hispanic ethnic group and the Asian race group in the U.S. over the period of 2005-2015. Our analysis differentiates between long-term immigrant and native-born Hispanics and Asians relative to recent immigrants to the U.S. (post 2005) and new labor market entrants. Our results show that for the Asian and Hispanic population aged 18-45, earnings inequality is constant or slightly decreasing for the long-term immigrant and native-born populations. However, including new labor market entrants and recent immigrants to the U.S. contributes significantly to the earnings inequality for these groups at both the aggregate and disaggregated race or ethnic group levels. These findings have important implications for the measurement of inequality for racial and ethnic groups that have higher proportions of new immigrants and new labor market entrants in the U.S.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • 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.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • 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.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    U.S. Long-Term Earnings Outcomes by Sex, Race, Ethnicity, and Place of Birth

    May 2021

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-07R

    This paper is part of the Global Income Dynamics Project cross-country comparison of earnings inequality, volatility, and mobility. Using data from the U.S. Census Bureau's Longitudinal Employer-Household Dynamics (LEHD) infrastructure files we produce a uniform set of earnings statistics for the U.S. From 1998 to 2019, we find U.S. earnings inequality has increased and volatility has decreased. The combination of increased inequality and reduced volatility suggest earnings growth differs substantially across different demographic groups. We explore this further by estimating 12-year average earnings for a single cohort of age 25-54 eligible workers. Differences in labor supply (hours paid and quarters worked) are found to explain almost 90% of the variation in worker earnings, although even after controlling for labor supply substantial earnings differences across demographic groups remain unexplained. Using a quantile regression approach, we estimate counterfactual earnings distributions for each demographic group. We find that at the bottom of the earnings distribution differences in characteristics such as hours paid, geographic division, industry, and education explain almost all the earnings gap, however above the median the contribution of the differences in the returns to characteristics becomes the dominant component.
    View Full Paper PDF