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Papers Containing Keywords(s): 'macroeconomic'

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Center for Economic Studies - 70

North American Industry Classification System - 68

Longitudinal Business Database - 67

Annual Survey of Manufactures - 58

National Bureau of Economic Research - 56

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 54

Total Factor Productivity - 53

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National Science Foundation - 49

Standard Industrial Classification - 48

Ordinary Least Squares - 46

Census of Manufactures - 44

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American Economic Review - 14

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MIT Press - 8

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Manufacturing Energy Consumption Survey - 7

Journal of Econometrics - 7

International Trade Research Report - 7

Journal of Political Economy - 7

Fabricated Metal Products - 7

Review of Economics and Statistics - 7

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Review of Economic Studies - 5

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Information and Communication Technology Survey - 4

Princeton University Press - 4

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Company Organization Survey - 4

Bureau of Labor - 4

Duke University - 4

Census Bureau Business Dynamics Statistics - 4

Federal Trade Commission - 4

Columbia University - 4

Michigan Institute for Teaching and Research in Economics - 4

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Postal Service - 4

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Characteristics of Business Owners - 4

New York Times - 4

Journal of International Economics - 4

Labor Turnover Survey - 4

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Service Annual Survey - 4

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Princeton University - 3

Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation - 3

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employment trends - 4

workers earnings - 4

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longitudinal - 4

imported - 4

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regulation - 4

wages production - 4

firm growth - 4

estimates employment - 4

export growth - 4

metropolitan - 4

regional industry - 4

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agglomeration economies - 4

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utilization - 4

capital productivity - 4

agency - 4

productivity plants - 4

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employment increases - 4

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retirement - 3

recession exposure - 3

advantage - 3

plant employment - 3

manufacturing plants - 3

electricity - 3

energy prices - 3

energy efficiency - 3

entry productivity - 3

industry output - 3

industries estimate - 3

deviation - 3

productivity wage - 3

productivity analysis - 3

productivity size - 3

industry employment - 3

competitive - 3

employment unemployment - 3

sourcing - 3

buyer - 3

export market - 3

employment data - 3

earnings mobility - 3

fiscal - 3

productivity dispersion - 3

decline - 3

labor statistics - 3

investment productivity - 3

budget - 3

economic growth - 3

managerial - 3

management - 3

tenure - 3

wage changes - 3

globalization - 3

productivity increases - 3

exporting firms - 3

exogenous - 3

businesses grow - 3

industry wages - 3

foreign trade - 3

firms import - 3

conglomerate - 3

tax - 3

lending - 3

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efficient - 3

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environmental - 3

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unobserved - 3

increase employment - 3

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rent - 3

reallocation productivity - 3

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employment count - 3

economic statistics - 3

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externality - 3

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research - 3

textile - 3

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industry growth - 3

analyst - 3

statistical agencies - 3

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Viewing papers 51 through 60 of 161


  • Working Paper

    Import Competition from and Offshoring to Low-Income Countries: Implications for Employment and Wages at U.S. Domestic Manufacturers

    January 2017

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-31

    Using confidential linked firm-level trade transactions and census data between 1997 and 2012, we provide new evidence on how American firms without foreign affiliates adjust employment and wages as they adapt to import competition from low-income countries. We provide stylized facts on the input sourcing strategies of these domestic firms, contrasting them with multinationals operating in the same industry. We then investigate how changes in firm input purchases from low-income countries as well as domestic market import penetration from these sources are correlated with changes in employment and wages at surviving domestic firms. Greater offshoring by domestic firms from low-income countries correlates with larger declines in manufacturing employment and in the average production workers' wage. Given the negative association, however, the estimated magnitudes are small, even for a narrow measure of offshoring that includes only intermediate goods. Import penetration of U.S. markets from these sources is associated with relatively larger changes in employment for arm's length importing firms, but has no significant correlation with employment changes at firms that do not trade. Given differences in the degree of both offshoring and import penetration, we find substantial variation across industries in the magnitude of changes associated with low-income country imports.
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  • Working Paper

    Earnings Inequality and Mobility Trends in the United States: Nationally Representative Estimates from Longitudinally Linked Employer-Employee Data

    January 2017

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-24

    Using earnings data from the U.S. Census Bureau, this paper analyzes the role of the employer in explaining the rise in earnings inequality in the United States. We first establish a consistent frame of analysis appropriate for administrative data used to study earnings inequality. We show that the trends in earnings inequality in the administrative data from the Longitudinal Employer-Household Dynamics Program are inconsistent with other data sources when we do not correct for the presence of misused SSNs. After this correction to the worker frame, we analyze how the earnings distribution has changed in the last decade. We present a decomposition of the year-to-year changes in the earnings distribution from 2004-2013. Even when simplifying these flows to movements between the bottom 20%, the middle 60% and the top 20% of the earnings distribution, about 20.5 million workers undergo a transition each year. Another 19.9 million move between employment and nonemployment. To understand the role of the firm in these transitions, we estimate a model for log earnings with additive fixed worker and firm effects using all jobs held by eligible workers from 2004-2013. We construct a composite log earnings firm component across all jobs for a worker in a given year and a non-firm component. We also construct a skill-type index. We show that, while the difference between working at a low-or middle-paying firm are relatively small, the gains from working at a top-paying firm are large. Specifically, the benefits of working for a high-paying firm are not only realized today, through higher earnings paid to the worker, but also persist through an increase in the probability of upward mobility. High-paying firms facilitate moving workers to the top of the earnings distribution and keeping them there.
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  • Working Paper

    Are firm-level idiosyncratic shocks important for U.S. aggregate volatility?

    January 2017

    Authors: Chen Yeh

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-23

    This paper quantitatively assesses whether firm-specific shocks can drive the U.S. business cycle. Firm-specific shocks to the largest firms can directly contribute to aggregate fluctuations whenever the firm size distribution is fat-tailed giving rise to the granular hypothesis. I use a novel, comprehensive data set compiled from administrative sources that contains the universe of firms and trade transactions, and find that the granular hypothesis accounts at most for 16 percent of the variation in aggregate sales growth. This is about half of that found by previous studies that imposed Gibrat's law where all firms are equally volatile regardless of their size. Using the full distribution of growth rates among U.S. firms, I find robust evidence of a negative relationship between firm-level volatility and size, i.e. the size-variance relationship. The largest firms (whose shocks drive granularity) are the least volatile under the size-variance relationship, thus their influence on aggregates is mitigated. I show that by taking this relationship into account the effect of firm-specific shocks on observed macroeconomic volatility is substantially reduced. I then investigate several plausible mechanisms that could explain the negative sizevariance relationship. After empirically ruling out some of them, I suggest a 'market power' channel in which large firms face smaller price elasticities and therefore respond less to a givensized productivity shock than small firms do. I provide direct evidence for this mechanism by estimating demand elasticities among U.S. manufactures. Lastly, I construct an analytically tractable framework that is consistent with several empirical regularities related to firm size.
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  • Working Paper

    Brighter Prospects? Assessing the Franchise Advantage using Census Data

    January 2017

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-21

    This paper uses Census micro data to examine how starting a business as a franchise rather than an independent business affects its survival and growth prospects. We first consider the factors that influence the business owner's decision about being franchised, and then use different empirical approaches to correct for selection bias in our performance analyses. We find that franchised businesses on average benefit from higher survival rates and faster initial growth relative to independent businesses. However, the effects are not large and, conditional on first-year survival, the differences basically disappear. We briefly discuss potential mechanisms to explain these results. U.S. Census Bureau. All results have been reviewed to ensure that no confidential information is disclosed. Support for this research at the Michigan Census Research Data Center is gratefully acknowledged.
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  • Working Paper

    Going Entrepreneurial? IPOs and New Firm Creation

    January 2017

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-18

    Using matched employee-employer US Census data, we examine the effect of a successful initial public offering (IPO) on employee departures to startups. Accounting for the endogeneity of a firm's choice to go public, we find strong evidence that going public induces employees to leave for start-ups. Moreover, we document that the increase in turnover following an IPO is driven by employees departing to start-ups; we find no change in the rate of employee departures for established firms. We present evidence that, following an IPO, many employees who received stock grants experience a positive shock to their wealth which allows them to better tolerate the risks associated with joining a startup or to obtain funding. Our results suggest that the recent declines in IPO activity and new firm creation in the US may be causally linked. The recent decline in IPOs means fewer workers may move to startups, decreasing overall new firm creation in the economy.
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  • Working Paper

    Bankruptcy Spillovers

    January 2017

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-16

    How do different bankruptcy approaches affect the local economy? Using U.S. Census microdata at the establishment level, we explore the spillover effects of reorganization and liquidation on geographically proximate firms. We exploit the random assignment of bankruptcy judges as a source of exogenous variation in the probability of liquidation. We find that within a five year period, employment declines substantially in the immediate neighborhood of the liquidated establishments, relative to reorganized establishments. Most of the decline is due to lower growth of existing establishments and, to a lesser extent, reduced entry into the area. The spillover effects are highly localized and concentrate in the non-tradable and service sectors, particularly when the bankrupt firm operates in the same sector. These results suggest that liquidation leads to a reduction in consumer traffic to the local area and to a decline in knowledge spillovers between firms. The evidence is inconsistent with the notion that liquidation leads to creative destruction, as the removal of bankrupt businesses does not lead to increased entry nor the revitalization of the area.
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  • Working Paper

    Slow to Hire, Quick to Fire: Employment Dynamics with Asymmetric Responses to News

    January 2017

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-15

    Concave hiring rules imply that firms respond more to bad shocks than to good shocks. They provide a united explanation for several seemingly unrelated facts about employment growth in macro and micro data. In particular, they generate countercyclical movement in both aggregate conditional 'macro' volatility and cross-sectional 'micro' volatility as well as negative skewness in the cross section and in the time series at different level of aggregation. Concave establishment level responses of employment growth to TFP shocks estimated from Census data induce significant skewness, movements in volatility and amplification of bad aggregate shocks.
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  • 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.
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  • Working Paper

    Labor Reallocation, Employment, and Earnings: Vector Autoregression Evidence

    January 2017

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-11R

    Analysis of the labor market has given increasing attention to the reallocation of jobs across employers and workers across jobs. However, whether and how job reallocation and labor market 'churn' affects the health of the labor market remains an open question. In this paper, we present time series evidence for the U.S. 1993-2013 and consider the relationship between labor reallocation, employment, and earnings using a vector autoregression (VAR) framework. We find that an increase in labor market churn by 1 percentage point predicts that, in the next quarter, employment will increase by 100 to 560 thousand jobs, lowering the unemployment rate by 0.05 to 0.25 percentage points. Job destruction does not predict future changes in employment but a 1 percentage point increase in job destruction leads to an increase in future unemployment 0.14 to 0.42 percentage points. We find mixed results on the relationship between labor reallocation rates and earnings: we nd that, especially for earnings derived from administrative records data, a 1 percentage point increase to either job destruction or churn leads to increased earnings of less than 2 percent. Results vary substantially depending on the earnings measure we use, and so the evidence inconsistent on whether productivity-enhancing aspects of churn and job destruction provide earnings gains for workers in aggregate. Our findings on churn leading to increased employment and a lower unemployment rate are consistent with models of replacement hiring and vacancy chains.
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  • Working Paper

    State Taxation and the Reallocation of Business Activity: Evidence from Establishment-Level Data

    January 2017

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-02

    Using Census microdata on multi-state firms, we estimate the impact of state taxes on business activity. For C corporations, employment and the number of establishments have corporate tax elasticities of -0.4, and do not vary with changes in personal tax rates. Pass-through entity activities show tax elasticities of -0.2 to -0.3 with respect to personal tax rates, and are invariant with respect to corporate tax rates. Reallocation of productive resources to other states drives around half the effect. Capital shows similar patterns but is 36% less elastic than labor. The responses are strongest for firms in tradable and footloose industries.
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