CREAT: Census Research Exploration and Analysis Tool

Papers Containing Keywords(s): 'patent'

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 - 36

National Science Foundation - 29

North American Industry Classification System - 28

Patent and Trademark Office - 27

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 23

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 23

Disclosure Review Board - 17

Center for Economic Studies - 15

Business Register - 15

Survey of Industrial Research and Development - 14

National Bureau of Economic Research - 13

Business Research and Development and Innovation Survey - 13

Total Factor Productivity - 12

Business Dynamics Statistics - 11

Economic Census - 11

Annual Survey of Manufactures - 11

Ordinary Least Squares - 11

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 11

Standard Industrial Classification - 10

Census Bureau Business Register - 10

Business R&D and Innovation Survey - 10

National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics - 9

Federal Reserve Bank - 9

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development - 9

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 8

Census of Manufactures - 8

Employer Identification Numbers - 8

Internal Revenue Service - 7

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 7

Census of Manufacturing Firms - 7

Cornell Institute for Social and Economic Research - 7

Citizenship and Immigration Services - 7

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 7

Service Annual Survey - 7

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 7

Longitudinal Research Database - 7

IBM - 6

Annual Business Survey - 6

Metropolitan Statistical Area - 5

Annual Survey of Entrepreneurs - 5

National Research Council - 5

University of Chicago - 5

Survey of Manufacturing Technology - 4

Initial Public Offering - 4

Current Population Survey - 4

Department of Homeland Security - 4

Technical Services - 4

County Business Patterns - 4

Survey of Business Owners - 4

Research Data Center - 4

World Bank - 4

Social Security - 4

Research and Development - 4

Protected Identification Key - 4

European Union - 4

Review of Economics and Statistics - 4

Journal of Political Economy - 4

American Economic Review - 4

Census Bureau Longitudinal Business Database - 3

Supreme Court - 3

University of California - 3

Census Bureau Business Dynamics Statistics - 3

Cobb-Douglas - 3

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 3

Small Business Administration - 3

Department of Energy - 3

University of Michigan - 3

Harvard Business School - 3

University of Maryland - 3

Financial, Insurance and Real Estate Industries - 3

Longitudinal Firm Trade Transactions Database - 3

American Community Survey - 3

Department of Economics - 3

National Center for Health Statistics - 3

Person Validation System - 3

Columbia University - 3

European Commission - 3

Company Organization Survey - 3

Customs and Border Protection - 3

Information and Communication Technology Survey - 3

Michigan Institute for Teaching and Research in Economics - 3

Employer Characteristics File - 3

Limited Liability Company - 3

Integrated Longitudinal Business Database - 3

North American Industry Classi - 3

International Standard Industrial Classification - 3

MIT Press - 3

University of California Los Angeles - 3

Foreign Direct Investment - 3

Kauffman Foundation - 3

Viewing papers 51 through 57 of 57


  • Working Paper

    Measuring U.S. Innovative Activity

    March 2007

    Authors: B.K. Atrostic

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-07-11

    Innovation has long been credited as a leading source of economic strength and vitality in the United States because it leads to new goods and services and increases productivity, leading to better living standards. Better measures of innovative activities'activities including but not limited to innovation alone'could improve what we know about the sources of productivity and economic growth. The U.S. Census Bureau either currently collects, or has collected, data on some measures of innovative activities, such as the diffusion of innovations and technologies, human and organizational capital, entrepreneurship and other worker and firm characteristics, and the entry and exit of businesses, that research shows affect productivity and other measures of economic performance. But developing an understanding of how those effects work requires more than just measures of innovative activity. It also requires solid statistical information about core measures of the economy: that is, comprehensive coverage of all industries, including improved measures of output and sales and additional information on inputs and purchased materials at the micro (enterprise) level for the same economic unit over time (so the effects can be measured). Filling gaps in core data would allow us to rule out the possibility that a measure of innovative activity merely proxies for something that is omitted from or measured poorly in the core data, provide more information about innovative activities, and strengthen our ability to evaluate the performance of the entire economy. These gaps can be filled by better integrating existing data and by more structured collections of new data.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    The Industry R&D Survey: Patent Database Link Project

    November 2006

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-06-28

    This paper details the construction of a firm-year panel dataset combining the NBER Patent Dataset with the Industry R&D Survey conducted by the Census Bureau and National Science Foundation. The developed platform offers an unprecedented view of the R&D-to-patenting innovation process and a close analysis of the strengths and limitations of the Industry R&D Survey. The files are linked through a name-matching algorithm customized for uniting the firm names to which patents are assigned with the firm names in Census Bureau's SSEL business registry. Through the Census Bureau's file structure, this R&D platform can be linked to the operating performances of each firm's establishments, further facilitating innovation-to-productivity studies.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Innovation and Regulation in the Pesticide Industry

    December 1995

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-95-14

    This paper examines the hypothesis that regulation negatively affects pesticide innovation, causes pesticide companies to introduce more harmful pesticides, and discourages firms from developing pesticides for minor crop markets. The results confirm that pesticide regulation adversely affects innovation and discourages firms from developing pesticides for minor crop markets. Contrary to the hypothesis, however, regulation encourages firms to develop less toxic pesticides. Estimates suggest that it requires about $29 million in industry expenditures on health and environmental testing to affect the toxicity of one new pesticide.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    The Span of the Effect of R&D in the Firm and Industry

    May 1994

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-94-07

    Previous studies have found that the firm's own research and spillovers of research by related firms increase firm productivity. In contrast, in this paper we explore the impact of firm R&D on the productivity of its individual plants. We carry out this investigation of within firm R&D effects using a unique set of Census data. The data, which are from the chemicals industry, are a match of plant level productivity and other characteristics with firm level data on R&D of the parent company, cross-classified by location and applied product field. We explore three aspects of the span of effect of the firm's R&D: (i), the degree to which its R&D is "public" across plants; (ii), the extent of its localization in geographic space, and (iii), the breadth of its relevance outside the applied product area in which it is classified. We find that (i), firm R&D acts more like a private input which is strongly amortized by the number of plants in the firm; (ii), firm R&D is geographically localized, and exerts greater influence on productivity when it is conducted nearer to the plant; and (iii), firm R&D in a given applied product area is of limited relevance to plants producing outside that product area. Moreover, we find that while geographic localization remains significant, it diminishes over time. This trend is consistent with the effect of improved telecommunications on increased information flows within organizations. Finally, we consider spillovers of R&D from the rest of industry, finding that the marginal product of industry R&D on plant productivity, though positive and significant, is far smaller than the marginal product of parent firm's R&D.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Academic Science, Industrial R&D, and the Growth of Inputs

    January 1993

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-93-01

    This paper is a theoretical and empirical investigation of the connection between science, R&D, and the growth of capital. Studies of high technology industries and recent labor studies agree in assigning a large role to science and technology in the growth of human and physical capital, although direct tests of these relationships have not been carried out. This paper builds on the search approach to R&D of Evenson and Kislev (1976) to unravel the complex interactions between science, R&D, and factor markets suggested by these studies. In our theory lagged science increases the returns to R&D, so that scientific advance later feeds into growth of R&D. In turn, product quality improvements and price declines lead to the growth of industry by shifting out new product demand, perhaps at the expense of traditional industries. All this tends to be in favor of the human and physical capital used intensively by high technology industries. This is the source of the factor bias which is implicit in the growth of capital per head. Our empirical work overwhelmingly supports the contention that growth of labor skills and physical capital are linked to science and R&D. It also supports the strong sequencing of events that is a crucial feature of our model, first from science to R&D, and later to output and factor markets.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Technology Usage in U.S. Manufacturing Industries: New Evidence from the Survey of Manufacturing Technology

    October 1991

    Authors: Timothy Dunne

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-91-07

    Using a new dataset on technology usage in U.S. manufacturing plants, this paper describes how technology usage varies by plant and firm characteristics. The paper extends the previous literature in three important ways. First, it examines a wide range of relatively new technologies. Second, the paper uses a much larger and more representative set of firms and establishments than previous studies. Finally, the paper explores the role of firm R&D expenditures in the process of technology adoption. The main findings indicate that larger plants more readily use new technologies, plants owned by firms with high R&D-to-sales ratios adopt technologies more rapidly, and the relationship between plant age and technology usage is relatively weak.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    The Structure Of Production Technology Productivity And Aggregation Effects

    August 1991

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-91-05

    This is a sequel to an earlier paper by the author, Dhrymes (1990). Using the LRD sample, that paper examined the adequacy of the functional form specifications commonly employed in the literature of US Manufacturing production relations. The "universe" of the investigation was the three digit product group; the basic unit of observation was the plant; the sample consisted of all "large" plants, defined by the criterion that they employ 250 or more workers. The study encompassed three digit product groups in industries 35, 36 and 38, over the period 1972-1986, and reached one major conclusion: if one were to judge the adequacy of a given specification by the parametric compatibility of the estimates of the same parameters, as derived from the various implications of each specification, then the three most popular (production function) specifications, Cobb-Douglas, CES and Translog all fell very wide of the mark. The current paper focuses the investigation on two digit industries (but retains the plant as the basic unit of observation), i.e., our sample consists of all "large" manufacturing plants, in each of Industry 35, 36 and 38, over the period 1972-1986. It first replicates the approach of the earlier paper; the results are basically of the same genre, and for that reason are not reported herein. Second, it examines the extent to which increasing returns to scale characterize production at the two digit level; it is established that returns to scale at the mean, in the case of the translog production function are almost identical to those obtained with the Cobb-Douglas function.1 Finally, it examines the robustness and characteristics of measures of productivity, obtained in the context of an econometric formulation and those obtained by the method of what may be thought of as the "Solow Residual" and generally designated as Total Factor Productivity (TFP). The major finding here is that while there are some differences in productivity behavior as established by these two procedures, by far more important is the aggregation sensitivity of productivity measures. Thus, in the context of a pooled sample, introduction of time effects (generally thought to refer to productivity shifts) are of very marginal consequence. On the other hand, the introduction of four digit industry effects is of appreciable consequence, and this phenomenon is universal, i.e., it is present in industry 35, 36 as well as 38. The suggestion that aggregate productivity behavior may be largely, or partly, an aggregation phenomenon is certainly not a part of the established literature. Another persistent phenomenon uncovered is the extent to which productivity measures for individual plants are volatile, while two digit aggregate measures appear to be stable. These findings clearly calls for further investigation.
    View Full Paper PDF