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Papers Containing Keywords(s): 'estimation'

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Center for Economic Studies - 33

Ordinary Least Squares - 32

Annual Survey of Manufactures - 31

Longitudinal Research Database - 30

Total Factor Productivity - 25

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 24

National Science Foundation - 22

Census of Manufactures - 22

North American Industry Classification System - 21

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 20

Current Population Survey - 19

Longitudinal Business Database - 16

Standard Industrial Classification - 16

Internal Revenue Service - 15

National Bureau of Economic Research - 15

Cobb-Douglas - 14

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 12

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 11

Metropolitan Statistical Area - 11

American Community Survey - 11

Federal Reserve Bank - 11

Cornell University - 9

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 9

Social Security Administration - 8

Census of Manufacturing Firms - 8

Economic Census - 8

Business Register - 7

University of Chicago - 7

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 7

Generalized Method of Moments - 7

Census Bureau Longitudinal Business Database - 7

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 6

Disclosure Review Board - 6

Decennial Census - 6

Quarterly Workforce Indicators - 6

Department of Economics - 6

Federal Reserve System - 6

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 6

Social Security - 5

Social Security Number - 5

Environmental Protection Agency - 5

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United States Census Bureau - 5

Department of Commerce - 5

Survey of Income and Program Participation - 4

Research Data Center - 4

AKM - 4

Journal of Labor Economics - 4

Department of Agriculture - 4

Service Annual Survey - 4

Journal of Economic Literature - 4

Department of Labor - 4

Medical Expenditure Panel Survey - 4

Boston Research Data Center - 4

Detailed Earnings Records - 3

Protected Identification Key - 3

Social and Economic Supplement - 3

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development - 3

Annual Business Survey - 3

Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages - 3

Accommodation and Food Services - 3

MIT Press - 3

Columbia University - 3

Energy Information Administration - 3

Housing and Urban Development - 3

National Research Council - 3

LEHD Program - 3

University of Maryland - 3

Economic Research Service - 3

Census Bureau Business Register - 3

American Immigration Council - 3

Center for Administrative Records Research - 3

IQR - 3

Federal Government - 3

Manufacturing Energy Consumption Survey - 3

Quarterly Journal of Economics - 3

American Economic Review - 3

Michigan Institute for Teaching and Research in Economics - 3

PAOC - 3

Pollution Abatement Costs and Expenditures - 3

New York University - 3

Permanent Plant Number - 3

estimating - 72

econometric - 36

production - 29

economist - 27

expenditure - 26

growth - 24

regression - 23

manufacturing - 20

estimator - 19

earnings - 19

demand - 19

macroeconomic - 18

statistical - 17

labor - 17

aggregate - 15

produce - 14

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data - 10

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quarterly - 10

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estimates production - 9

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economically - 9

census bureau - 8

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efficiency - 8

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manufacturer - 7

regressing - 7

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productivity measures - 7

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agency - 7

population - 6

innovation - 6

productivity dynamics - 6

estimates employment - 6

employee - 6

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elasticity - 6

data census - 6

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census research - 5

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plant productivity - 5

autoregressive - 5

estimates productivity - 5

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wages productivity - 4

housing - 4

analysis - 4

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econometrically - 4

disclosure - 4

factor productivity - 4

productivity estimates - 4

resident - 4

exogeneity - 4

industries estimate - 4

impact - 4

worker - 4

wage changes - 4

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earn - 4

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regulation - 4

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ssa - 3

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population survey - 3

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inventory - 3

patent - 3

patenting - 3

employment estimates - 3

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forecast - 3

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indicator - 3

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aggregate productivity - 3

manufacturing productivity - 3

confidentiality - 3

privacy - 3

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economic census - 3

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larger firms - 3

wage regressions - 3

public - 3

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financial - 3

investing - 3

consumption - 3

emission - 3

employment data - 3

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disadvantaged - 3

fiscal - 3

enrollment - 3

household income - 3

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tax - 3

compensation - 3

regulatory - 3

pollution - 3

environmental regulation - 3

epa - 3

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pollutant - 3

merger - 3

labor productivity - 3

productivity wage - 3

substitute - 3

productivity plants - 3

labor statistics - 3

capital - 3

employment dynamics - 3

layoff - 3

profitability - 3

employing - 3

regulation productivity - 3

longitudinal - 3

observed productivity - 3

analysis productivity - 3

Viewing papers 51 through 60 of 91


  • Working Paper

    Estimating the "True" Cost of Job Loss: Evidence Using Matched Data from Califormia 1991-2000

    June 2009

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-09-14

    Estimates of the cost of job displacement from survey and administrative data differ markedly. This paper uses a unique match of data between the Displaced Worker Survey (DWS) and administrative wage records from California to examine the sources of this discrepancy. When we use similar estimation methods and account for measurement error in survey wages correlated with worker demographics, estimates of earnings losses at displacement are similar from both datasets and significantly larger than those based on the DWS alone. Also correcting for measurement errors in reported displacements suggests both sources of such estimates may yield lower bounds for the true cost of displacement.
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  • Working Paper

    Measuring Labor Earnings Inequality Using Public-Use March Current Population Survey Data: The Value of Including Variances and Cell Means When Imputing Topcoded Values

    November 2008

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-08-38

    Using the Census Bureau's internal March Current Population Surveys (CPS) file, we construct and make available variances and cell means for all topcoded income values in the publicuse version of these data. We then provide a procedure that allows researchers with access only to the public-use March CPS data to take advantage of this added information when imputing its topcoded income values. As an example of its value we show how our new procedure improves on existing imputation methods in the labor earnings inequality literature.
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  • Working Paper

    Linking Investment Spikes and Productivity Growth: U.S. Food Manufacturing Industry

    October 2008

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-08-36

    We investigate the relationship between productivity growth and investment spikes using Census Bureau's plant-level data set for the U.S. food manufacturing industry. We find that productivity growth increases after investment spikes suggesting an efficiency gain or plants' learning effect. However, efficiency and the learning period associated with investment spikes differ among plants' productivity quartile ranks implying the differences in the plants' investment types such as expansionary, replacement or retooling. We find evidence of both convex and non-convex types of adjustment costs where lumpy plant-level investments suggest the possibility of non-convex adjustment costs and hazard estimation results suggest the possibility of convex adjustment costs. The downward sloping hazard can be due to the unobserved heterogeneity across plants such as plants' idiosyncratic obsolescence caused by different R&D capabilities and implies the existence of convex adjustment costs. Food plants frequently invest during their first few years of operation and high productivity plants postpone investing due to high fixed costs.
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  • Working Paper

    The Going Public Decision and the Product Market

    July 2008

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-08-20

    At what point in a firm's life should it go public? How do a firm's ex ante product market characteristics relate to its going public decision? Further, what are the implications of a firm going public on its post-IPO operating and product market performance? In this paper, we answer the above questions by conducting the first large sample study of the going public decisions of U.S. firms in the literature. We use the Longitudinal Research Database (LRD) of the U.S. Census Bureau, which covers the entire universe of private and public U.S. manufacturing firms. Our findings can be summarized as follows. First, a private firm's product market characteristics (market share, competition, capital intensity, cash flow riskiness) significantly affect its likelihood of going public. Second, private firms facing less information asymmetry and those with projects that are cheaper for outsiders to evaluate are more likely to go public (consistent with Chemmanur and Fulghieri (1999)). Third, IPOs of firms occur at the peak of their productivity cycle (consistent with Clementi (2002)): the dynamics of total factor productivity (TFP) and sales growth exhibit an inverted U-shaped pattern. Finally, sales, capital expenditures, and other performance variables exhibit a consistently increasing pattern over the years before and after the IPO. The last two findings are consistent with the widely documented post-IPO operating underperformance of firms being due to the real investment effects of a firm going public, and inconsistent with underperformance being solely due to earnings management immediately prior to the IPO.
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  • Working Paper

    Using the P90/P10 Index to Measure U.S. Inequality Trends with Current Population Survey Data: A View From Inside the Census Bureau Vaults

    June 2007

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-07-17

    The March Current Population Survey (CPS) is the primary data source for estimation of levels and trends in labor earnings and income inequality in the USA. Time-inconsistency problems related to top coding in theses data have led many researchers to use the ratio of the 90th and 10th percentiles of these distributions (P90/P10) rather than a more traditional summary measure of inequality. With access to public use and restricted-access internal CPS data, and bounding methods, we show that using P90/P10 does not completely obviate time inconsistency problems, especially for household income inequality trends. Using internal data, we create consistent cell mean values for all top-coded public use values that, when used with public use data, closely track inequality trends in labor earnings and household income using internal data. But estimates of longer-term inequality trends with these corrected data based on P90/P10 differ from those based on the Gini coefficient. The choice of inequality measure matters.
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  • Working Paper

    Identifying Individual and Group Effects in the Presence of Sorting: A Neighborhood Effects Application

    January 2007

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-07-03

    Researchers have long recognized that the non-random sorting of individuals into groups generates correlation between individual and group attributes that is likely to bias naive estimates of both individual and group effects. This paper proposes a non-parametric strategy for identifying these effects in a model that allows for both individual and group unobservables, applying this strategy to the estimation of neighborhood effects on labor market outcomes. The first part of this strategy is guided by a robust feature of the equilibrium in the canonical vertical sorting model of Epple and Platt (1998), that there is a monotonic relationship between neighborhood housing prices and neighborhood quality. This implies that under certain conditions a non-parametric function of neighborhood housing prices serves as a suitable control function for the neighborhood unobservable in the labor market outcome regression. This control function converts the problem to a model with one unobservable so that traditional instrumental variables solutions may be applied. In our application, we instrument for each individual.s observed neighborhood attributes with the average neighborhood attributes of a set of observationally identical individuals. The neighborhood effects model is estimated using confidential microdata from the 1990 Decennial Census for the Boston MSA. The results imply that the direct effects of geographic proximity to jobs, neighborhood poverty rates, and average neighborhood education are substantially larger than the conditional correlations identified using OLS, although the net effect of neighborhood quality on labor market outcomes remains small. These findings are robust across a wide variety of specifications and robustness checks.
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  • Working Paper

    Using the MEPS-IC to Study Retiree Health Insurance

    April 2006

    Authors: Alice Zawacki

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-06-13

    This paper discusses using the restricted-access Medical Expenditure Panel Survey- Insurance Component (MEPS-IC) to study employer-sponsored retiree health insurance (RHI). This topic is particularly interesting given current events such as the aging of baby boomers, rising health care costs, new prescription drug coverage under Medicare, and changes in accounting standards for reporting liabilities related to RHI offerings. Consequently, employers are grappling with an aging workforce, evaluating Medicare subsidies to employers for offering retiree drug plans, facing rising premium costs as a result of rising health care costs, and trying to show profitability on financial reports. This paper provides technical information on using the MEPS-IC to study RHI and points out data issues with some of the measures in the database. Descriptive statistics are provided to illustrate the types of retiree estimates possible using the MEPS-IC and to show some of the trends in this subject area. Not surprising, these estimates show that employer offers of RHI have declined, greater numbers of retirees are enrolling in these plans, and expenditures for employer-sponsored RHI have been rising.
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  • Working Paper

    Wage Dispersion, Compensation Policy and the Role of Firms

    November 2005

    Authors: Bryce Stephens

    Working Paper Number:

    tp-2005-04

    Empirical work in economics stresses the importance of unobserved firm- and person-level characteristics in the determination of wages, finding that these unobserved components account for the overwhelming majority of variation in wages. However, little is known about the mechanisms sustaining these wage di'er- entials. This paper attempts to demystify the firm-side of the puzzle by developing a statistical model that enriches the role that firms play in wage determination, allowing firms to influence both average wages as well as the returns to observable worker characteristics. I exploit the hierarchical nature of a unique employer-employee linked dataset for the United States, estimating a multilevel statistical model of earnings that accounts for firm-specific deviations in average wages as well as the returns to components of human capital - race, gender, education, and experience - while also controlling for person-level heterogeneity in earnings. These idiosyncratic prices reflect one aspect of firm compensation policy; another, and more novel aspect, is the unstructured characterization of the covariance of these prices across firms. I estimate the model's variance parameters using Restricted (or Residual) Maximum Likelihood tech- niques. Results suggest that there is significant variation in the returns to worker characteristics across firms. First, estimates of the parameters of the covariance matrix of firm-specific returns are statistically significant. Firms that tend to pay higher average wages also tend to pay higher than average returns to worker characteristics; firms that tend to reward highly the human capital of men also highly reward the human capital of women. For instance, the correlation between the firm-specific returns to education for men and women is 0.57. Second, the firm-specific returns account for roughly 9% of the variation in wages - approximately 50% of the variation in wages explained by firm-specific intercepts alone. The inclusion of firm-specific returns ties variation in wages, otherwise attributable to firm-specific intercepts, to observable components of human capital.
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  • Working Paper

    Networking Off Madison Avenue

    October 2005

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-05-15

    This paper examines the effect on productivity of having more near advertising agency neighbors and hence better opportunities for meetings and exchange within Manhattan. We will show that there is extremely rapid spatial decay in the benefits of having more near neighbors even in the close quarters of southern Manhattan, a finding that is new to the empirical literature and indicates our understanding of scale externalities is still very limited. The finding indicates that having a high density of commercial establishments is important in enhancing local productivity, an issue in Lucas and Rossi-Hansberg (2002), where within business district spatial decay of spillovers plays a key role. We will argue also that in Manhattan advertising agencies trade-off the higher rent costs of being in bigger clusters nearer 'centers of action', against the lower rent costs of operating on the 'fringes' away from high concentrations of other agencies. Introducing the idea of trade-offs immediately suggests heterogeneity is involved. We will show that higher quality agencies are the ones willing to pay more rent to locate in greater size clusters, specifically because they benefit more from networking. While all this is an exploration of neighborhood and networking externalities, the findings relate to the economic anatomy of large metro areas like New Yorkthe nature of their buzz.
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  • Working Paper

    The Industry Life-Cycle of the Size Distribution of Firms

    July 2005

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-05-10

    This paper analyzes the evolution of the distributions of output and employment across firms in U.S. manufacturing industries from 1963 until 1997. The evolutions of the employment and output distributions differ, but display strong inter-industry regularities, including that the nature of the evolution depends whether the industry is experiencing growth, shakeout, maturity, or decline. The observed patterns have implications for theories of industry dynamics and evolution.
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