CREAT: Census Research Exploration and Analysis Tool

Papers Containing Keywords(s): 'resident'

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

American Community Survey - 49

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 29

Decennial Census - 28

2010 Census - 23

Protected Identification Key - 21

Current Population Survey - 21

Internal Revenue Service - 21

Metropolitan Statistical Area - 21

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 20

Disclosure Review Board - 18

Social Security Administration - 18

Social Security Number - 18

Center for Economic Studies - 17

Ordinary Least Squares - 16

National Science Foundation - 15

Housing and Urban Development - 13

Department of Housing and Urban Development - 13

Master Address File - 13

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 13

Research Data Center - 13

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 12

Social Security - 12

American Housing Survey - 12

Individual Taxpayer Identification Numbers - 11

Person Validation System - 11

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 10

Survey of Income and Program Participation - 10

Personally Identifiable Information - 9

Federal Reserve Bank - 8

Person Identification Validation System - 8

Special Sworn Status - 7

1940 Census - 7

Office of Management and Budget - 7

Census Numident - 6

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 6

Department of Agriculture - 6

Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program - 6

Postal Service - 6

Temporary Assistance for Needy Families - 6

Computer Assisted Personal Interview - 6

Administrative Records - 6

National Bureau of Economic Research - 6

Core Based Statistical Area - 5

NUMIDENT - 5

Census Bureau Master Address File - 5

Adjusted Gross Income - 5

Citizenship and Immigration Services - 5

Indian Health Service - 5

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 5

Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages - 5

PSID - 5

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 5

Economic Research Service - 4

National Institute on Aging - 4

COVID-19 - 4

Integrated Public Use Microdata Series - 4

PIKed - 4

New York University - 4

Supreme Court - 4

Some Other Race - 4

Computer Assisted Telephone Interviews and Computer Assisted Personal Interviews - 4

CATI - 4

Cornell Institute for Social and Economic Research - 4

Census Edited File - 4

Consolidated Metropolitan Statistical Areas - 4

General Accounting Office - 4

Public Use Micro Sample - 4

Longitudinal Business Database - 4

Federal Reserve System - 3

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention - 3

National Institutes of Health - 3

Earned Income Tax Credit - 3

Data Management System - 3

Geographic Information Systems - 3

American Economic Association - 3

MTO - 3

MWTP - 3

Employer Identification Numbers - 3

North American Industry Classification System - 3

Customs and Border Protection - 3

Census Household Composition Key - 3

Department of Justice - 3

Department of Homeland Security - 3

Medicaid Services - 3

Centers for Medicare - 3

Urban Institute - 3

County Business Patterns - 3

National Opinion Research Center - 3

Unemployment Insurance - 3

Quarterly Workforce Indicators - 3

Department of Economics - 3

Center for Administrative Records Research and Applications - 3

Economic Census - 3

Annual Survey of Manufactures - 3

population - 49

neighborhood - 47

housing - 41

residential - 39

residence - 38

metropolitan - 36

ethnicity - 27

disadvantaged - 22

poverty - 20

ethnic - 20

rural - 20

disparity - 20

census data - 20

hispanic - 19

racial - 19

migrant - 19

urban - 19

respondent - 18

minority - 18

migration - 18

segregation - 18

immigrant - 17

survey - 17

socioeconomic - 16

census bureau - 16

reside - 16

race - 15

neighbor - 15

rent - 13

city - 13

citizen - 13

suburb - 13

state - 13

white - 12

geographic - 12

immigration - 12

renter - 11

black - 11

segregated - 11

community - 11

town - 10

migrating - 10

data census - 10

employ - 10

home - 10

census responses - 10

statistical - 9

income neighborhoods - 9

relocation - 9

migrate - 9

mobility - 9

moving - 9

residing - 9

relocate - 9

geographically - 9

data - 9

estimating - 9

use census - 8

residential segregation - 8

prevalence - 8

suburbanization - 8

suburban - 8

amenity - 8

census survey - 8

recession - 8

workforce - 8

2010 census - 8

census research - 8

homeowner - 7

relocating - 7

house - 7

employed - 7

neighborhood income - 6

urbanization - 6

health - 6

area - 6

citizenship - 6

microdata - 6

unemployed - 6

labor - 6

discrimination - 6

census 2020 - 6

heterogeneity - 5

midwest - 5

assimilation - 5

urbanized - 5

enrollment - 5

geography - 5

census records - 5

environmental - 5

locality - 5

census household - 5

federal - 5

district - 5

census use - 5

welfare - 4

country - 4

impact - 4

worker - 4

affluent - 4

imputation - 4

record - 4

percentile - 4

estimation - 4

individuals census - 4

economically - 4

medicaid - 4

social - 4

race census - 4

expenditure - 4

demand - 4

job - 4

economic census - 4

immigrant population - 3

benefit - 3

eligibility - 3

sociology - 3

aging - 3

report - 3

linked census - 3

census linked - 3

endogeneity - 3

subsidized - 3

coverage - 3

unobserved - 3

sampling - 3

mexican - 3

latino - 3

pollution - 3

pollutant - 3

disclosure - 3

earnings - 3

regional - 3

crime - 3

local economic - 3

poorer - 3

research census - 3

statistician - 3

records census - 3

datasets - 3

assessed - 3

work census - 3

census employment - 3

commute - 3

native - 3

econometric - 3

incorporated - 3

Viewing papers 71 through 80 of 90


  • Working Paper

    Assessing the Incidence and Efficiency of a Prominent Place Based Policy

    February 2011

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-11-07

    This paper empirically assesses the incidence and efficiency of Round I of the federal urban Empowerment Zone (EZ) program using confidential microdata from the Decennial Census and the Longitudinal Business Database. Using rejected and future applicants to the EZ program as controls, we find that EZ designation substantially increased employment in zone neighborhoods and generated wage increases for local workers without corresponding increases in population or the local cost of living. The results suggest the efficiency costs of first Round EZs were relatively small.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Local Manufacturing Establishments and the Earnings of Manufacturing Workers: Insights from Matched Employer-Employee Data

    January 2011

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-11-01

    We analyze the earnings determination process of more than 400,000 rural manufacturing workers in 12 selected U.S. states. Our theoretical motivation stems from an ongoing interest in the benefits of locally oriented business establishments. In this case, we distinguish manufacturing concerns that are single establishments in one rural place from branch plants that are part of larger multi-establishment enterprises. Our data permit us to introduce attributes of both workers and their employing firms into earnings determination models. For manufacturing workers in 'micropolitan' rural counties, we find that working for a local (single) establishment has a positive impact on annual earnings. However, tenure with a firm returns more earnings for workers in non-local manufacturing facilities. Conversely, for manufacturing workers in 'noncore' or rural areas without urban cores, we find that working for a local establishment has a negative effect on earnings. But, job tenure pays off more when working for a local establishment.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Migration Decisions in Arctic Alaska: Empirical Evidence of the Stepping Stones Hypothesis

    December 2010

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-10-41

    This paper explores hypotheses of hierarchical migration using data from the Alaskan Arctic. We focus on migration of I'upiat people, who are indigenous to the region, and explore the role of income, harvests of subsistence resources, and other place characteristics in migration decisions. To test related hypotheses we use confidential micro-data from the US Census Bureau's 2000 Decennial Census of Population and Income. Using predicted earnings and subsistence along with place invariant characteristics we generate migration probabilities using a mixed multinomial and conditional logit model. Our results support stepwise migration patterns, both up and down an urban and rural hierarchy. At the same time, we also identify differences between men and women, and we find mixed effects of place amenities and predicted earnings.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    How Low Income Neighborhoods Change: Entry, Exit and Enhancement

    September 2010

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-10-19

    This paper examines whether the economic gains experienced by low-income neighborhoods in the 1990s followed patterns of classic gentrification (as frequently assumed) ' that is, through the in migration of higher income white, households, and out migration (or displacement) of the original lower income, usually minority residents, spurring racial transition in the process. Using the internal Census version of the American Housing Survey, we find no evidence of heightened displacement, even among the most vulnerable, original residents. While the entrance of higher income households was an important source of income gains, original residents also experienced differential gains in income, and reported greater increases in their satisfaction with their neighborhood than found in other low-income neighborhoods. Finally, gaining neighborhoods were able to avoid the losses of white households that non-gaining low income tracts experienced, and were thereby more racially stable rather than less.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Who Moves to Mixed-Income Neighborhoods?

    August 2010

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-10-18

    This paper uses confidential Census data, specifically the 1990 and 2000 Census Long Form data, to study the income dispersion of recent cohorts of migrants to mixed-income neighborhoods. If recent in-migrants to mixed-income neighborhoods exhibit high levels of income heterogeneity, this is consistent with stable mixed-income neighborhoods. If, however, mixed-income neighborhoods are comprised of older homogeneous lower-income (higher income) cohorts combined with newer homogeneous higher-income (lower-income) cohorts, this is consistent with neighborhood transition. Our results indicate that neighborhoods with high levels of income dispersion do in fact attract a much more heterogeneous set of in-migrants, particularly from the tails of the income distribution, but that income heterogeneity does tend to erode over time. Our results also suggest that the residents of mixed-income neighborhoods may be less heterogeneous with respect to lifetime income.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Wage Premia in Employment Clusters: Agglomeration or Worker Heterogeneity?

    February 2010

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-10-04

    This paper tests whether the correlation between wages and the spatial concentration of employment can be explained by unobserved worker productivity differences. Residential location is used as a proxy for a worker's unobserved productivity, and average workplace commute time is used to test whether location based productivity differences are compensated away by longer commutes. Analyses using confidential data from the 2000 Decennial Census Long Form find that the agglomeration estimates are robust to comparisons within residential location and that the estimates do not persist after controlling for commutes suggesting that the productivity differences across locations are due to agglomeration, rather than productivity differences across individuals.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Who Gentrifies Low Income Neighborhoods?

    January 2008

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-08-02

    This paper uses confidential Census data, specifically the 1990 and 2000 Census Long- Form data, to study the demographic processes underlying the gentrification of low income urban neighborhoods during the 1990's. In contrast to previous studies, the analysis is conducted at the more refined census-tract level with a narrower definition of gentrification and more narrowly defined comparison neighborhoods. The analysis is also richly disaggregated by demographic characteristic, uncovering differential patterns by race, education, age and family structure that would not have emerged in the more aggregate analysis in previous studies. The results provide little evidence of displacement of low-income non-white households in gentrifying neighborhoods. The bulk of the income gains in gentrifying neighborhoods are attributed to white college graduates and black high school graduates. It is the disproportionate in-migration of the former and the disproportionate retention and income gains of the latter that appear to be the main engines of gentrification.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Resident Perceptions of Crime: How Similar are They to Official Crime Rates?

    March 2007

    Authors: John Hipp

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-07-10

    This study compares the relationship between official crime rates and residents' perceptions of crime in census tracts. Employing a unique dataset that links household level data from the American Housing Survey metro samples over a period of 25 years (1976-2000) with official crime rate data for census tracts in selected cities during selected years, this large sample provides considerable ability to generalize the findings. I find that residents' perception of crime is most strongly related to official rates of tract violent crime. Models simultaneously taking into account both violent and property crime consistently found that property crime actually has a negative effect on perceived crime. Among types of violent crime, the robbery rate is consistently related to higher levels of perceived crime in the tract, whereas it appears a structural shift occurred in the mid-1980s in which aggravated assault and murder rates now impact perceptions of crime, even when taking into account the robbery rate.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • 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.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Stability and Change in Individual Determinants of Migration: Evidence from 1985-1990 and 1995 to 2000

    November 2006

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-06-27

    In this paper, we compare the reliability of migration estimates from two rather different macroeconomic periods in recent U.S. history. One of these periods, 1985-1990 coincides with the culmination of a vast industrial restructuring which saw a significant decline in manufacturing employment. The other period, 1995-2000, encompasses a time of robust economic growth and tight labor markets driven by productivity gains associated with new technologies. Our interest here is in the stability of common individual-level predictors of migration in these rather disparate macroeconomic contexts. Using confidential internal versions of the 1990 and 2000 Census long-form data, we estimate logistic models of the likelihood that individuals will migrate. The geographic detail in the internal Census data permits us to measure migration in ways that are not possible with public-domain Census data on persons. We develop migration definitions that distinguish between local residential mobility likely associated with life course transitions from migration out of the labor market area that may be driven more by employment and other socioeconomic considerations. Using logistic modeling, we find that the same individual attributes predict migration reasonably well during both periods. We also compute some illustrative probabilities of migration that show temporal stability in migration predictors could be lessened by certain changes in population composition.
    View Full Paper PDF