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Papers Containing Tag(s): 'Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board'

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American Community Survey - 133

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 127

Disclosure Review Board - 125

North American Industry Classification System - 119

Longitudinal Business Database - 110

Internal Revenue Service - 110

Protected Identification Key - 88

Current Population Survey - 78

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 78

Social Security Administration - 77

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 67

Center for Economic Studies - 66

Social Security Number - 62

National Science Foundation - 62

Ordinary Least Squares - 59

Decennial Census - 58

Employer Identification Numbers - 56

Social Security - 52

National Bureau of Economic Research - 44

Business Register - 43

Person Validation System - 41

W-2 - 41

Economic Census - 35

Federal Reserve Bank - 35

2010 Census - 33

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 32

Business Dynamics Statistics - 31

Census Bureau Business Register - 29

Annual Survey of Manufactures - 28

Census Numident - 28

Survey of Income and Program Participation - 27

Total Factor Productivity - 26

Department of Housing and Urban Development - 26

Standard Industrial Classification - 25

Person Identification Validation System - 24

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 24

Census of Manufacturing Firms - 23

Master Address File - 23

Census of Manufactures - 22

Personally Identifiable Information - 22

Adjusted Gross Income - 22

Office of Management and Budget - 22

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Federal Reserve System - 22

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Housing and Urban Development - 21

County Business Patterns - 21

Annual Business Survey - 20

Department of Homeland Security - 20

Department of Economics - 19

Longitudinal Firm Trade Transactions Database - 19

Quarterly Workforce Indicators - 18

Research Data Center - 18

Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages - 17

Special Sworn Status - 17

Unemployment Insurance - 17

Survey of Business Owners - 17

Accommodation and Food Services - 17

National Center for Health Statistics - 16

Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program - 16

National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics - 16

Earned Income Tax Credit - 16

Cobb-Douglas - 16

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 16

Data Management System - 16

Herfindahl Hirschman Index - 16

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development - 15

Individual Characteristics File - 15

Cornell University - 15

University of Maryland - 15

PSID - 15

Patent and Trademark Office - 15

Individual Taxpayer Identification Numbers - 15

Department of Labor - 14

1940 Census - 14

Technical Services - 14

International Trade Research Report - 14

Census Household Composition Key - 14

National Institute on Aging - 13

Census Bureau Longitudinal Business Database - 13

Indian Health Service - 13

Integrated Public Use Microdata Series - 12

Service Annual Survey - 12

General Accounting Office - 12

ASEC - 12

National Institutes of Health - 12

Small Business Administration - 12

Census Edited File - 11

Some Other Race - 11

Detailed Earnings Records - 11

Board of Governors - 11

Postal Service - 11

University of Chicago - 11

Environmental Protection Agency - 11

Retail Trade - 11

American Economic Association - 11

Department of Education - 10

Citizenship and Immigration Services - 10

Harmonized System - 10

National Longitudinal Survey of Youth - 10

AKM - 10

Arts, Entertainment - 10

Generalized Method of Moments - 10

Disability Insurance - 10

SSA Numident - 10

Temporary Assistance for Needy Families - 10

New York University - 10

Cornell Institute for Social and Economic Research - 10

National Employer Survey - 9

United States Census Bureau - 9

MAFID - 9

World Trade Organization - 9

American Housing Survey - 9

University of Michigan - 9

Supreme Court - 9

NBER Summer Institute - 9

Wholesale Trade - 9

Securities and Exchange Commission - 9

Census Bureau Person Identification Validation System - 9

Annual Survey of Entrepreneurs - 9

MAF-ARF - 9

Core Based Statistical Area - 9

IQR - 8

Social and Economic Supplement - 8

Russell Sage Foundation - 8

Customs and Border Protection - 8

European Union - 8

Department of Agriculture - 8

Characteristics of Business Owners - 8

Health Care and Social Assistance - 8

Energy Information Administration - 8

Sloan Foundation - 8

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 8

Master Beneficiary Record - 8

Computer Assisted Personal Interview - 8

Social Science Research Institute - 8

Indian Housing Information Center - 8

Pew Research Center - 8

Standard Occupational Classification - 7

Occupational Employment Statistics - 7

Integrated Longitudinal Business Database - 7

Nonemployer Statistics - 7

Health and Retirement Study - 7

NUMIDENT - 7

Stanford University - 7

Federal Register - 7

Business R&D and Innovation Survey - 7

Educational Services - 7

Professional Services - 7

Medicaid Services - 7

Paycheck Protection Program - 7

Employment History File - 7

UC Berkeley - 7

Census Bureau Master Address File - 7

Business Formation Statistics - 7

Statistics Canada - 7

Department of Justice - 7

Legal Form of Organization - 6

Yale University - 6

CPS ASEC - 6

IBM - 6

Initial Public Offering - 6

Consumer Expenditure Survey - 6

Financial, Insurance and Real Estate Industries - 6

Business Research and Development and Innovation Survey - 6

Urban Institute - 6

Centers for Medicare - 6

Department of Energy - 6

Employer Characteristics File - 6

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention - 6

Current Population Survey Annual Social and Economic Supplement - 6

Duke University - 6

Journal of Economic Literature - 6

Council of Economic Advisers - 6

Company Organization Survey - 6

Information and Communication Technology Survey - 6

Cell Mean Public Use - 5

Ohio State University - 5

Geographic Information Systems - 5

Census Bureau Business Dynamics Statistics - 5

MTO - 5

Opportunity Atlas - 5

Survey of Consumer Finances - 5

Survey of Industrial Research and Development - 5

Management and Organizational Practices Survey - 5

National Establishment Time Series - 5

Agriculture, Forestry - 5

Public Administration - 5

Michigan Institute for Teaching and Research in Economics - 5

National Income and Product Accounts - 5

Federal Poverty Level - 5

Census Bureau Center for Economic Studies - 5

Center for Administrative Records Research - 5

Economic Research Service - 5

Federal Insurance Contribution Act - 5

National Academy of Sciences - 5

Harvard University - 5

Boston College - 5

Administrative Records - 5

National Ambient Air Quality Standards - 5

PIKed - 5

Federal Reserve Board of Governors - 5

Michigan Institute for Data Science - 5

George Mason University - 5

Herfindahl-Hirschman - 5

Retirement History Survey - 5

Public Use Micro Sample - 5

LEHD Program - 5

North American Industry Classi - 5

Census of Retail Trade - 4

Code of Federal Regulations - 4

Office of Personnel Management - 4

Department of Health and Human Services - 4

Minnesota Population Center - 4

North American Free Trade Agreement - 4

Columbia University - 4

University of Toronto - 4

American Immigration Council - 4

IZA - 4

Center for Administrative Records Research and Applications - 4

Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation - 4

Department of Defense - 4

Net Present Value - 4

International Trade Commission - 4

Limited Liability Company - 4

Regression Discontinuity Design - 4

Manufacturing Energy Consumption Survey - 4

Society of Labor Economists - 4

Princeton University - 4

2SLS - 4

State Energy Data System - 4

TFPR - 4

European Commission - 4

National Opinion Research Center - 4

World Bank - 4

Kauffman Foundation - 4

Survey of Manufacturing Technology - 3

Commodity Flow Survey - 3

United Nations - 3

Longitudinal Research Database - 3

Brookings Institution - 3

Toxics Release Inventory - 3

Penn State University - 3

Harvard Business School - 3

CDF - 3

Cumulative Density Function - 3

Quarterly Journal of Economics - 3

American Economic Review - 3

Composite Person Record - 3

Business Services - 3

Bureau of Labor - 3

Department of Commerce - 3

Master Earnings File - 3

TFPQ - 3

Linear Probability Models - 3

Current Employment Statistics - 3

Federal Trade Commission - 3

Medical Expenditure Panel Survey - 3

Journal of Econometrics - 3

Local Employment Dynamics - 3

Foreign Direct Investment - 3

COMPUSTAT - 3

University of Minnesota - 3

Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality - 3

University of California Los Angeles - 3

National Research Council - 3

John Voorheis - 21

Lucia Foster - 20

John Haltiwanger - 16

John M. Abowd - 14

Nathan Goldschlag - 12

J. David Brown - 11

Emin Dinlersoz - 10

Sonya R. Porter - 10

Fariha Kamal - 9

Catherine Buffington - 9

Moises Yi - 9

Jonathan Eggleston - 9

Lars Vilhuber - 8

Maggie R. Jones - 8

Kevin Rinz - 8

Zachary Kroff - 7

Cheryl Grim - 6

Zoltan Wolf - 6

Jay Stewart - 6

Martha Stinson - 6

Cristina Tello-Trillo - 6

Randall Akee - 6

Jonathan Colmer - 6

Lawrence Warren - 6

Kevin L. McKinney - 6

Misty L. Heggeness - 6

Ariel J. Binder - 5

Nikolas Zolas - 5

Thomas B. Foster - 5

Renuka Bhaskar - 5

Leah R. Clark - 5

Kendall Houghton - 5

Marta Murray-Close - 5

G. Jacob Blackwood - 4

Cindy Cunningham - 4

Sabrina Wulff Pabilonia - 4

Ryan Monarch - 4

Nicholas Bloom - 4

Kristina McElheran - 4

Erik Brynjolfsson - 4

Teresa C. Fort - 4

Sabrina T. Howell - 4

Charles Hokayem - 4

Eva Lyubich - 4

Amanda Eng - 4

Reed Walker - 4

Gloria G. Aldana - 4

Nikolas Pharris-Ciurej - 4

Leticia Fernandez - 4

Joseph Staudt - 4

Danielle H. Sandler - 4

Dominic A. Smith - 3

Cody Tuttle - 3

Rachel Nesbit - 3

Kristin Sandusky - 3

Ethan Lewis - 3

Robert Ashmead - 3

Daniel Kifer - 3

Philip Leclerc - 3

Rolando A. Rodríguez - 3

Tamara Adams - 3

David Darais - 3

Sourya Dey - 3

Simson L. Garfinkel - 3

Scott Moore - 3

Ramy N. Tadros - 3

Yoshiki Ando - 3

Steven J. Davis - 3

Emilia Simeonova - 3

David Card - 3

Jesse Rothstein - 3

Peter Schott - 3

Sean Wang - 3

Seula Kim - 3

Richard Mansfield - 3

Ethan Krohn - 3

Mary Munro - 3

Jennifer Withrow - 3

Emek Basker - 3

Suvy Qin - 3

Kyle Handley - 3

Timothy R. Wojan - 3

Adela Luque - 3

Carl Lieberman - 3

Garrett Anstreicher - 3

Gale Boyd - 3

Matthew Doolin - 3

James M. Noon - 3

James P. Ziliak - 3

Parag Mahajan - 3

Sharon R. Ennis - 3

Matthew Staiger - 3

J. Daniel Kim - 3

Sarah Miller - 3

Laura Wherry - 3

Javier Miranda - 3

Shawn Klimek - 3

Victoria Udalova - 3

earnings - 59

employed - 59

labor - 58

employ - 57

workforce - 54

population - 52

survey - 51

recession - 49

respondent - 42

ethnicity - 40

market - 33

hispanic - 33

minority - 32

disparity - 32

manufacturing - 32

employee - 32

immigrant - 32

disadvantaged - 31

innovation - 31

payroll - 30

sector - 29

economist - 29

revenue - 28

growth - 26

census bureau - 26

entrepreneur - 26

earner - 26

poverty - 26

resident - 26

investment - 26

estimating - 25

racial - 25

economically - 25

disclosure - 25

industrial - 25

entrepreneurship - 24

ethnic - 24

company - 24

socioeconomic - 23

race - 23

export - 23

salary - 23

irs - 23

immigration - 23

statistical - 22

expenditure - 22

enterprise - 22

tax - 22

census data - 21

neighborhood - 21

macroeconomic - 21

patent - 21

gdp - 21

production - 21

econometric - 21

residence - 20

agency - 20

sale - 19

housing - 19

spillover - 19

welfare - 19

hiring - 19

trend - 18

venture - 18

finance - 18

heterogeneity - 18

worker - 18

unemployed - 18

data - 18

data census - 17

demand - 17

import - 17

financial - 17

migrant - 17

percentile - 16

enrollment - 16

report - 16

segregation - 16

rent - 16

incentive - 16

endogeneity - 16

1040 - 16

family - 15

entrepreneurial - 15

intergenerational - 15

citizen - 15

occupation - 14

residential - 14

technological - 14

loan - 14

relocation - 14

corporation - 14

quarterly - 14

eligibility - 13

investor - 13

exporter - 13

impact - 13

patenting - 13

discrimination - 13

microdata - 13

taxpayer - 13

inventory - 12

use census - 12

state - 12

rural - 12

funding - 12

job - 12

hire - 12

establishment - 12

datasets - 12

federal - 12

record - 12

graduate - 11

census responses - 11

wealth - 11

importer - 11

earn - 11

estimation - 11

manufacturer - 11

black - 11

researcher - 11

medicaid - 11

bias - 11

census employment - 10

parent - 10

proprietor - 10

innovate - 10

employment growth - 10

white - 10

migration - 10

imputation - 10

aggregate - 10

parental - 9

child - 9

coverage - 9

proprietorship - 9

assessed - 9

retirement - 9

home - 9

renter - 9

community - 9

pandemic - 9

metropolitan - 9

trading - 9

lender - 9

employment earnings - 9

financing - 9

household surveys - 9

monopolistic - 9

native - 9

urban - 9

migrate - 9

profit - 9

filing - 9

environmental - 9

emission - 9

census household - 9

mexican - 9

efficiency - 8

eligible - 8

enrolled - 8

incorporated - 8

census disclosure - 8

mortgage - 8

ssa - 8

labor markets - 8

prevalence - 8

acquisition - 8

poorer - 8

shipment - 8

multinational - 8

supplier - 8

imported - 8

borrower - 8

lending - 8

debt - 8

produce - 8

invention - 8

innovative - 8

productive - 8

productivity growth - 8

innovating - 8

organizational - 8

city - 8

migrating - 8

geographically - 8

dependent - 8

income data - 8

pollution - 8

commerce - 7

retailer - 7

wholesale - 7

productivity dispersion - 7

generation - 7

homeowner - 7

insurance - 7

latino - 7

segregated - 7

price - 7

consumption - 7

tariff - 7

exporting - 7

investing - 7

invest - 7

census survey - 7

subsidy - 7

startup - 7

relocate - 7

employment statistics - 7

mobility - 7

reside - 7

citizenship - 7

stock - 7

bank - 7

exogeneity - 7

confidentiality - 7

woman - 7

saving - 7

regional - 7

adoption - 7

competitor - 7

workers earnings - 7

labor statistics - 6

regress - 6

maternal - 6

economic census - 6

mortality - 6

asian - 6

propensity - 6

rurality - 6

founder - 6

credit - 6

importing - 6

earnings employees - 6

equity - 6

fund - 6

2010 census - 6

prospect - 6

security - 6

technology - 6

growth productivity - 6

innovator - 6

employment estimates - 6

employment data - 6

workplace - 6

employment trends - 6

borrowing - 6

banking - 6

leverage - 6

provided census - 6

epa - 6

pollution exposure - 6

sectoral - 6

monopolistically - 6

pollutant - 6

policymakers - 6

birth - 6

analysis - 6

research - 6

accounting - 6

retail - 5

merchandise - 5

university - 5

degree - 5

decade - 5

education - 5

house - 5

indian - 5

benefit - 5

suburb - 5

international trade - 5

foreign - 5

firms export - 5

multinational firms - 5

creditor - 5

commodity - 5

exported - 5

risk - 5

sociology - 5

effects employment - 5

productivity estimates - 5

productivity shocks - 5

factory - 5

region - 5

opportunity - 5

unobserved - 5

longitudinal - 5

census records - 5

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sampling - 5

survey households - 5

population survey - 5

geographic - 5

wage growth - 5

family income - 5

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income households - 5

income children - 5

immigrant workers - 5

globalization - 5

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exposure - 5

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linked census - 5

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surveys censuses - 5

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gender - 5

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regressing - 5

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classified - 5

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reporting - 5

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measures productivity - 4

views census - 4

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educated - 4

schooling - 4

adulthood - 4

death - 4

disability - 4

country - 4

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agriculture - 4

health - 4

residential segregation - 4

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technology adoption - 4

good - 4

spending - 4

consumer - 4

purchase - 4

subsidiary - 4

downstream - 4

trader - 4

sourcing - 4

disaster - 4

hurricane - 4

town - 4

effect wages - 4

wage gap - 4

census 2020 - 4

firms patents - 4

patents firms - 4

factor productivity - 4

depreciation - 4

business startups - 4

area - 4

layoff - 4

developed - 4

patented - 4

employment dynamics - 4

worker demographics - 4

longitudinal employer - 4

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moving - 4

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shareholder - 4

bankruptcy - 4

borrow - 4

income individuals - 4

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custom - 4

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publicly - 4

industry wages - 4

endogenous - 4

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labor productivity - 4

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tenure - 4

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employment wages - 4

taxation - 4

matching - 4

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policy - 4

immigrant entrepreneurs - 4

renewable - 4

union - 4

fertility - 4

aggregate productivity - 4

earnings workers - 4

employment measures - 4

censuses surveys - 4

dispersion productivity - 3

warehouse - 3

productivity variation - 3

program census - 3

mother - 3

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exporters multinationals - 3

export market - 3

affluent - 3

wage earnings - 3

crime - 3

asset - 3

firm patenting - 3

productivity dynamics - 3

wage effects - 3

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work census - 3

turnover - 3

collateral - 3

aging - 3

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wages employment - 3

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information - 3

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firms import - 3

expense - 3

restaurant - 3

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location - 3

outsourcing - 3

exogenous - 3

income survey - 3

neighbor - 3

records census - 3

race census - 3

fuel - 3

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employment effects - 3

impact employment - 3

parents income - 3

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income neighborhoods - 3

volatility - 3

ancestry - 3

executive - 3

firms grow - 3

poor - 3

average - 3

industry variation - 3

assessing - 3

network - 3

reallocation productivity - 3

geography - 3

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regulatory - 3

customer - 3

utility - 3

merger - 3

enforcement - 3

locality - 3

wage data - 3

polluting - 3

econometrician - 3

fiscal - 3

earnings inequality - 3

pregnancy - 3

mandate - 3

tech - 3

business data - 3

employer household - 3

employment count - 3

measures employment - 3

workforce indicators - 3

employed census - 3

statistical agencies - 3

Viewing papers 91 through 100 of 292


  • Working Paper

    The Impact of Parental Resources on Human Capital Investment and Labor Market Outcomes: Evidence from the Great Recession

    June 2024

    Authors: Jeremy Kirk

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-34

    I study the impact of parents' financial resources during adolescence on postsecondary human capital investment and labor market outcomes, using house value changes during the Great Recession of 2007-2009 as a natural experiment. I use several restricted-access datasets from the U.S. Census Bureau to create a novel dataset that includes intergenerational linkages between children and their parents. This data allows me to exploit house value variation within labor markets, addressing the identification concern that local house values are related to local economic conditions. I find that the average decrease to parents' home values lead to persistent decreases in bachelor's degree attainment of 1.26%, earnings of 1.96%, and full-time employment of 1.32%. Children of parents suffering larger house value shocks are more likely to substitute into two-year degree programs, drop out of college, or be enrolled in a college program in their late 20s.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Urban-Biased Growth: A Macroeconomic Analysis

    June 2024

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-33

    After 1980, larger US cities experienced substantially faster wage growth than smaller ones. We show that this urban bias mainly reflected wage growth at large Business Services firms. These firms stand out through their high per-worker expenditure on information technology and disproportionate presence in big cities. We introduce a spatial model of investment-specific technical change that can rationalize these patterns. Using the model as an accounting framework, we find that the observed decline in the investment price of information technology capital explains most urban-biased growth by raising the profits of large Business Services firms in big cities.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Measuring Income of the Aged in Household Surveys: Evidence from Linked Administrative Records

    June 2024

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-32

    Research has shown that household survey estimates of retirement income (defined benefit pensions and defined contribution account withdrawals) suffer from substantial underreporting which biases downward measures of financial well-being among the aged. Using data from both the redesigned 2016 Current Population Survey Annual Social and Economic Supplement (CPS ASEC) and the Health and Retirement Study (HRS), each matched with administrative records, we examine to what extent underreporting of retirement income affects key statistics such as reliance on Social Security benefits and poverty among the aged. We find that underreporting of retirement income is still prevalent in the CPS ASEC. While the HRS does a better job than the CPS ASEC in terms of capturing retirement income, it still falls considerably short compared to administrative records. Consequently, the relative importance of Social Security income remains overstated in household surveys'53 percent of elderly beneficiaries in the CPS ASEC and 49 percent in the HRS rely on Social Security for the majority of their incomes compared to 42 percent in the linked administrative data. The poverty rate for those aged 65 and over is also overstated'8.8 percent in the CPS ASEC and 7.4 percent in the HRS compared to 6.4 percent in the linked administrative data. Our results illustrate the effects of using alternative data sources in producing key statistics from the Social Security Administration's Income of the Aged publication.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Citizenship Question Effects on Household Survey Response

    June 2024

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-31

    Several small-sample studies have predicted that a citizenship question in the 2020 Census would cause a large drop in self-response rates. In contrast, minimal effects were found in Poehler et al.'s (2020) analysis of the 2019 Census Test randomized controlled trial (RCT). We reconcile these findings by analyzing associations between characteristics about the addresses in the 2019 Census Test and their response behavior by linking to independently constructed administrative data. We find significant heterogeneity in sensitivity to the citizenship question among households containing Hispanics, naturalized citizens, and noncitizens. Response drops the most for households containing noncitizens ineligible for a Social Security number (SSN). It falls more for households with Latin American-born immigrants than those with immigrants from other countries. Response drops less for households with U.S.-born Hispanics than households with noncitizens from Latin America. Reductions in responsiveness occur not only through lower unit self-response rates, but also by increased household roster omissions and internet break-offs. The inclusion of a citizenship question increases the undercount of households with noncitizens. Households with noncitizens also have much higher citizenship question item nonresponse rates than those only containing citizens. The use of tract-level characteristics and significant heterogeneity among Hispanics, the foreign-born, and noncitizens help explain why the effects found by Poehler et al. were so small. Linking administrative microdata with the RCT data expands what we can learn from the RCT.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Who Marries Whom? The Role of Segregation by Race and Class

    June 2024

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-30

    Americans rarely marry outside of their race or class group. We distinguish between two possible explanations: a lack of exposure to other groups versus a preference to marry within group. We develop an instrument for neighborhood exposure to opposite-sex members of other race and class groups using variation in sex ratios among nearby birth cohorts in childhood neighborhoods. We then test whether increased exposure results in more interracial (white-Black) and interclass (top-to-bottom parent income quartile) marriages. Increased exposure to opposite-sex members of other class groups generates a substantial increase in interclass marriage, but increased exposure to other race groups has no detectable effect on interracial marriage. We use these results to estimate a spatial model of the marriage market and quantify the impact of reducing residential segregation in general equilibrium. For small changes in exposure, the model implies effects in line with recent estimates from policy experiments. We then use the model to assess the overall contribution of segregation and find that residential segregation has large effects on interclass, but not interracial, marriage.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Whose Neighborhood Now? Gentrification and Community Life in Low-Income Urban Neighborhoods

    June 2024

    Authors: AJ Golio

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-29

    Gentrification is a process of urban change that has wide-ranging social and political impacts, but previous studies provide divergent findings. Does gentrification leave residents feeling alienated, or does it bolster neighborhood social satisfaction? Politically, does urban change mobilize residents, or leave them disengaged? I assess a national, cross-sectional sample of about 17,500 respondents in lower-income urban neighborhoods, and use a structural equation modeling approach to model six latent variables pertaining to local social environment and political participation. Amongst the full sample, gentrification has a positive association with all six factors. However, this relationship depends upon respondents' level of income, length of residency, and racial identity. White residents and those with shorter length of residency report higher levels of social cohesion as gentrification increases, but there is no such association amongst racial minority groups and longer-term residents. This finding aligns with a perspective on gentrification as a racialized process, and demonstrates that gentrification-related amenities primarily serve the interests of white residents and newcomers. All groups, however, are more likely to participate in neighborhood politics as gentrification increases, drawing attention to the agency of local residents as they attempt to influence processes of urban change.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Revisiting Methods to Assign Responses when Race and Hispanic Origin Reporting are Discrepant Across Administrative Records and Third Party Sources

    May 2024

    Authors: James M. Noon

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-26

    The Best Race and Ethnicity Administrative Records Composite file ('Best Race file') is an composite file which combines Census, federal, and Third Party Data (TPD) sources and applies business rules to assign race and ethnicity values to person records. The first version of the Best Race administrative records composite was first constructed in 2015 and subsequently updated each year to include more recent vintages, when available, of the data sources originally included in the composite file. Where updates were available for data sources, the most recent information for persons was retained, and the business rules were reapplied to assign a single race and single Hispanic origin value to each person record. The majority of person records on the Best Race file have consistent race and ethnicity information across data sources. Where there are discrepancies in responses across data sources, we apply a series of business rules to assign a single race and ethnicity to each record. To improve the quality of the Best Race administrative records composite, we have begun revising the business rules which were developed several years ago. This paper discusses the original business rules as well as the implemented changes and their impact on the composite file.
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  • Working Paper

    U.S. Worker Mobility Across Establishments within Firms: Scope, Prevalence, and Effects on Worker Earnings

    May 2024

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-24

    Multi-establishment firms account for around 60% of U.S. workers' primary employers, providing ample opportunity for workers to change their work location without changing their employer. Using U.S. matched employer-employee data, this paper analyzes workers' access to and use of such between-establishment job transitions, and estimates the effect on workers' earnings growth of greater access, as measured by proximity of employment at other within-firm establishments. While establishment transitions are not perfectly observed, we estimate that within-firm establishment transitions account for 7.8% percent of all job transitions and 18.2% of transitions originating from the largest firms. Using variation in worker's establishment locations within their firms' establishment network, we show that having a greater share of the firm's jobs in nearby establishments generates meaningful increases in workers' earnings: a worker at the 90th percentile of earnings gains from more proximate within-firm job opportunities can expect to enjoy 2% higher average earnings over the following five years than a worker at the 10th percentile with the same baseline earnings.
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  • Working Paper

    Mobility, Opportunity, and Volatility Statistics (MOVS): Infrastructure Files and Public Use Data

    April 2024

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-23

    Federal statistical agencies and policymakers have identified a need for integrated systems of household and personal income statistics. This interest marks a recognition that aggregated measures of income, such as GDP or average income growth, tell an incomplete story that may conceal large gaps in well-being between different types of individuals and families. Until recently, longitudinal income data that are rich enough to calculate detailed income statistics and include demographic characteristics, such as race and ethnicity, have not been available. The Mobility, Opportunity, and Volatility Statistics project (MOVS) fills this gap in comprehensive income statistics. Using linked demographic and tax records on the population of U.S. working-age adults, the MOVS project defines households and calculates household income, applying an equivalence scale to create a personal income concept, and then traces the progress of individuals' incomes over time. We then output a set of intermediate statistics by race-ethnicity group, sex, year, base-year state of residence, and base-year income decile. We select the intermediate statistics most useful in developing more complex intragenerational income mobility measures, such as transition matrices, income growth curves, and variance-based volatility statistics. We provide these intermediate statistics as part of a publicly released data tool with downloadable flat files and accompanying documentation. This paper describes the data build process and the output files, including a brief analysis highlighting the structure and content of our main statistics.
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  • Working Paper

    Does Rapid Transit and Light Rail Infrastructure Improve Labor Market Outcomes?

    April 2024

    Authors: Maysen Yen

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-22

    Public transit has often been proposed as a solution to the spatial mismatch hypothesis but the link between public transit accessibility and employment has not been firmly established in the literature. Los Angeles provides an interesting case study ' as the city has transformed from zero rail infrastructure before the 1990s to a large network consisting of subway, light rail, and bus rapid transit servicing diverse neighborhoods. I use confidential panel data from the American Community Survey, treating route placement as endogenous, which is then instrumented by the distance from the centroid of each tract in LA to a hypothetical Metro route. Overall, I find proximity to Metro stations increases employment for residents, which is robust to using both a binary and continuous measure of distance. Additionally, I find evidence that increased job density in neighborhoods near new transit stations is contributing to the employment increase.
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