CREAT: Census Research Exploration and Analysis Tool

Papers Containing Tag(s): 'Federal Statistical Research Data Center'

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

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 134

North American Industry Classification System - 95

Longitudinal Business Database - 93

Disclosure Review Board - 77

Center for Economic Studies - 61

National Science Foundation - 57

American Community Survey - 54

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 53

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 46

National Bureau of Economic Research - 44

Internal Revenue Service - 38

Annual Survey of Manufactures - 37

Current Population Survey - 35

Economic Census - 34

Employer Identification Numbers - 33

Federal Reserve Bank - 33

Business Dynamics Statistics - 32

Standard Industrial Classification - 32

Ordinary Least Squares - 32

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 31

Decennial Census - 31

Census of Manufactures - 30

Social Security Administration - 30

Census of Manufacturing Firms - 28

Total Factor Productivity - 27

Protected Identification Key - 25

Business Register - 24

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 22

Research Data Center - 22

Census Bureau Business Register - 21

County Business Patterns - 21

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development - 21

Metropolitan Statistical Area - 19

Special Sworn Status - 18

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 17

Social Security Number - 16

Patent and Trademark Office - 15

Cobb-Douglas - 15

Quarterly Workforce Indicators - 15

Department of Homeland Security - 15

Service Annual Survey - 14

Longitudinal Firm Trade Transactions Database - 14

Herfindahl Hirschman Index - 13

Energy Information Administration - 13

Department of Economics - 13

Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages - 13

National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics - 13

Federal Reserve System - 12

Person Validation System - 12

Social Security - 12

International Trade Research Report - 12

Census Bureau Longitudinal Business Database - 11

University of Chicago - 11

COVID-19 - 11

Survey of Business Owners - 11

2010 Census - 11

Individual Characteristics File - 11

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 11

Environmental Protection Agency - 10

Unemployment Insurance - 10

Annual Business Survey - 10

United States Census Bureau - 10

University of Michigan - 10

Business Research and Development and Innovation Survey - 10

Annual Survey of Entrepreneurs - 9

Integrated Public Use Microdata Series - 9

Cornell University - 9

Business R&D and Innovation Survey - 9

Small Business Administration - 9

Employment History File - 9

Retail Trade - 9

Survey of Income and Program Participation - 9

Herfindahl-Hirschman - 8

IQR - 8

Board of Governors - 8

Company Organization Survey - 8

Department of Labor - 8

World Trade Organization - 8

Generalized Method of Moments - 8

Housing and Urban Development - 8

Manufacturing Energy Consumption Survey - 8

Financial, Insurance and Real Estate Industries - 8

Statistics Canada - 8

Postal Service - 8

Information and Communication Technology Survey - 8

Supreme Court - 7

Survey of Industrial Research and Development - 7

Technical Services - 7

National Institutes of Health - 7

Securities and Exchange Commission - 7

Office of Management and Budget - 7

National Institute on Aging - 7

European Union - 7

Department of Agriculture - 7

National Longitudinal Survey of Youth - 7

National Academy of Sciences - 7

Wholesale Trade - 7

PSID - 7

State Energy Data System - 7

American Economic Association - 7

Sloan Foundation - 7

Accommodation and Food Services - 7

Kauffman Foundation - 7

Management and Organizational Practices Survey - 7

Maximum Likelihood Estimation - 6

Department of Energy - 6

Employer Characteristics File - 6

UC Berkeley - 6

W-2 - 6

Integrated Longitudinal Business Database - 6

National Center for Health Statistics - 6

Geographic Information Systems - 6

Russell Sage Foundation - 6

Harmonized System - 6

Professional Services - 6

University of Toronto - 6

National Establishment Time Series - 6

Duke University - 6

University of Maryland - 6

Boston College - 6

Core Based Statistical Area - 6

Master Address File - 6

Review of Economics and Statistics - 6

Center for Research in Security Prices - 5

National Income and Product Accounts - 5

Initial Public Offering - 5

Michigan Institute for Teaching and Research in Economics - 5

Occupational Employment Statistics - 5

Department of Education - 5

Federal Register - 5

Princeton University - 5

Longitudinal Research Database - 5

IBM - 5

NBER Summer Institute - 5

Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation - 5

Department of Housing and Urban Development - 5

American Housing Survey - 5

Cornell Institute for Social and Economic Research - 5

Citizenship and Immigration Services - 5

Personally Identifiable Information - 5

General Accounting Office - 5

World Bank - 5

Characteristics of Business Owners - 5

Employer-Household Dynamics - 4

Standard Occupational Classification - 4

Office of Personnel Management - 4

Nonemployer Statistics - 4

Yale University - 4

Health and Retirement Study - 4

Department of Health and Human Services - 4

Commodity Flow Survey - 4

AKM - 4

Paycheck Protection Program - 4

IZA - 4

Business Employment Dynamics - 4

Social Science Research Institute - 4

Columbia University - 4

Indian Health Service - 4

Journal of Political Economy - 4

American Economic Review - 4

Council of Economic Advisers - 4

Person Identification Validation System - 4

Bureau of Labor - 4

TFPR - 4

TFPQ - 4

European Commission - 4

1940 Census - 4

Public Use Micro Sample - 4

Census Edited File - 4

Census Numident - 4

Data Management System - 4

Economic Research Service - 4

North American Industry Classi - 4

Department of Commerce - 4

Kauffman Firm Survey - 4

National Employer Survey - 3

Ohio State University - 3

Stanford University - 3

Minnesota Population Center - 3

Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program - 3

Consumer Expenditure Survey - 3

United Nations - 3

Customs and Border Protection - 3

Public Administration - 3

Penn State University - 3

New York University - 3

Harvard Business School - 3

Federal Reserve Board of Governors - 3

Quarterly Journal of Economics - 3

Business Register Bridge - 3

Retirement History Survey - 3

MAFID - 3

MAF-ARF - 3

Federal Trade Commission - 3

Department of Justice - 3

Census Bureau Business Dynamics Statistics - 3

National Research Council - 3

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention - 3

Disability Insurance - 3

Composite Person Record - 3

Local Employment Dynamics - 3

Federal Tax Information - 3

Educational Services - 3

Health Care and Social Assistance - 3

Current Employment Statistics - 3

Brookings Institution - 3

Arts, Entertainment - 3

HHS - 3

Pew Research Center - 3

Federal Insurance Contribution Act - 3

MIT Press - 3

Journal of International Economics - 3

employ - 38

market - 32

innovation - 29

manufacturing - 29

labor - 29

recession - 29

employed - 28

workforce - 28

sector - 26

growth - 25

survey - 24

patent - 23

investment - 23

industrial - 23

macroeconomic - 23

earnings - 23

company - 23

econometric - 23

production - 21

gdp - 21

revenue - 21

enterprise - 21

employee - 21

sale - 20

estimating - 20

neighborhood - 20

economist - 19

expenditure - 19

population - 19

resident - 19

export - 19

economically - 18

respondent - 18

payroll - 18

demand - 17

financial - 17

entrepreneurship - 17

quarterly - 15

entrepreneur - 15

disclosure - 15

inventory - 14

patenting - 14

hiring - 14

statistical - 14

rural - 14

import - 14

report - 14

housing - 14

finance - 14

agency - 14

technological - 13

socioeconomic - 13

disparity - 13

census data - 13

census bureau - 13

data census - 13

minority - 13

metropolitan - 13

exporter - 13

incentive - 13

microdata - 13

innovative - 12

debt - 12

efficiency - 12

disadvantaged - 12

immigrant - 12

immigration - 12

venture - 11

innovate - 11

spillover - 11

importer - 11

produce - 11

hire - 11

invention - 10

acquisition - 10

earner - 10

incorporated - 10

ethnicity - 10

poverty - 10

hispanic - 10

investor - 10

rent - 10

residential - 10

monopolistic - 9

earn - 9

loan - 9

salary - 9

aggregate - 9

productivity growth - 9

corporation - 9

entrepreneurial - 9

segregation - 9

residence - 9

endogeneity - 9

organizational - 9

racial - 9

race - 9

trend - 8

job - 8

worker - 8

relocation - 8

borrowing - 8

record - 8

community - 8

consumption - 8

shipment - 8

exporting - 8

renter - 8

manufacturer - 8

developed - 8

profit - 8

employment growth - 8

research - 8

leverage - 8

city - 8

ethnic - 8

unemployed - 8

emission - 8

establishment - 8

use census - 8

wholesale - 8

data - 8

datasets - 8

innovation patenting - 7

exogeneity - 7

shift - 7

accounting - 7

equity - 7

enrollment - 7

welfare - 7

agriculture - 7

rurality - 7

multinational - 7

impact - 7

firms patents - 7

researcher - 7

urban - 7

energy - 7

discrimination - 7

home - 7

saving - 7

bankruptcy - 7

technology - 6

innovating - 6

patented - 6

fuel - 6

occupation - 6

creditor - 6

aggregate productivity - 6

percentile - 6

labor markets - 6

segregated - 6

suburb - 6

price - 6

firms export - 6

trading - 6

investing - 6

invest - 6

intergenerational - 6

estimation - 6

patents firms - 6

productive - 6

depreciation - 6

innovator - 6

patenting firms - 6

credit - 6

warehousing - 6

black - 6

heterogeneity - 6

electricity - 6

epa - 6

state - 6

geographically - 6

bias - 6

migrant - 6

research census - 6

renewable - 6

econometrically - 6

merger - 5

specialization - 5

bank - 5

borrow - 5

graduate - 5

average - 5

productivity measures - 5

database - 5

proprietor - 5

parent - 5

family - 5

parental - 5

country - 5

recessionary - 5

prevalence - 5

suburbanization - 5

importing - 5

exported - 5

trader - 5

sociology - 5

crime - 5

founder - 5

filing - 5

subsidy - 5

firm innovation - 5

firm patenting - 5

productivity estimates - 5

productivity shocks - 5

stock - 5

tax - 5

banking - 5

development - 5

outsourced - 5

monopolistically - 5

regional - 5

supplier - 5

census disclosure - 5

competitor - 5

wealth - 5

homeowner - 5

mortgage - 5

growth productivity - 5

analysis - 5

productivity dispersion - 5

externality - 5

2010 census - 5

economic census - 5

energy efficiency - 5

regulation - 5

federal - 5

confidentiality - 5

tenure - 5

energy prices - 5

employment statistics - 5

census research - 5

white - 5

retailer - 5

agricultural - 5

business data - 5

layoff - 4

relocate - 4

fund - 4

asset - 4

opportunity - 4

institutional - 4

measures productivity - 4

imputation - 4

information census - 4

corporate - 4

subsidiary - 4

labor statistics - 4

census employment - 4

proprietorship - 4

retirement - 4

benefit - 4

eligibility - 4

pandemic - 4

suburban - 4

gain - 4

good - 4

purchase - 4

sourcing - 4

town - 4

citizen - 4

factor productivity - 4

innovation productivity - 4

shareholder - 4

lending - 4

lender - 4

employment dynamics - 4

growth employment - 4

product - 4

custom - 4

exporting firms - 4

sectoral - 4

tariff - 4

region - 4

labor productivity - 4

ownership - 4

neighbor - 4

policymakers - 4

house - 4

cost - 4

census responses - 4

efficient - 4

regulatory - 4

enforcement - 4

statistician - 4

privacy - 4

statistical disclosure - 4

study - 4

irs - 4

regression - 4

mexican - 4

work census - 4

information - 4

merchandise - 4

census business - 4

censuses surveys - 4

census survey - 4

collateral - 4

reporting - 4

manager - 4

tech - 3

unemployment rates - 3

migration - 3

executive - 3

identifier - 3

eligible - 3

child - 3

schooling - 3

urbanization - 3

residential segregation - 3

urbanized - 3

consumer - 3

poorer - 3

commodity - 3

imported - 3

export market - 3

downstream - 3

effects employment - 3

wage earnings - 3

employment earnings - 3

earnings employees - 3

financing - 3

funding - 3

prospect - 3

profitability - 3

compensation - 3

wage growth - 3

shock - 3

geographic - 3

foreign - 3

globalization - 3

firms import - 3

multinational firms - 3

job growth - 3

employment trends - 3

location - 3

outsourcing - 3

productivity size - 3

practices productivity - 3

aggregation - 3

woman - 3

earnings age - 3

employment effects - 3

employing - 3

workers earnings - 3

impact employment - 3

taxation - 3

income households - 3

transition - 3

immigrant workers - 3

marketing - 3

recession exposure - 3

pricing - 3

firms census - 3

estimator - 3

industry concentration - 3

area - 3

customer - 3

policy - 3

utility - 3

plant productivity - 3

public - 3

publicly - 3

startup - 3

debtor - 3

worker demographics - 3

union - 3

electricity prices - 3

latino - 3

pollution - 3

pollutant - 3

amenity - 3

longitudinal employer - 3

employee data - 3

corp - 3

subsidized - 3

geography - 3

trademark - 3

productivity firms - 3

firms grow - 3

commerce - 3

retail - 3

business startups - 3

buyer - 3

linked census - 3

decade - 3

farm - 3

industry productivity - 3

dispersion productivity - 3

ancestry - 3

immigrant entrepreneurs - 3

businesses census - 3

divorced - 3

surveys censuses - 3

bankrupt - 3

Viewing papers 131 through 140 of 193


  • Working Paper

    Productivity Dispersion, Entry, and Growth in U.S. Manufacturing Industries

    August 2021

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-21

    Within-industry productivity dispersion is pervasive and exhibits substantial variation across countries, industries, and time. We build on prior research that explores the hypothesis that periods of innovation are initially associated with a surge in business start-ups, followed by increased experimentation that leads to rising dispersion potentially with declining aggregate productivity growth, and then a shakeout process that results in higher productivity growth and declining productivity dispersion. Using novel detailed industry-level data on total factor productivity and labor productivity dispersion from the Dispersion Statistics on Productivity along with novel measures of entry rates from the Business Dynamics Statistics and productivity growth data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics for U.S. manufacturing industries, we find support for this hypothesis, especially for the high-tech industries.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Leapfrogging the Melting Pot? European Immigrants' Intergenerational Mobility Across the 20th Century

    August 2021

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-20

    During the early twentieth century, industrial-era European immigrants entered the United States with lower levels of education than the U.S. average. However, empirical research has yielded unclear and inconsistent evidence about the extent and pace of their integration, leaving openings for arguments that contest the narrative that these groups experienced rapid integration and instead assert that educational deficits among lower-status groups persisted across multiple generations. Here, we advance another argument, that European immigrants may have 'leapfrogged' or exceeded U.S.-born non-Hispanic white attainment by the third generation. To assess these ideas, we reconstituted three-generation families by linking individuals across the 1940 Census, years 1973, 1979, 1981-90 of the Current Population Survey, the 2000 Census, and years 2001-2017 of the American Community Survey. Results show that most European immigrant groups not only caught up with U.S.-born whites by the second generation, but surpassed them, and this advantage further increased in the third generation. This research provides a new understanding of the time to integration for 20th century European immigrant groups by showing that they integrated at a faster pace than previously thought, indicative of a process of accelerated upward mobility.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Immigration and Local Business Dynamics: Evidence from U.S. Firms

    August 2021

    Authors: Parag Mahajan

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-18

    This paper finds that establishment entry and exit'particularly the prevention of establishment exit'drive immigrant absorption and immigrant-induced productivity increases in U.S. local industries. Using a comprehensive collection of confidential survey and administrative data from the Census Bureau, it shows that inflows of immigrantworkers lead to more establishment entry and less establishment exit in local industries. These relationships are responsible for nearly all of long-run immigrant-induced job creation, with 78 percent accounted for by exit prevention alone, leaving a minimal role for continuing establishment expansion. Furthermore, exit prevention is not uniform: immigrant inflows increase the probability of exit by establishments from low productivity firms and decrease the probability of exit by establishments from high productivity firms. As a result, the increase in establishment count is concentrated at the top of the productivity distribution. A general equilibrium model proposes a mechanism that ties immigrantworkers to high productivity firms and shows how accounting for changes to the firm productivity distribution can yield substantially larger estimates of immigrant-generated economic surplus than canonical models of labor demand.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    A Search and Learning Model of Export Dynamics

    August 2021

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-17

    Exporting abroad is much harder than selling at home, and overcoming hurdles to exporting takes time. Our goal is to identify specific barriers to exporting and to measure their importance. We develop a model of firm-level export dynamics that features costly customer search, network effects in finding buyers, and learning about product appeal. Fitting the model to customs records of U.S. imports of manufactures from Colombia we replicate patterns of exporter maturation. A potentially valuable intangible asset of a firm is its customer base and knowledge of a market. Our model delivers some striking estimates of what such assets are worth. Averaging across active exporters, the loss from total market amnesia (losing its current U.S. customer base along with its accumulated knowledge of product appeal) is US$ 3.4 million, about 34 percent of the value of exporting overall. About half is the loss of future sales to existing customers while the rest is the cost of relearning its appeal in the market and reestablishing visibility as an exporter. Given the importance of search, learning, and visibility, the 5-year response of total export sales to an exchange rate shock exceeds the 1-year response by about 40 percent.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    A Note on the Locational Determinants of the Agricultural Supply Chain

    July 2021

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-16

    Over the past several decades, an increasing share of the agricultural supply chain is located beyond the farmgate, implying that some set of economic factors are influencing the location decisions of food and agricultural establishments. We explore the location decisions of several food and agricultural industries for employer and non-employer establishments by expanding on the empirical implications of Carpenter et al. (2021)'s demand threshold models. While Carpenter et al. (2021) focus on methods to estimate these industries' demand thresholds using restricted access data, we focus on expanding the interpretations of their empirical research and explore additional industries along the agricultural supply chain using their refined methods. Results highlight the influential role of the Land Grant University system for specific establishment types, the importance of diverse industries within local economies, and the changing rurality of the agricultural supply chain.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Combining Rules and Discretion in Economic Development Policy: Evidence on the Impacts of the California Competes Tax Credit

    June 2021

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-13

    We evaluate the effects of one of a new generation of economic development programs, the California Competes Tax Credit (CCTC), on local job creation. Incorporating perceived best practices from previous initiatives, the CCTC combines explicit eligibility thresholds with some discretion on the part of program officials to select tax credit recipients. The structure and implementation of the program facilitates rigorous evaluation. We exploit detailed data on accepted and rejected applicants to the CCTC, including information on scoring of applicants with regard to program goals and funding decisions, together with restricted access American Community Survey (ACS) data on local economic conditions. Using a difference-in-differences approach, we find that each CCTC-incentivized job in a census tract increases the number of individuals working in that tract by over two ' a significant local multiplier. We also explore the program's distributional implications and impacts by industry. We find that CCTC awards increase employment among workers residing in both high income and low income communities, and that the local multipliers are larger for non-manufacturing awards than for manufacturing awards.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    The Impacts of Opportunity Zones on Zone Residents

    June 2021

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-12

    Created by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act in 2017, the Opportunity Zone program was designed to encourage investment in distressed communities across the U.S. We examine the early impacts of the Opportunity Zone program on residents of targeted areas. We leverage restricted-access microdata from the American Community Survey and employ difference-in-differences and matching approaches to estimate causal reduced-form effects of the program. Our results point to modest, if any, positive effects of the Opportunity Zone program on the employment, earnings, or poverty of zone residents.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Redesigning the Longitudinal Business Database

    May 2021

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-08

    In this paper we describe the U.S. Census Bureau's redesign and production implementation of the Longitudinal Business Database (LBD) first introduced by Jarmin and Miranda (2002). The LBD is used to create the Business Dynamics Statistics (BDS), tabulations describing the entry, exit, expansion, and contraction of businesses. The new LBD and BDS also incorporate information formerly provided by the Statistics of U.S. Businesses program, which produced similar year-to-year measures of employment and establishment flows. We describe in detail how the LBD is created from curation of the input administrative data, longitudinal matching, retiming of economic census-year births and deaths, creation of vintage consistent industry codes and noise factors, and the creation and cleaning of each year of LBD data. This documentation is intended to facilitate the proper use and understanding of the data by both researchers with approved projects accessing the LBD microdata and those using the BDS tabulations.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    High Frequency Business Dynamics in the United States During the COVID-19 Pandemic

    March 2021

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-06

    Existing small businesses experienced very sharp declines in activity, business sentiment, and expectations early in the pandemic. While there has been some recovery since the early days of the pandemic, small businesses continued to exhibit indicators of negative growth, business sentiment, and expectations through the first week of January 2021. These findings are from a unique high frequency, real time survey of small employer businesses, the Census Bureau's Small Business Pulse Survey (SBPS). Findings from the SBPS show substantial variation across sectors in the outcomes for small businesses. Small businesses in Accommodation and Food Services have been hit especially hard relative to those Finance and Insurance. However, even in Finance and Insurance small businesses exhibit indicators of negative growth, business sentiment, and expectations for all weeks from late April 2020 through the first week of 2021. While existing small businesses have fared poorly, after an initial decline, there has been a surge in new business applications based on the high frequency, real time Business Formation Statistics (BFS). Most of these applications are for likely nonemployers that are out of scope for the SBPS. However, there has also been a surge in new applications for likely employers. The surge in applications has been especially apparent in Retail Trade (and especially Non-store Retailers). We compare and contrast the patterns from these two new high frequency data products that provide novel insights into the distinct patterns of dynamics for existing small businesses relative to new business formations.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Whose Job Is It Anyway? Co-Ethnic Hiring in New U.S. Ventures

    March 2021

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-05

    We explore co-ethnic hiring among new ventures using U.S. administrative data. Co-ethnic hiring is ubiquitous among immigrant groups, averaging about 22.5% and ranging from 2% to 40%. Co-ethnic hiring grows with the size of the local ethnic workforce, greater linguistic distance to English, lower cultural/genetic similarity to U.S. natives, and in harsher policy environments for immigrants. Co ethnic hiring is remarkably persistent for ventures and for individuals. Co-ethnic hiring is associated with greater venture survival and growth when thick local ethnic employment surrounds the business. Our results are consistent with a blend of hiring due to information advantages within ethnic groups with some taste-based hiring.
    View Full Paper PDF