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Papers Containing Tag(s): 'Metropolitan Statistical Area'

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Center for Economic Studies - 59

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North American Industry Classification System - 51

Longitudinal Business Database - 50

Current Population Survey - 44

Standard Industrial Classification - 41

Ordinary Least Squares - 40

Decennial Census - 39

National Science Foundation - 39

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 37

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 37

Census of Manufactures - 35

Internal Revenue Service - 33

American Community Survey - 31

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 30

Annual Survey of Manufactures - 29

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 29

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Economic Census - 26

Total Factor Productivity - 24

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Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 21

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Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 19

Service Annual Survey - 19

Longitudinal Research Database - 19

Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages - 18

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National Bureau of Economic Research - 16

Survey of Income and Program Participation - 15

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2010 Census - 13

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Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 12

Census of Manufacturing Firms - 11

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National Longitudinal Survey of Youth - 9

Cornell University - 9

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American Economic Review - 9

Department of Economics - 8

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Generalized Method of Moments - 8

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Michigan Institute for Teaching and Research in Economics - 8

International Trade Research Report - 8

PSID - 8

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Department of Labor - 7

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Journal of Economic Literature - 7

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W-2 - 6

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1940 Census - 6

American Economic Association - 6

Survey of Business Owners - 6

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Financial, Insurance and Real Estate Industries - 6

University of California Los Angeles - 6

Harvard University - 6

Census Bureau Center for Economic Studies - 6

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Office of Personnel Management - 5

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Cumulative Density Function - 5

Journal of Labor Economics - 5

Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation - 5

Establishment Micro Properties - 5

North American Industry Classi - 5

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Person Validation System - 4

George Mason University - 4

Business Services - 4

World Bank - 4

Annual Survey of Entrepreneurs - 4

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Management and Organizational Practices Survey - 4

Data Management System - 4

HHS - 4

Business Formation Statistics - 4

National Institute on Aging - 4

Federal Tax Information - 4

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TFPQ - 4

Annual Business Survey - 4

University of Minnesota - 4

State Energy Data System - 4

Census Bureau Business Dynamics Statistics - 4

Federal Reserve System - 4

Economic Research Service - 4

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University of Michigan - 4

Labor Productivity - 4

New York Times - 4

Commodity Flow Survey - 4

Quarterly Journal of Economics - 4

Journal of Political Economy - 4

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Medical Expenditure Panel Survey - 4

Business Register Bridge - 4

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LEHD Program - 4

United States Census Bureau - 4

University of Texas - 3

Computer Assisted Personal Interview - 3

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Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program - 3

Social Science Research Institute - 3

NBER Summer Institute - 3

Current Employment Statistics - 3

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Cornell Institute for Social and Economic Research - 3

Department of Defense - 3

National Income and Product Accounts - 3

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Employer-Household Dynamics - 3

IQR - 3

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Federal Trade Commission - 3

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Journal of Economic Perspectives - 3

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employment statistics - 8

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employment estimates - 6

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economic census - 6

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geography - 5

urbanized - 5

household surveys - 5

estimates employment - 5

wage growth - 5

patent - 5

patenting - 5

incentive - 5

warehousing - 5

work census - 5

longitudinal employer - 5

employee data - 5

workforce indicators - 5

equilibrium - 5

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financing - 5

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establishments data - 5

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factory - 5

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employment entrepreneurship - 5

labor statistics - 5

census research - 5

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income survey - 4

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assessed - 4

earner - 4

regress - 4

technological - 4

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estimator - 4

use census - 4

residential segregation - 4

inventory - 4

innovative - 4

manager - 4

turnover - 4

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employer household - 4

productive - 4

productivity measures - 4

labor markets - 4

suburban - 4

exogeneity - 4

commerce - 4

price - 4

consumer - 4

restaurant - 4

warehouse - 4

research census - 4

census survey - 4

lending - 4

lender - 4

business data - 4

businesses census - 4

customer - 4

apartment - 4

regression - 4

founder - 4

bankruptcy - 4

debt - 4

endogenous - 4

agriculture - 4

citizen - 4

labor productivity - 4

export - 4

strategic - 4

pollution - 4

regional economic - 4

layoff - 4

mexican - 4

educated - 4

quantity - 4

employing - 4

employment flows - 4

poorer - 3

affluent - 3

sampling - 3

income data - 3

policymakers - 3

economic growth - 3

neighborhood income - 3

immigrated - 3

innovate - 3

immigrant entrepreneurs - 3

wage industries - 3

compensation - 3

poor - 3

trends employment - 3

employment count - 3

worker demographics - 3

productivity wage - 3

industry productivity - 3

subsidy - 3

eligibility - 3

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midwest - 3

competitive - 3

monopolistically - 3

retailer - 3

decade - 3

black business - 3

borrower - 3

database - 3

yearly - 3

record - 3

census years - 3

startup - 3

business startups - 3

marketing - 3

employment wages - 3

estimates productivity - 3

productivity dynamics - 3

firms patents - 3

social - 3

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regulation - 3

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unemployment rates - 3

employment measures - 3

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housing survey - 3

immigrant population - 3

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invention - 3

pricing - 3

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census file - 3

corp - 3

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industry variation - 3

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Viewing papers 11 through 20 of 163


  • Working Paper

    Where to Build Affordable Housing? Evaluating the Tradeoffs of Location

    December 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-62R

    How does the location of affordable housing affect tenant welfare, the distribution of assistance, and broader societal objectives such as racial integration? Using administrative data on tenants of units funded by the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC), we first show that characteristics such as race and proxies for need vary widely across neighborhoods. Despite fixed eligibility requirements, LIHTC developments in more opportunity-rich neighborhoods house tenants who are higher income, more educated, and far less likely to be Black. To quantify the welfare implications, we build a residential choice model in which households choose from both market-rate and affordable housing options, where the latter must be rationed. While building affordable housing in higher-opportunity neighborhoods costs more, it also increases household welfare and reduces city-wide segregation. The gains in household welfare, however, accrue to more moderate-need, non-Black/Hispanic households at the expense of other households. This change in the distribution of assistance is primarily due to a 'crowding out' effect: households that only apply for assistance in higher-opportunity neighborhoods crowd out those willing to apply regardless of location. Finally, other policy levers'such as lowering the income limits used for means-testing'have only limited effects relative to the choice of location.
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  • Working Paper

    Are Immigrants More Innovative? Evidence from Entrepreneurs

    November 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-56

    We evaluate the contributions of immigrant entrepreneurs to innovation in the U.S. using linked survey-administrative data on 199,000 firms with a rich set of innovation measures and other firm and owner characteristics. We find that not only are immigrants more likely than natives to own businesses, but on average their firms display more innovation activities and outcomes. Immigrant owned firms are particularly more likely to create completely new products, improve previous products, use new processes, and engage in both basic and applied R&D, and their efforts are reflected in substantially higher levels of patents and productivity. Immigrant owners are slightly less likely than natives to imitate products of others and to hire more employees. Delving into potential explanations of the immigrant-native differences, we study other characteristics of entrepreneurs, access to finance, choice of industry, immigrant self-selection, and effects of diversity. We find that the immigrant innovation advantage is robust to controlling for detailed characteristics of firms and owners, it holds in both high-tech and non-high-tech industries and, with the exception of productivity, it tends to be even stronger in firms owned by diverse immigrant-native teams and by diverse immigrants from different countries. The evidence from nearly all measures that immigrants tend to operate more innovative and productive firms, together with the higher share of business ownership by immigrants, implies large contributions to U.S. innovation and growth.
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  • Working Paper

    Managing Employee Retention Concerns: Evidence from U.S. Census Data

    February 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-07

    Using Census microdata on 14,000 manufacturing plants, we examine how firms man age employee retention concerns in response to local wage pressure. We validate our measure of employee retention concerns by documenting that plants respond with wage increases, and do so more when the employees' human capital is higher. We doc ument substantial use of non-wage levers in response to retention concerns. Plants shift incentives to increase the likelihood that bonuses can be paid: performance target transparency declines, as does the use of localized performance metrics for bonuses. Furthermore, promotions become more meritocratic, ensuring key employees can be promoted and retained. Lastly, decision-making authority at the plant-level increases, offering more agency to local employees. We find evidence consistent with inequity aversion constraining the response to local wage pressure, and document spillovers in both wage and non-wage reactions across same-firm plants.
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  • Working Paper

    National Experimental Wellbeing Statistics - Version 1

    February 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-04

    This is the U.S. Census Bureau's first release of the National Experimental Wellbeing Statistics (NEWS) project. The NEWS project aims to produce the best possible estimates of income and poverty given all available survey and administrative data. We link survey, decennial census, administrative, and third-party data to address measurement error in income and poverty statistics. We estimate improved (pre-tax money) income and poverty statistics for 2018 by addressing several possible sources of bias documented in prior research. We address biases from 1) unit nonresponse through improved weights, 2) missing income information in both survey and administrative data through improved imputation, and 3) misreporting by combining or replacing survey responses with administrative information. Reducing survey error substantially affects key measures of well-being: We estimate median household income is 6.3 percent higher than in survey estimates, and poverty is 1.1 percentage points lower. These changes are driven by subpopulations for which survey error is particularly relevant. For house holders aged 65 and over, median household income is 27.3 percent higher and poverty is 3.3 percentage points lower than in survey estimates. We do not find a significant impact on median household income for householders under 65 or on child poverty. Finally, we discuss plans for future releases: addressing other potential sources of bias, releasing additional years of statistics, extending the income concepts measured, and including smaller geographies such as state and county.
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  • Working Paper

    Business Dynamics Statistics for Single-Unit Firms

    December 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-57

    The Business Dynamics Statistics of Single Unit Firms (BDS-SU) is an experimental data product that provides information on employment and payroll dynamics for each quarter of the year at businesses that operate in one physical location. This paper describes the creation of the data tables and the value they add to the existing Business Dynamics Statistics (BDS) product. We then present some analysis of the published statistics to provide context for the numbers and demonstrate how they can be used to understand both national and local business conditions, with a particular focus on 2020 and the recession induced by the COVID-19 pandemic. We next examine how firms fared in this recession compared to the Great Recession that began in the fourth quarter of 2007. We also consider the heterogenous impact of the pandemic on various industries and areas of the country, showing which types of businesses in which locations were particularly hard hit. We examine business exit rates in some detail and consider why different metro areas experienced the pandemic in different ways. We also consider entry rates and look for evidence of a surge in new businesses as seen in other data sources. We finish by providing a preview of on-going research to match the BDS to worker demographics and show statistics on the relationship between the characteristics of the firm's workers and outcomes such as firm exit and net job creation.
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  • Working Paper

    LEHD Snapshot Documentation, Release S2021_R2022Q4

    November 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-51

    The Longitudinal Employer-Household Dynamics (LEHD) data at the U.S. Census Bureau is a quarterly database of linked employer-employee data covering over 95% of employment in the United States. These data are used to produce a number of public-use tabulations and tools, including the Quarterly Workforce Indicators (QWI), LEHD Origin-Destination Employment Statistics (LODES), Job-to-Job Flows (J2J), and Post-Secondary Employment Outcomes (PSEO) data products. Researchers on approved projects may also access the underlying LEHD microdata directly, in the form of the LEHD Snapshot restricted-use data product. This document provides a detailed overview of the LEHD Snapshot as of release S2021_R2022Q4, including user guidance, variable codebooks, and an overview of the approvals needed to obtain access. Updates to the documentation for this and future snapshot releases will be made available in HTML format on the LEHD website.
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  • Working Paper

    What Drives Stagnation: Monopsony or Monopoly?

    October 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-45

    Wages for the vast majority of workers have stagnated since the 1980s while productivity has grown. We investigate two coexisting explanations based on rising market power: 1. Monopsony, where dominant firms exploit the limited mobility of their own workers to pay lower wages; and 2. Monopoly, where dominant firms charge too high prices for what they sell, which lowers production and the demand for labor, and hence equilibrium wages economy-wide. Using establishment data from the US Census Bureau between 1997 and 2016, we find evidence of both monopoly and monopsony, where the former is rising over this period and the latter is stable. Both contribute to the decoupling of productivity and wage growth, with monopoly being the primary determinant: in 2016 monopoly accounts for 75% of wage stagnation, monopsony for 25%.
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  • Working Paper

    Opening the Black Box: Task and Skill Mix and Productivity Dispersion

    September 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-44

    An important gap in most empirical studies of establishment-level productivity is the limited information about workers' characteristics and their tasks. Skill-adjusted labor input measures have been shown to be important for aggregate productivity measurement. Moreover, the theoretical literature on differences in production technologies across businesses increasingly emphasizes the task content of production. Our ultimate objective is to open this black box of tasks and skills at the establishment-level by combining establishment-level data on occupations from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) with a restricted-access establishment-level productivity dataset created by the BLS-Census Bureau Collaborative Micro-productivity Project. We take a first step toward this objective by exploring the conceptual, specification, and measurement issues to be confronted. We provide suggestive empirical analysis of the relationship between within-industry dispersion in productivity and tasks and skills. We find that within-industry productivity dispersion is strongly positively related to within-industry task/skill dispersion.
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  • Working Paper

    Market Power And Wage Inequality

    September 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-37

    We propose a theory of how market power affects wage inequality. We ask how goods and labor market power jointly affect the level of wages, the Skill Premium, and wage inequality. We then use detailed microdata from the US Census between 1997 and 2016 to estimate the parameters of labor supply, technology and the market structure. We find that a less competitive market structure lowers the wage level, contributes 7% to the rise in the Skill Premium and accounts for half of the increase in between-establishment wage variance.
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  • Working Paper

    The Effect of Housing Assistance Program on Labor Supply and Family Formation

    August 2022

    Authors: Ning Zhang

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-35

    This paper studies the effect of U.S. Housing Choice Voucher Program Section 8 on low-income people' labor supply and family formation. I analyse this effect using data from the 2014 Panel and 2018 Panel of the restricted-use Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP). My economic approach is to explore the policy which assigns housing vouchers based on an income cutoff as an instrument to study the effect of housing vouchers on low-income people's employment and family formation. The assignment policy states that households with income lower than 50% of the median income for the MSA area are eligible for housing vouchers. With household eligibility status, I compare the households whose income is slightly below the income cutoff (eligible households) with the households whose income is slightly above the income cutoff (ineligible household) to identify the effect of housing vouchers on employment and family formation. I find that housing vouchers have a negative impact on individual labor supply through both extensive and intensive margins. In addition, housing vouchers also negatively impact family formation by decreasing marriage and increasing divorce rates. This project will contribute to understanding the effect of Section 8 Housing Vouchers on low-income households' labor supply and family formation.
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