CREAT: Census Research Exploration and Analysis Tool

Papers Containing Tag(s): 'Unemployment Insurance'

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

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 62

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 32

Current Population Survey - 30

Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages - 29

American Community Survey - 29

Internal Revenue Service - 27

Quarterly Workforce Indicators - 27

North American Industry Classification System - 26

National Science Foundation - 24

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 23

Center for Economic Studies - 22

Social Security Number - 21

Employer Identification Numbers - 20

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 18

Protected Identification Key - 18

Cornell University - 17

Social Security Administration - 16

Longitudinal Business Database - 15

Survey of Income and Program Participation - 15

Decennial Census - 15

Disclosure Review Board - 15

Metropolitan Statistical Area - 15

Local Employment Dynamics - 15

Standard Industrial Classification - 14

LEHD Program - 14

Employer Characteristics File - 12

Service Annual Survey - 12

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 10

Business Register - 10

Social Security - 10

Research Data Center - 10

International Trade Research Report - 10

Census Bureau Business Register - 9

Employment History File - 9

Individual Characteristics File - 9

Core Based Statistical Area - 9

Ordinary Least Squares - 9

National Institute on Aging - 9

Office of Personnel Management - 8

Business Dynamics Statistics - 8

County Business Patterns - 7

Department of Economics - 7

2010 Census - 7

University of Chicago - 7

Master Address File - 7

American Economic Review - 7

Employer-Household Dynamics - 6

Department of Labor - 6

Composite Person Record - 6

National Bureau of Economic Research - 6

Labor Turnover Survey - 6

Business Employment Dynamics - 6

Federal Reserve Bank - 5

AKM - 5

Economic Census - 5

Census Numident - 5

Successor Predecessor File - 5

National Longitudinal Survey of Youth - 5

JOLTS - 5

MIT Press - 5

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 5

Business Master File - 5

American Housing Survey - 5

Consolidated Metropolitan Statistical Areas - 5

Cornell Institute for Social and Economic Research - 5

National Center for Health Statistics - 4

Generalized Method of Moments - 4

Quarterly Journal of Economics - 4

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 4

Federal Tax Information - 4

Health and Retirement Study - 4

University of Michigan - 4

Census 2000 - 4

CDF - 4

Business Register Bridge - 4

Cumulative Density Function - 4

W-2 - 3

Integrated Longitudinal Business Database - 3

Department of Health and Human Services - 3

Occupational Employment Statistics - 3

Brookings Institution - 3

Department of Homeland Security - 3

Office of Management and Budget - 3

NBER Summer Institute - 3

Housing and Urban Development - 3

Indian Health Service - 3

Sloan Foundation - 3

Person Validation System - 3

PSID - 3

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 3

American Economic Association - 3

American Statistical Association - 3

Journal of Political Economy - 3

Journal of Econometrics - 3

Journal of Labor Economics - 3

BLS Handbook of Methods - 3

Retail Trade - 3

Financial, Insurance and Real Estate Industries - 3

Probability Density Function - 3

Establishment Micro Properties - 3

Census Industry Code - 3

Permanent Plant Number - 3

employed - 40

workforce - 38

employ - 31

labor - 28

employee - 27

payroll - 21

earnings - 21

recession - 19

census employment - 18

survey - 17

job - 16

worker - 16

hiring - 14

quarterly - 14

econometric - 12

hire - 11

salary - 11

workplace - 11

employment data - 11

economist - 10

employer household - 10

longitudinal employer - 10

longitudinal - 10

employment dynamics - 10

census bureau - 10

residential - 9

employment statistics - 9

employee data - 9

statistical - 9

agency - 9

tenure - 9

employment growth - 8

workforce indicators - 8

respondent - 8

macroeconomic - 7

earn - 7

earner - 7

heterogeneity - 7

employing - 7

employment wages - 7

residence - 7

employment count - 7

estimating - 7

census data - 7

metropolitan - 7

shift - 6

employment flows - 6

occupation - 6

layoff - 6

socioeconomic - 6

unemployment rates - 6

employment unemployment - 6

workers earnings - 6

employment earnings - 6

state employment - 6

employment estimates - 6

data census - 6

mobility - 6

data - 6

unemployed - 6

state - 6

clerical - 6

aging - 6

migration - 5

recessionary - 5

work census - 5

trend - 5

report - 5

labor statistics - 5

turnover - 5

estimates employment - 5

research census - 5

relocation - 4

disparity - 4

endogeneity - 4

wages employment - 4

poverty - 4

ethnic - 4

immigrant - 4

employment effects - 4

housing - 4

microdata - 4

department - 4

privacy - 4

linked census - 4

record - 4

unemployment insurance - 4

insurance - 4

census survey - 4

population - 4

federal - 4

citizen - 4

regress - 3

relocate - 3

enterprise - 3

proprietorship - 3

entrepreneurship - 3

incorporated - 3

sector - 3

labor markets - 3

incentive - 3

minority - 3

segregation - 3

disadvantaged - 3

neighborhood - 3

ethnicity - 3

worker wages - 3

worker demographics - 3

earnings workers - 3

measures employment - 3

employment measures - 3

disclosure - 3

statistical disclosure - 3

employed census - 3

industrial - 3

database - 3

statistician - 3

household surveys - 3

resident - 3

migrate - 3

commute - 3

trends employment - 3

rates employment - 3

coverage - 3

economic census - 3

Viewing papers 21 through 30 of 65


  • Working Paper

    Disclosure Limitation and Confidentiality Protection in Linked Data

    January 2018

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-18-07

    Confidentiality protection for linked administrative data is a combination of access modalities and statistical disclosure limitation. We review traditional statistical disclosure limitation methods and newer methods based on synthetic data, input noise infusion and formal privacy. We discuss how these methods are integrated with access modalities by providing three detailed examples. The first example is the linkages in the Health and Retirement Study to Social Security Administration data. The second example is the linkage of the Survey of Income and Program Participation to administrative data from the Internal Revenue Service and the Social Security Administration. The third example is the Longitudinal Employer-Household Dynamics data, which links state unemployment insurance records for workers and firms to a wide variety of censuses and surveys at the U.S. Census Bureau. For examples, we discuss access modalities, disclosure limitation methods, the effectiveness of those methods, and the resulting analytical validity. The final sections discuss recent advances in access modalities for linked administrative data.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Does Federally-Funded Job Training Work? Nonexperimental Estimates of WIA Training Impacts Using Longitudinal Data on Workers and Firms

    January 2018

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-18-02

    We study the job training provided under the US Workforce Investment Act (WIA) to adults and dislocated workers in two states. Our substantive contributions center on impacts estimated non-experimentally using administrative data. These impacts compare WIA participants who do and do not receive training. In addition to the usual impacts on earnings and employment, we link our state data to the Longitudinal Employer-Household Dynamics (LEHD) data at the US Census Bureau, which allows us to estimate impacts on the characteristics of the firms at which participants find employment. We find moderate positive impacts on employment, earnings and desirable firm characteristics for adults, but not for dislocated workers. Our primary methodological contribution consists of assessing the value of the additional conditioning information provided by the LEHD relative to the data available in state Unemployment Insurance (UI) earnings records. We find that value to be zero.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    The Potential for Using Combined Survey and Administrative Data Sources to Study Internal Labor Migration

    January 2017

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-55

    This paper introduces a novel data set combining survey data from the American Community Survey (ACS) with administrative data on employment from the Longitudinal Employer-Household Dynamics program, in order to study geographic labor mobility. With its rich set of information about individuals at the time of the migration decision, large sample size, and near-comprehensive ability to detect labor mobility, the new combined ACS-LEHD data offers several advantages over the existing data sets that are typically used in the study of migration, such as the Decennial Census, Current Population Survey, and Internal Revenue Service data. An overview of how these different data sets can be employed, and examples demonstrating the usefulness of the newly proposed data set, are provided. Aggregate statistics and stylized facts are generated from the ACS-LEHD data which reveal many of the same features as the existing data sets, including the decline of aggregate mobility throughout the past decade, as well as many of the known demographic differences in migration propensity.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Sorting Between and Within Industries: A Testable Model of Assortative Matching

    January 2017

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-43

    We test Shimer's (2005) theory of the sorting of workers between and within industrial sectors based on directed search with coordination frictions, deliberately maintaining its static general equilibrium framework. We fit the model to sector-specific wage, vacancy and output data, including publicly-available statistics that characterize the distribution of worker and employer wage heterogeneity across sectors. Our empirical method is general and can be applied to a broad class of assignment models. The results indicate that industries are the loci of sorting-more productive workers are employed in more productive industries. The evidence confirm that strong assortative matching can be present even when worker and employer components of wage heterogeneity are weakly correlated.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Two Perspectives on Commuting: A Comparison of Home to Work Flows Across Job-Linked Survey and Administrative Files

    January 2017

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-34

    Commuting flows and workplace employment data have a wide constituency of users including urban and regional planners, social science and transportation researchers, and businesses. The U.S. Census Bureau releases two, national data products that give the magnitude and characteristics of home to work flows. The American Community Survey (ACS) tabulates households' responses on employment, workplace, and commuting behavior. The Longitudinal Employer-Household Dynamics (LEHD) program tabulates administrative records on jobs in the LEHD Origin-Destination Employment Statistics (LODES). Design differences across the datasets lead to divergence in a comparable statistic: county-to-county aggregate commute flows. To understand differences in the public use data, this study compares ACS and LEHD source files, using identifying information and probabilistic matching to join person and job records. In our assessment, we compare commuting statistics for job frames linked on person, employment status, employer, and workplace and we identify person and job characteristics as well as design features of the data frames that explain aggregate differences. We find a lower rate of within-county commuting and farther commutes in LODES. We attribute these greater distances to differences in workplace reporting and to uncertainty of establishment assignments in LEHD for workers at multi-unit employers. Minor contributing factors include differences in residence location and ACS workplace edits. The results of this analysis and the data infrastructure developed will support further work to understand and enhance commuting statistics in both datasets.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Earnings Inequality and Mobility Trends in the United States: Nationally Representative Estimates from Longitudinally Linked Employer-Employee Data

    January 2017

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-24

    Using earnings data from the U.S. Census Bureau, this paper analyzes the role of the employer in explaining the rise in earnings inequality in the United States. We first establish a consistent frame of analysis appropriate for administrative data used to study earnings inequality. We show that the trends in earnings inequality in the administrative data from the Longitudinal Employer-Household Dynamics Program are inconsistent with other data sources when we do not correct for the presence of misused SSNs. After this correction to the worker frame, we analyze how the earnings distribution has changed in the last decade. We present a decomposition of the year-to-year changes in the earnings distribution from 2004-2013. Even when simplifying these flows to movements between the bottom 20%, the middle 60% and the top 20% of the earnings distribution, about 20.5 million workers undergo a transition each year. Another 19.9 million move between employment and nonemployment. To understand the role of the firm in these transitions, we estimate a model for log earnings with additive fixed worker and firm effects using all jobs held by eligible workers from 2004-2013. We construct a composite log earnings firm component across all jobs for a worker in a given year and a non-firm component. We also construct a skill-type index. We show that, while the difference between working at a low-or middle-paying firm are relatively small, the gains from working at a top-paying firm are large. Specifically, the benefits of working for a high-paying firm are not only realized today, through higher earnings paid to the worker, but also persist through an increase in the probability of upward mobility. High-paying firms facilitate moving workers to the top of the earnings distribution and keeping them there.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Labor Reallocation, Employment, and Earnings: Vector Autoregression Evidence

    January 2017

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-11R

    Analysis of the labor market has given increasing attention to the reallocation of jobs across employers and workers across jobs. However, whether and how job reallocation and labor market 'churn' affects the health of the labor market remains an open question. In this paper, we present time series evidence for the U.S. 1993-2013 and consider the relationship between labor reallocation, employment, and earnings using a vector autoregression (VAR) framework. We find that an increase in labor market churn by 1 percentage point predicts that, in the next quarter, employment will increase by 100 to 560 thousand jobs, lowering the unemployment rate by 0.05 to 0.25 percentage points. Job destruction does not predict future changes in employment but a 1 percentage point increase in job destruction leads to an increase in future unemployment 0.14 to 0.42 percentage points. We find mixed results on the relationship between labor reallocation rates and earnings: we nd that, especially for earnings derived from administrative records data, a 1 percentage point increase to either job destruction or churn leads to increased earnings of less than 2 percent. Results vary substantially depending on the earnings measure we use, and so the evidence inconsistent on whether productivity-enhancing aspects of churn and job destruction provide earnings gains for workers in aggregate. Our findings on churn leading to increased employment and a lower unemployment rate are consistent with models of replacement hiring and vacancy chains.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Revisiting the Effects of Unemployment Insurance Extensions on Unemployment: A Measurement Error-Corrected Regression Discontinuity Approach

    March 2016

    Working Paper Number:

    carra-2016-01

    The extension of Unemployment Insurance (UI) benefits was a key policy response to the Great Recession. However, these benefit extensions may have had detrimental labor market effects. While evidence on the individual labor supply response indicates small effects on unemployment, recent work by Hagedorn et al. (2015) uses a county border pair identification strategy to find that the total effects inclusive of effects on labor demand are substantially larger. By focusing on variation within border county pairs, this identification strategy requires counties in the pairs to be similar in terms of unobservable factors. We explore this assumption using an alternative regression discontinuity approach that controls for changes in unobservables by distance to the border. To do so, we must account for measurement error induced by using county-level aggregates. These new results provide no evidence of a large change in unemployment induced by differences in UI generosity across state boundaries. Further analysis suggests that individuals respond to UI benefit differences across boundaries by targeting job search in high-benefit states, thereby raising concerns of treatment spillovers in this setting. Taken together, these two results suggest that the effect of UI benefit extensions on unemployment remains an open question.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Hires and Separations in Equilibrium

    January 2016

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-16-57

    Hiring occurs primarily to fill vacant slots that occur when workers separate. Equivalently, separation occurs to move workers to better alternatives. A model of efficient separations yields several specific predictions. Labor market churn is most likely when mean wages are low and the variance in wages is high. Additionally, over the business cycle, churn decreases during recessions, with hires falling at the beginning of recessions and separations declining later to match hiring. Furthermore, the young disproportionately bear the brunt of employment declines. More generally, hires and separations are positively correlated over time as well as across industry and firm. These predictions are borne out in the LEHD microdata at the economy and firm level.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    The Shifting Job Tenure Distribution

    January 2016

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-16-12R

    There has been a shift in the U.S. job tenure distribution toward longer-duration jobs since 2000. This change is apparent both in the tenure supplements to the Current Population Survey and in matched employer-employee data. A substantial portion of this shift can be accounted for by the ageing of the workforce and the decline in the entry rate of new employer businesses. This shift is accounted for more by declines in the hiring rate, which are concentrated in the labor market downturns associated with the 2001 and 2007-2009 recessions, rather than declines in separation rates. The increase in average real earnings since 2007 is less than what would be predicted by the shift toward longer-tenure jobs because of declines in tenure-held-constant real earnings. Regression estimates of the returns to job tenure provide no evidence that the shift in the job tenure distribution is being driven by better matches between workers and employers.
    View Full Paper PDF