CREAT: Census Research Exploration and Analysis Tool

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

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

Center for Economic Studies - 59

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 53

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

Employer Identification Numbers - 28

Economic Census - 26

Total Factor Productivity - 24

County Business Patterns - 22

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 21

Business Register - 21

Social Security Administration - 20

Research Data Center - 20

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 19

Service Annual Survey - 19

Longitudinal Research Database - 19

Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages - 18

Special Sworn Status - 17

Consolidated Metropolitan Statistical Areas - 17

Disclosure Review Board - 16

University of Chicago - 16

National Bureau of Economic Research - 16

Survey of Income and Program Participation - 15

Unemployment Insurance - 15

Federal Reserve Bank - 15

American Housing Survey - 14

Quarterly Workforce Indicators - 14

Social Security Number - 13

Census Bureau Business Register - 13

Protected Identification Key - 13

2010 Census - 13

Census Bureau Longitudinal Business Database - 13

Housing and Urban Development - 12

Social Security - 12

Department of Housing and Urban Development - 12

Small Business Administration - 12

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 12

Census of Manufacturing Firms - 11

Core Based Statistical Area - 11

Cobb-Douglas - 11

Office of Management and Budget - 10

Master Address File - 10

Business Dynamics Statistics - 10

Characteristics of Business Owners - 10

Sample Edited Detail File - 10

National Longitudinal Survey of Youth - 9

Cornell University - 9

Business Employment Dynamics - 9

Herfindahl Hirschman Index - 9

American Economic Review - 9

Department of Economics - 8

Individual Characteristics File - 8

Generalized Method of Moments - 8

Postal Service - 8

Patent and Trademark Office - 8

Michigan Institute for Teaching and Research in Economics - 8

International Trade Research Report - 8

PSID - 8

Public Use Micro Sample - 8

Department of Labor - 7

Employment History File - 7

Employer Characteristics File - 7

University of Maryland - 7

Council of Economic Advisers - 7

New York University - 7

Journal of Economic Literature - 7

Permanent Plant Number - 7

Department of Agriculture - 6

W-2 - 6

Composite Person Record - 6

COVID-19 - 6

Supreme Court - 6

1940 Census - 6

American Economic Association - 6

Survey of Business Owners - 6

Local Employment Dynamics - 6

National Establishment Time Series - 6

Financial, Insurance and Real Estate Industries - 6

University of California Los Angeles - 6

Harvard University - 6

Census Bureau Center for Economic Studies - 6

Business Master File - 6

WECD - 6

MAF-ARF - 5

COVID - 5

Occupational Employment Statistics - 5

Paycheck Protection Program - 5

Office of Personnel Management - 5

Accommodation and Food Services - 5

Successor Predecessor File - 5

Herfindahl-Hirschman - 5

CDF - 5

Cumulative Density Function - 5

Journal of Labor Economics - 5

Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation - 5

Establishment Micro Properties - 5

North American Industry Classi - 5

Disability Insurance - 4

Person Validation System - 4

George Mason University - 4

Business Services - 4

World Bank - 4

Annual Survey of Entrepreneurs - 4

Oil and Gas Extraction - 4

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

Standard Occupational Classification - 4

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

Company Organization Survey - 4

Nonemployer Statistics - 4

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

Regional Economic Information System - 4

Medical Expenditure Panel Survey - 4

Business Register Bridge - 4

Geographic Information Systems - 4

LEHD Program - 4

United States Census Bureau - 4

University of Texas - 3

Computer Assisted Personal Interview - 3

Temporary Assistance for Needy Families - 3

Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program - 3

Social Science Research Institute - 3

NBER Summer Institute - 3

Current Employment Statistics - 3

Bureau of Labor - 3

Cornell Institute for Social and Economic Research - 3

Department of Defense - 3

National Income and Product Accounts - 3

Department of Health and Human Services - 3

ASEC - 3

Department of Homeland Security - 3

Arts, Entertainment - 3

Employer-Household Dynamics - 3

IQR - 3

TFPR - 3

Federal Trade Commission - 3

Census of Retail Trade - 3

Retail Trade - 3

Kauffman Firm Survey - 3

Survey of Consumer Finances - 3

CAAA - 3

Journal of Economic Perspectives - 3

Sloan Foundation - 3

Kauffman Foundation - 3

Integrated Longitudinal Business Database - 3

Center for Administrative Records Research - 3

Russell Sage Foundation - 3

Integrated Public Use Microdata Series - 3

Energy Information Administration - 3

Department of Commerce - 3

Census 2000 - 3

Census of Services - 3

Auxiliary Establishment Survey - 3

Environmental Protection Agency - 3

Retirement History Survey - 3

UC Berkeley - 3

Administrative Records - 3

National Institutes of Health - 3

MTO - 3

Boston Research Data Center - 3

metropolitan - 38

workforce - 36

employ - 34

employed - 33

econometric - 33

labor - 32

neighborhood - 30

market - 30

housing - 28

production - 27

employee - 26

manufacturing - 26

company - 25

population - 25

recession - 25

establishment - 25

enterprise - 24

economist - 23

payroll - 22

sale - 22

resident - 21

residential - 21

revenue - 20

endogeneity - 20

minority - 19

estimating - 19

growth - 19

industrial - 19

survey - 18

segregation - 18

entrepreneurship - 18

city - 17

rent - 17

racial - 17

residence - 17

ethnicity - 17

ethnic - 17

demand - 17

macroeconomic - 17

spillover - 17

economically - 17

sector - 16

entrepreneur - 16

poverty - 15

quarterly - 15

hispanic - 15

area - 14

socioeconomic - 14

earnings - 14

migrant - 14

black - 14

entrepreneurial - 13

venture - 13

immigrant - 13

worker - 13

produce - 13

respondent - 12

discrimination - 12

disadvantaged - 12

profit - 12

race - 12

white - 12

migration - 12

statistical - 11

investment - 11

census data - 11

urban - 11

expenditure - 11

estimation - 11

proprietorship - 11

workplace - 11

gdp - 10

employment growth - 10

segregated - 10

monopolistic - 10

occupation - 10

competitor - 10

job - 10

finance - 10

employment data - 10

geographically - 10

organizational - 10

rural - 9

agency - 9

immigration - 9

employment dynamics - 9

incorporated - 9

regional - 9

externality - 9

impact - 8

region - 8

geographic - 8

innovation - 8

data census - 8

census employment - 8

neighbor - 8

renter - 8

trend - 8

employment statistics - 8

efficiency - 8

acquisition - 8

longitudinal - 8

proprietor - 8

migrate - 8

manufacturer - 8

competitiveness - 8

hiring - 7

report - 7

disparity - 7

urbanization - 7

aggregate - 7

relocation - 7

reside - 7

census bureau - 7

unemployed - 7

tenure - 7

salary - 7

microdata - 7

homeowner - 7

amenity - 7

data - 7

migrating - 7

relocate - 7

merger - 7

profitability - 7

corporate - 7

bias - 6

welfare - 6

community - 6

district - 6

state - 6

employment estimates - 6

productivity growth - 6

information census - 6

native - 6

hire - 6

heterogeneity - 6

wages productivity - 6

econometrician - 6

suburb - 6

industry concentration - 6

economic census - 6

financial - 6

corporation - 6

home - 6

house - 6

leverage - 6

moving - 6

locality - 6

relocating - 6

income neighborhoods - 6

country - 5

town - 5

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

specialization - 5

financing - 5

loan - 5

bank - 5

establishments data - 5

enrollment - 5

mobility - 5

factory - 5

capital - 5

commodity - 5

unobserved - 5

employment entrepreneurship - 5

labor statistics - 5

census research - 5

cost - 5

opportunity - 5

sociology - 4

income survey - 4

survey income - 4

assessed - 4

earner - 4

regress - 4

technological - 4

industry wages - 4

estimator - 4

use census - 4

residential segregation - 4

inventory - 4

innovative - 4

manager - 4

turnover - 4

pandemic - 4

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

subsidized - 3

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

declining - 3

aging - 3

supplier - 3

downstream - 3

productivity firms - 3

regulation - 3

reallocation productivity - 3

borrowing - 3

industrialized - 3

unemployment rates - 3

employment measures - 3

partnership - 3

housing survey - 3

immigrant population - 3

assimilation - 3

plants industry - 3

prospect - 3

invention - 3

pricing - 3

emission - 3

environmental - 3

polluting - 3

census file - 3

corp - 3

network - 3

productivity plants - 3

location - 3

industry variation - 3

diversification - 3

discriminatory - 3

profitable - 3

union - 3

indian - 3

schooling - 3

aggregation - 3

Viewing papers 21 through 30 of 163


  • Working Paper

    Metropolitan Segregation: No Breakthrough in Sight

    May 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-14

    The 2020 Census offers new information on changes in residential segregation in metropolitan regions across the country as they continue to become more diverse. We take a long view, assessing trends since 1980 and extrapolating to the future. These new data mostly reinforce patterns that were observed a decade ago: high but slowly declining black-white segregation, and less intense but hardly changing segregation of Hispanics and Asians from whites. Enough time has passed since the civil rights era of the 1960s and 1970s to draw this conclusion: segregation will continue to divide Americans well into the 21st Century.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Has toughness of local competition declined?

    May 2022

    Authors: Lan Dinh

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-13

    Recent evidence on rm-level markups and concentration raises a concern that market competition has declined in the U.S. over the last few decades. Since measuring competition is difficult, methodologies used to arrive at these findings have merits but also raise technical concerns which question the validity of these results. Given the significance of documenting how competition has changed, I contribute to this literature by studying a different measure of competition. Specifically, I estimate the toughness of local competition over time. To derive this estimate, I use a generalized monopolistic competition model with variable markups. This model generates insights that allows me to measure competition as the sensitivity of weighted-average markup to changes in the number of competitors using directly observable variables. Compared to firm-level markups estimation, this method relaxes the need to estimate production functions. I then use confidential Census data to estimate toughness of local competition from 1997 to 2016, which shows that local competition has decreased in non-tradable industries on average in the U.S. during this time period.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    The Evolution of U.S. Retail Concentration

    March 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-07

    Increases in national concentration have been a salient feature of industry dynamics in the U.S. and have contributed to concerns about increasing market power. Yet, local trends may be more informative about market power, particularly in the retail sector where consumers have traditionally shopped at nearby stores. We find that local concentration has increased almost in parallel with national concentration using novel Census data on product-level revenue for all U.S. retail stores. The increases in concentration are broad based, affecting most markets, products, and retail industries. We implement a new decomposition of the national Herfindahl Hirschman Index and show that despite similar trends, national and local concentration reflect different changes in the retail sector. The increase in national concentration comes from consumers in different markets increasingly buying from the same firms and does not reflect changes in local market power. We estimate a model of retail competition which links local concentration to markups. The model implies that the increase in local concentration explains one-third of the observed increase in markups.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    The Industrial Revolution in Services

    October 2021

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-34

    The U.S. has experienced an industrial revolution in services. Firms in service industries, those where output has to be supplied locally, increasingly operate in more markets. Employment, sales, and spending on fixed costs such as R&D and managerial employment have increased rapidly in these industries. These changes have favored top firms the most and have led to increasing national concentration in service industries. Top firms in service industries have grown entirely by expanding into new local markets that are predominantly small and mid-sized U.S. cities. Market concentration at the local level has decreased in all U.S. cities but by significantly more in cities thatwere initially small. These facts are consistent with the availability of a new menu of fixed-cost-intensive technologies in service sectors that enable adopters to produce at lower marginal costs in any markets. The entry of top service firms into new local markets has led to substantial unmeasured productivity growth, particularly in small markets.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    The Business Dynamics Statistics: Describing the Evolution of the U.S. Economy from 1978-2019

    October 2021

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-33

    The U.S. Census Bureau's Business Dynamics Statistics (BDS) provide annual measures of how many businesses begin, end, or continue their operations and the associated job creation and destruction. The BDS is a valuable resource for information on the U.S. economy because of its long time series (1978-2019), its complete coverage (all private sector, non-farm U.S. businesses), and its tabulations for both individual establishments and the firms that own and control them. In this paper, we use the publicly available BDS data to describe the dynamics of the economy over the past 40 years. We highlight the increasing concentration of employment at old and large firms and describe net job creation trends in the manufacturing, retail, information, food/accommodations, and healthcare industry sectors. We show how the spatial distribution of employment has changed, first moving away from the largest cities and then back again. Finally, we show long-run trends for a group of industries we classify as high-tech and explore how the share of employment at small and young firms has changed for this part of the economy.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Small Business Pulse Survey Estimates by Owner Characteristics and Rural/Urban Designation

    September 2021

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-24

    In response to requests from policymakers for additional context for Small Business Pulse Survey (SBPS) measures of the impact of COVID-19 on small businesses, we researched developing estimates by owner characteristics and rural/urban locations. Leveraging geographic coding on the Business Register, we create estimates of the effect of the pandemic on small businesses by urban and rural designations. A more challenging exercise entails linking micro-level data from the SBPS with ownership data from the Annual Business Survey (ABS) to create estimates of the effect of the pandemic on small businesses by owner race, sex, ethnicity, and veteran status. Given important differences in survey design and concerns about nonresponse bias, we face significant challenges in producing estimates for owner demographics. We discuss our attempts to meet these challenges and provide discussion about caution that must be used in interpreting the results. The estimates produced for this paper are available for download. Reflecting the Census Bureau's commitment to scientific inquiry and transparency, the micro data from the SBPS will be available to qualified researchers on approved projects in the Federal Statistical Research Data Center network.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Black Entrepreneurs, Job Creation, and Financial Constraints

    May 2021

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-11

    Black-owned businesses tend to operate with less finance and employ fewer workers than those owned by Whites. Motivated by a simple conceptual framework, we document these facts and show they are causally connected using large firm-level surveys linked to universal employer data from the Census Bureau. We find that the racial financing gap is most pronounced at start-up and tends to narrow with firm age. At any age, Black-owned firms are less likely to receive bank loans, more likely to refrain from applying because they expect denial, and more likely to report that lack of finance reduces their profitability. Yet the observable characteristics of Black entrepreneurs are similar in most respects to Whites, and in some ways - higher education, growth-oriented motivations, and involvement in the business - would seem to imply higher, not lower, demand for finance. Concerning employment, we find that Black-owned firms have on average about 12 percent fewer employees than those owned by Whites, but the difference drops when controlling for firm age and other characteristics. However, when the analysis holds financial variables constant, the results imply that equally well-financed Black-owned rms would be larger than White-owned by about seven percent. Exploiting the credit supply shock of changing assignment to Community Reinvestment Act treatment through a Regression Discontinuity Design in a firm-level panel regression framework, we find that expanded credit access raises employment 5-7 percentage points more at Black-owned businesses than White-owned firms in treated neighborhoods.
    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

    Changes in Metropolitan Area Definition, 1910-2010

    February 2021

    Authors: Todd Gardner

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-04

    The Census Bureau was established as a permanent agency in 1902, as industrialization and urbanization were bringing about rapid changes in American society. The years following the establishment of a permanent Census Bureau saw the first attempts at devising statistical geography for tabulating statistics for large cities and their environs. These efforts faced several challenges owing to the variation in settlement patterns, political organization, and rates of growth across the United States. The 1910 census proved to be a watershed, as the Census Bureau offered a definition of urban places, established the first census tract boundaries for tabulating data within cities, and introduced the first standardized metropolitan area definition. It was not until the middle of the twentieth century, however, the Census Bureau in association with other statistical agencies had established a flexible standard metropolitan definition and a more consistent means of tabulating urban data. Since 1950, the rules for determining the cores and extent of metropolitan areas have been largely regarded as comparable. In the decades that followed, however, a number of rule changes were put into place that accounted for metropolitan complexity in differing ways, and these have been the cause of some confusion. Changes put into effect with the 2000 census represent a consensus of sorts for how to handle these issues.
    View Full Paper PDF