CREAT: Census Research Exploration and Analysis Tool

Papers Containing Tag(s): 'Total Factor Productivity'

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

Annual Survey of Manufactures - 106

Longitudinal Business Database - 90

Center for Economic Studies - 90

North American Industry Classification System - 77

Ordinary Least Squares - 77

Census of Manufactures - 75

National Bureau of Economic Research - 68

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 67

Longitudinal Research Database - 67

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 65

Standard Industrial Classification - 60

National Science Foundation - 55

Cobb-Douglas - 54

Census of Manufacturing Firms - 42

Economic Census - 36

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 32

Federal Reserve Bank - 31

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 30

Internal Revenue Service - 28

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 27

Special Sworn Status - 25

Metropolitan Statistical Area - 24

TFPQ - 22

Employer Identification Numbers - 22

Generalized Method of Moments - 21

Federal Reserve System - 18

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 18

Census Bureau Longitudinal Business Database - 17

Department of Economics - 15

Business Dynamics Statistics - 15

Census Bureau Business Register - 15

Business Register - 15

TFPR - 14

University of Chicago - 14

Current Population Survey - 14

New York University - 14

Michigan Institute for Teaching and Research in Economics - 13

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 13

Herfindahl Hirschman Index - 13

Securities and Exchange Commission - 12

IQR - 12

Environmental Protection Agency - 12

World Bank - 12

Disclosure Review Board - 11

Federal Trade Commission - 11

American Economic Review - 11

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 10

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development - 10

Information and Communication Technology Survey - 10

Research Data Center - 10

Securities Data Company - 10

Labor Productivity - 9

University of Maryland - 9

Boston College - 9

American Community Survey - 9

Longitudinal Firm Trade Transactions Database - 9

NBER Summer Institute - 9

Center for Research in Security Prices - 9

Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages - 8

International Trade Research Report - 8

Kauffman Foundation - 8

National Income and Product Accounts - 8

Quarterly Journal of Economics - 8

Review of Economics and Statistics - 8

Pollution Abatement Costs and Expenditures - 8

Boston Research Data Center - 8

Permanent Plant Number - 8

UC Berkeley - 7

Decennial Census - 7

Retirement History Survey - 7

County Business Patterns - 7

Harmonized System - 7

Fabricated Metal Products - 7

Journal of Economic Literature - 7

Commodity Flow Survey - 7

Initial Public Offering - 6

University of California Los Angeles - 6

Management and Organizational Practices Survey - 6

World Trade Organization - 6

Value Added - 6

Manufacturing Energy Consumption Survey - 6

Herfindahl-Hirschman - 6

Foreign Direct Investment - 6

North American Industry Classi - 6

Duke University - 6

Journal of Political Economy - 6

Journal of Econometrics - 6

Net Present Value - 6

PAOC - 6

COMPUSTAT - 6

Department of Commerce - 6

Administrative Records - 6

Department of Homeland Security - 5

Board of Governors - 5

Census of Retail Trade - 5

Department of Labor - 5

Annual Business Survey - 5

Department of Justice - 5

Survey of Industrial Research and Development - 5

Energy Information Administration - 5

Financial, Insurance and Real Estate Industries - 5

Council of Economic Advisers - 5

E32 - 5

Bureau of Labor - 5

American Economic Association - 5

State Energy Data System - 5

University of Michigan - 5

Journal of Economic Perspectives - 5

North American Free Trade Agreement - 5

European Union - 5

Review of Economic Studies - 5

MIT Press - 5

Northwestern University - 4

Wholesale Trade - 4

Hypothesis 2 - 4

Patent and Trademark Office - 4

Princeton University - 4

General Accounting Office - 4

International Standard Industrial Classification - 4

CDF - 4

Cumulative Density Function - 4

Company Organization Survey - 4

Census Bureau Center for Economic Studies - 4

New York Times - 4

Princeton University Press - 4

Statistics Canada - 4

Stanford University - 4

2SLS - 4

Cambridge University Press - 4

Journal of International Economics - 4

Core Based Statistical Area - 4

Columbia University - 4

Standard Occupational Classification - 3

Survey of Manufacturing Technology - 3

IBM - 3

National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics - 3

Social Security Administration - 3

Social Security - 3

Business Research and Development and Innovation Survey - 3

Public Administration - 3

National Institute on Aging - 3

Ohio State University - 3

Quarterly Workforce Indicators - 3

2010 Census - 3

Wal-Mart - 3

VAR - 3

Establishment Micro Properties - 3

Postal Service - 3

Customs and Border Protection - 3

Harvard University - 3

Business Services - 3

Department of Energy - 3

Cornell University - 3

CAAA - 3

Auxiliary Establishment Survey - 3

Chicago RDC - 3

Heckscher-Ohlin - 3

New England County Metropolitan - 3

production - 104

manufacturing - 71

growth - 68

market - 60

produce - 56

investment - 55

macroeconomic - 55

econometric - 53

revenue - 52

expenditure - 49

sale - 45

industrial - 40

efficiency - 39

economist - 39

estimating - 39

economically - 39

demand - 36

recession - 36

labor - 35

productive - 34

acquisition - 34

gdp - 33

profit - 31

sector - 28

productivity growth - 28

company - 28

estimation - 25

monopolistic - 24

endogeneity - 24

merger - 24

earnings - 23

export - 22

depreciation - 22

employ - 21

technological - 21

innovation - 21

spillover - 21

industry productivity - 21

manufacturer - 20

plant productivity - 20

enterprise - 19

leverage - 19

productivity dispersion - 18

firms productivity - 18

profitability - 18

exporter - 17

aggregate - 16

productivity measures - 16

finance - 16

regression - 16

productivity plants - 16

quarterly - 15

financial - 15

incentive - 15

econometrician - 15

regulation - 15

organizational - 15

equity - 14

accounting - 14

inventory - 14

factor productivity - 14

factory - 14

rates productivity - 14

stock - 14

labor productivity - 14

aggregate productivity - 13

employed - 13

employee - 13

growth productivity - 13

corporate - 13

competitor - 13

acquirer - 13

debt - 12

statistical - 12

measures productivity - 12

workforce - 12

entrepreneurship - 12

investor - 12

patent - 12

takeover - 12

consumption - 12

cost - 12

multinational - 12

product - 12

payroll - 11

import - 11

technology - 11

productivity dynamics - 11

conglomerate - 11

heterogeneity - 11

gain - 11

endogenous - 11

producing - 11

dispersion productivity - 10

regress - 10

employment growth - 10

corporation - 9

trend - 9

shareholder - 9

geographically - 9

shock - 9

investing - 9

invest - 9

industry concentration - 9

exogeneity - 9

tariff - 9

estimator - 9

spending - 9

emission - 9

pollution - 9

capital - 9

ownership - 9

quantity - 8

bank - 8

borrowing - 8

estimates productivity - 8

productivity analysis - 8

exporting - 8

productivity estimates - 8

firms plants - 8

plants industry - 8

subsidiary - 8

regulatory - 8

epa - 8

environmental - 8

strategic - 8

efficient - 8

plant - 8

profitable - 8

textile - 8

productivity distribution - 7

financing - 7

loan - 7

impact - 7

entrepreneur - 7

exported - 7

investment productivity - 7

productivity shocks - 7

innovating - 7

wages productivity - 7

plants firms - 7

externality - 7

level productivity - 7

monopolistically - 7

productivity differences - 7

establishment - 7

regulation productivity - 7

econometrically - 7

specialization - 7

manager - 7

yield - 7

analysis productivity - 7

declining - 7

exogenous - 7

bankruptcy - 7

pricing - 7

commodity - 7

pollutant - 7

productivity variation - 6

lending - 6

lender - 6

creditor - 6

average - 6

wholesale - 6

venture - 6

subsidy - 6

productivity impacts - 6

innovate - 6

city - 6

relocation - 6

plant investment - 6

regional - 6

competitiveness - 6

reallocation productivity - 6

area - 6

equilibrium - 6

share - 6

regressing - 6

metropolitan - 6

price - 6

productivity size - 6

management - 6

productivity increases - 6

liquidation - 6

productivity firms - 6

trading - 6

fluctuation - 6

consumer - 6

performance - 6

diversification - 6

incorporated - 5

collateral - 5

contract - 5

asset - 5

report - 5

respondent - 5

retailer - 5

sector productivity - 5

occupation - 5

entrepreneurial - 5

technology adoption - 5

prospect - 5

innovation productivity - 5

innovative - 5

worker - 5

relocate - 5

salary - 5

rent - 5

plant employment - 5

industries estimate - 5

productivity wage - 5

wage growth - 5

estimates production - 5

agriculture - 5

observed productivity - 5

technical - 5

larger firms - 5

security - 5

capital productivity - 5

recessionary - 5

budget - 5

managerial - 5

rate - 5

utilization - 5

volatility - 5

mergers acquisitions - 5

restructuring - 5

outsourcing - 5

environmental regulation - 5

costs pollution - 5

pollution abatement - 5

owner - 5

industry variation - 5

refinery - 5

polluting - 5

deviation - 4

microdata - 4

borrow - 4

credit - 4

banking - 4

fund - 4

disclosure - 4

tax - 4

imputation - 4

commerce - 4

data census - 4

survey - 4

employment effects - 4

layoff - 4

shipment - 4

regressors - 4

invention - 4

researcher - 4

innovator - 4

patenting - 4

oligopolistic - 4

region - 4

manufacturing plants - 4

country - 4

sectoral - 4

entry productivity - 4

downturn - 4

firms grow - 4

decline - 4

estimates employment - 4

employment dynamics - 4

oligopoly - 4

bankrupt - 4

debtor - 4

expense - 4

buyer - 4

practices productivity - 4

forecast - 4

aggregation - 4

firms export - 4

exporting firms - 4

downstream - 4

good - 4

international trade - 4

regulated - 4

abatement expenditures - 4

manufacturing industries - 4

diversify - 4

data - 4

analysis - 4

housing - 3

mortgage - 3

irs - 3

warehouse - 3

retail - 3

grocery - 3

percentile - 3

labor statistics - 3

manufacturing productivity - 3

state - 3

shift - 3

urban - 3

relocating - 3

bias - 3

industry output - 3

labor markets - 3

geography - 3

regional economic - 3

local economic - 3

tech - 3

outsourced - 3

sourcing - 3

industry growth - 3

employment distribution - 3

hire - 3

trends labor - 3

employment production - 3

economic growth - 3

supplier - 3

energy - 3

autoregressive - 3

inflation - 3

heterogeneous - 3

hiring - 3

firms trade - 3

proprietor - 3

model - 3

unobserved - 3

development - 3

customer - 3

analyst - 3

agency - 3

trade models - 3

workplace - 3

valuation - 3

economic census - 3

advantage - 3

diversified - 3

plants industries - 3

measure - 3

study - 3

Viewing papers 21 through 30 of 208


  • Working Paper

    Industry Linkages from Joint Production

    January 2023

    Authors: Xiang Ding

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-02

    I develop a theory of joint production to quantify aggregate economies of scope. In US manufacturing data, increased export demand in one industry raises a firm's sales in its other industries that share knowledge inputs like R&D and software. I estimate that knowledge inputs contribute to economies of scope through their scalability and partial non-rivalry within the firm. On average a 10 percent increase in output in one industry lowers prices in other industries by 0.4 percent. Such economies of scope manifest disproportionately among knowledge proximate industries and imply large spillover impacts of recent US-China trade policy on producer prices.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • 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%.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • 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.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • 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.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Grouped Variation in Factor Shares: An Application to Misallocation

    August 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-33

    A striking feature of micro-level plant data is the presence of significant variation in factor cost shares across plants within an industry. We develop a methodology to decompose cost shares into idiosyncratic and group-specific components. In particular, we carry out a cluster analysis to recover the number and membership of groups using breaks in the dispersion of factor cost shares across plants. We apply our methodology to Chilean plant-level data and find that group-specific variation accounts for approximately one-third of the variation in factor shares across firms. We also study the implications ofthese groups in cost shares on the gains from eliminating misallocation. We place bounds on their importance and find that ignoring them can overstate the gains from eliminating misallocation by up to one-third.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Propagation and Amplification of Local Productivity Spillovers

    August 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-32

    This paper shows that local productivity spillovers can propagate throughout the economy through the plant-level networks of multi-region firms. Using confidential Census plant-level data, we find that large manufacturing plant openings not only raise the productivity of local plants but also of distant plants hundreds of miles away, which belong to multi-region firms that are exposed to the local productivity spillover through one of their plants. To quantify the significance of plant-level networks for the propagation and amplification of local productivity shocks, we develop and estimate a quantitative spatial model in which plants of multi-region firms are linked through shared knowledge. Counterfactual exercises show that while knowledge sharing through plant-level networks amplifies the aggregate effects of local productivity shocks, it can widen economic disparities between workers and regions in the economy.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    The Radius of Economic Opportunity: Evidence from Migration and Local Labor Markets

    July 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-27

    We examine the geographic incidence of local labor market growth across locations of childhood residence. We ask: when wages grow in a given US labor market, do the benefits flow to individuals growing up in nearby or distant locations? We begin by constructing new statistics on migration rates across labor markets between childhood and young adulthood. This migration matrix shows 80% of young adults migrate less than 100 miles from where they grew up. 90% migrate less than 500 miles. Migration distances are shorter for Black and Hispanic individuals and for those from low income families. These migration patterns provide information on the first order geographic incidence of local wage growth. Next, we explore the responsiveness of location choices to economic shocks. Using geographic variation induced by the recovery from the Great Recession, we estimate the elasticity of migration with respect to increases in local labor market wage growth. We develop and implement a novel test for validating whether our identifying wage variation is driven by changes in labor market opportunities rather than changes in worker composition due to sorting. We find that higher wages lead to increased in-migration, decreased out-migration and a partial capitalization of wage increases into local prices. Our results imply that for a 2 rank point increase in annual wages (approximately $1600) in a given commuting zone (CZ), approximately 99% of wage gains flow to those who would have resided in the CZ in the absence of the wage change. The geographically concentrated nature of most migration and the small magnitude of these migration elasticities suggest that the incidence of labor market conditions across childhood residences is highly local. For many individuals, the 'radius of economic opportunity' is quite narrow.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Agglomeration Spillovers and Persistence: New Evidence from Large Plant Openings

    June 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-21

    We use confidential Census microdata to compare outcomes for plants in counties that 'win' a new plant to plants in similar counties that did not to receive the new plant, providing empirical evidence on the economic theories used to justify local industrial policies. We find little evidence that the average highly incentivized large plant generates significant productivity spillovers. Our semiparametric estimates of the overall local agglomeration function indicate that residual TFP is linear for the range of 'agglomeration' densities most frequently observed, suggesting local economic shocks do not push local economies to a new higher equilibrium. Examining changes twenty years after the new plant entrant, we find some evidence of persistent, positive increases in winning county-manufacturing shares that are not driven by establishment births.
    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

    Automation and the Workforce: A Firm-Level View from the 2019 Annual Business Survey

    April 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-12R

    This paper describes the adoption of automation technologies by US firms across all economic sectors by leveraging a new module introduced in the 2019 Annual Business Survey, conducted by the US Census Bureau in partnership with the National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics (NCSES). The module collects data from over 300,000 firms on the use of five advanced technologies: AI, robotics, dedicated equipment, specialized software, and cloud computing. The adoption of these technologies remains low (especially for AI and robotics), varies substantially across industries, and concentrates on large and young firms. However, because larger firms are much more likely to adopt them, 12-64% of US workers and 22-72% of manufacturing workers are exposed to these technologies. Firms report a variety of motivations for adoption, including automating tasks previously performed by labor. Consistent with the use of these technologies for automation, adopters have higher labor productivity and lower labor shares. In particular, the use of these technologies is associated with a 11.4% higher labor productivity, which accounts for 20'30% of the difference in labor productivity between large firms and the median firm in an industry. Adopters report that these technologies raised skill requirements and led to greater demand for skilled labor, but brought limited or ambiguous effects to their employment levels.
    View Full Paper PDF