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Papers Containing Tag(s): 'Securities and Exchange Commission'

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Longitudinal Business Database - 19

North American Industry Classification System - 14

Center for Economic Studies - 13

Internal Revenue Service - 12

Annual Survey of Manufactures - 12

Total Factor Productivity - 11

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 10

Standard Industrial Classification - 10

Employer Identification Numbers - 9

Ordinary Least Squares - 9

National Science Foundation - 9

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 8

Longitudinal Research Database - 8

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 7

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 7

Current Population Survey - 7

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 7

Census of Manufactures - 7

Business Register - 6

National Bureau of Economic Research - 6

Census of Manufacturing Firms - 6

Social Security Administration - 6

Herfindahl Hirschman Index - 5

Herfindahl-Hirschman - 5

Federal Reserve Bank - 5

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 5

Cobb-Douglas - 5

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 5

Company Organization Survey - 4

Census Bureau Longitudinal Business Database - 4

American Community Survey - 4

Business Dynamics Statistics - 4

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development - 4

Economic Census - 4

Cornell University - 4

University of Minnesota - 4

Initial Public Offering - 4

Research Data Center - 4

Special Sworn Status - 4

Center for Research in Security Prices - 3

Michigan Institute for Teaching and Research in Economics - 3

Protected Identification Key - 3

New York Times - 3

American Economic Association - 3

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 3

International Trade Research Report - 3

County Business Patterns - 3

Foreign Direct Investment - 3

Census Bureau Business Register - 3

Boston College - 3

Department of Labor - 3

Federal Trade Commission - 3

Securities Data Company - 3

Social Security - 3

Survey of Income and Program Participation - 3

American Statistical Association - 3

Permanent Plant Number - 3

Viewing papers 21 through 30 of 32


  • Working Paper

    The Real Effects of Hedge Fund Activism: Productivity, Risk, and Product Market Competition

    July 2012

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-12-14

    This paper studies the long-term effect of hedge fund activism on the productivity of target firms using plant-level information from the U.S. Census Bureau. A typical target firm improves its production efficiency within two years after activism, and this improvement is concentrated in industries with a high degree of product market competition. By following plants that were sold post-intervention, we also find that efficient capital redeployment is an important channel via which activists create value. Furthermore, our analyses demonstrate that measuring performance using the Compustat data is likely to lead to a downward bias because target firms experiencing greater improvement post-intervention are also more likely to disappear from the Compustat database. Finally, consistent with recent work in asset-pricing linking firm investment decisions and expected returns, we show how changes to target firms' productivity are associated with a decline in systemic risk, particularly in competitive industries.
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  • Working Paper

    Errors in Survey Reporting and Imputation and Their Effects on Estimates of Food Stamp Program Participation

    April 2011

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-11-14

    Benefit receipt in major household surveys is often underreported. This misreporting leads to biased estimates of the economic circumstances of disadvantaged populations, program takeup, and the distributional effects of government programs, and other program effects. We use administrative data on Food Stamp Program (FSP) participation matched to American Community Survey (ACS) and Current Population Survey (CPS) household data. We show that nearly thirty-five percent of true recipient households do not report receipt in the ACS and fifty percent do not report receipt in the CPS. Misreporting, both false negatives and false positives, varies with individual characteristics, leading to complicated biases in FSP analyses. We then directly examine the determinants of program receipt using our combined administrative and survey data. The combined data allow us to examine accurate participation using individual characteristics missing in administrative data. Our results differ from conventional estimates using only survey data, as such estimates understate participation by single parents, non-whites, low income households, and other groups. To evaluate the use of Census Bureau imputed ACS and CPS data, we also examine whether our estimates using survey data alone are closer to those using the accurate combined data when imputed survey observations are excluded. Interestingly, excluding the imputed observations leads to worse ACS estimates, but has less effect on the CPS estimates.
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  • Working Paper

    The Center for Economic Studies 1982-2007: A Brief History

    October 2009

    Authors: B.K. Atrostic

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-09-35

    More than half a century ago, visionaries representing both the Census Bureau and the external research community laid the foundation for the Center for Economic Studies (CES) and the Research Data Center (RDC) system. They saw a clear need for a system meeting the inextricably related requirements of providing more and better information from existing Census Bureau data collections while preserving respondent confidentiality and privacy. CES opened in 1982 to house new longitudinal business databases, develop them further, and make them available to qualified researchers. CES and the RDC system evolved to meet the designers' requirements. Research at CES and the RDCs meets the commitments of the Census Bureau (and, recently, of other agencies) to preserving confidentiality while contributing paradigm-shifting fundamental research in a range of disciplines and up-to-the-minute critical tools for decision-makers.
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  • Working Paper

    Resolving the Tension Between Access and Confidentiality: Past Experience and Future Plans at the U.S. Census Bureau

    September 2009

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-09-33

    This paper provides an historical context for access to U.S. Federal statistical data with a primary focus on the U.S. Census Bureau. We review the various modes used by the Census Bureau to make data available to users, and highlight the costs and benefits associated with each. We highlight some of the specific improvements underway or under consideration at the Census Bureau to better serve its data users, as well as discuss the broad strategies employed by statistical agencies to respond to the challenges of data access.
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  • Working Paper

    Discretionary Disclosure in Financial Reporting: An Examination Comparing Internal Firm Data to Externally Reported Segment Data

    September 2009

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-09-28

    We use confidential, U.S. Census Bureau, plant-level data to investigate aggregation in external reporting. We compare firms' plant-level data to their published segment reports, conducting our tests by grouping a firm's plants that share the same four-digit SIC code into a 'pseudo-segment.' We then determine whether that pseudo-segment is disclosed as an external segment, or whether it is subsumed into a different business unit for external reporting purposes. We find pseudo-segments are more likely to be aggregated within a line-of-business segment when the agency and proprietary costs of separately reporting the pseudo-segment are higher and when firm and pseudo-segment characteristics allow for more discretion in the application of segment reporting rules. For firms reporting multiple external segments, aggregation of pseudo-segments is driven by both agency and proprietary costs. However, for firms reporting a single external segment, we find no evidence of an agency cost motive for aggregation.
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  • Working Paper

    The Going Public Decision and the Product Market

    July 2008

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-08-20

    At what point in a firm's life should it go public? How do a firm's ex ante product market characteristics relate to its going public decision? Further, what are the implications of a firm going public on its post-IPO operating and product market performance? In this paper, we answer the above questions by conducting the first large sample study of the going public decisions of U.S. firms in the literature. We use the Longitudinal Research Database (LRD) of the U.S. Census Bureau, which covers the entire universe of private and public U.S. manufacturing firms. Our findings can be summarized as follows. First, a private firm's product market characteristics (market share, competition, capital intensity, cash flow riskiness) significantly affect its likelihood of going public. Second, private firms facing less information asymmetry and those with projects that are cheaper for outsiders to evaluate are more likely to go public (consistent with Chemmanur and Fulghieri (1999)). Third, IPOs of firms occur at the peak of their productivity cycle (consistent with Clementi (2002)): the dynamics of total factor productivity (TFP) and sales growth exhibit an inverted U-shaped pattern. Finally, sales, capital expenditures, and other performance variables exhibit a consistently increasing pattern over the years before and after the IPO. The last two findings are consistent with the widely documented post-IPO operating underperformance of firms being due to the real investment effects of a firm going public, and inconsistent with underperformance being solely due to earnings management immediately prior to the IPO.
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  • Working Paper

    The Myth of Decline: A New Perspective on the Supply Chain and Changing Inventory-Sales Ratios

    October 2004

    Authors: Adam Fein

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-04-18

    There is a widely held perception that improved supply chain practices and new technologies have led to declines in the inventory-sales ratio. Our empirical analyses of 87 inventory-sales ratios in 45 manufacturing, wholesale distribution, and retail trade industries casts doubt on assumptions of widespread declines in these ratios. We find that less than half of the ratios showed statistically significant declines during the 12 year period from January 1992 through December 2003. Information technology may indeed have improved inventory management, but this improvement is not reflected in inventory-sales ratio data for many U.S. industries. Our detailed case study of the pharmaceutical supply chain also offers additional insights by showing how relevant technological investments led to an extended period in which inventory-to-sales ratios increased.
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  • Working Paper

    THE MANUFACTURING PLANT OWNERSHIP CHANGE DATABASE: ITS CONSTRUCTION AND USEFULNESS

    September 1998

    Authors: Sang V Nguyen

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-98-16

    The Center for Economic Studies, U. S. Bureau of the Census, has constructed the "Manufacturing Plant Ownership Change Database" (OCD)using plant-level data taken from the Census Bureau's Longitudinal Research Database (LRD). The OCD contains data on all manufacturing establishments that have experienced ownership change at least once during the period 1963-1992 . This is a unique data set which, together with the LRD, can be used to conduct a variety of economic studies that were not possible before. This paper describes how the OCD was constructed and discusses the usefulness of these data for economic research.
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  • Working Paper

    Efficiency of Bankrupt Firms and Industry Conditions: Theory and Evidence

    October 1996

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-96-12

    We show that the incentives to reorganize inefficient firms and redeploy their assets depend on the change in industry output and industry characteristics. We use plant-level data to investigate the productivity of Chapter 11 bankrupt firms and asset-sale and closure decisions. We find no evidence of bankruptcy costs in industries with declining output growth, where most bankruptcies occur. In declining industries, bankrupt firms' plants are not less productive than industry averages and do not decline in productivity while in Chapter 11. In these industries, Chapter 11 appears to be a mechanism for fostering exit of capacity. In high-growth industries, there is some limited evidence of productivity declines while in Chapter 11 for a subsample of firms that remain in Chapter 11 for four or more years. Examining asset sales and closures by bankrupt firms and their competitors, we find that Chapter 11 status is of limited importance in predicting these decisions once industry and plant characteristics are taken into account. More generally, the findings imply that Chapter 11 may involve few real economic costs, and that industry effects and sample selection issues are very important in evaluating the performance of bankrupt firms.
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  • Working Paper

    Innovation and Regulation in the Pesticide Industry

    December 1995

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-95-14

    This paper examines the hypothesis that regulation negatively affects pesticide innovation, causes pesticide companies to introduce more harmful pesticides, and discourages firms from developing pesticides for minor crop markets. The results confirm that pesticide regulation adversely affects innovation and discourages firms from developing pesticides for minor crop markets. Contrary to the hypothesis, however, regulation encourages firms to develop less toxic pesticides. Estimates suggest that it requires about $29 million in industry expenditures on health and environmental testing to affect the toxicity of one new pesticide.
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