CREAT: Census Research Exploration and Analysis Tool

Papers Containing Tag(s): 'Census Bureau Longitudinal Business Database'

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 Business Database - 60

North American Industry Classification System - 41

Center for Economic Studies - 34

Standard Industrial Classification - 31

Longitudinal Research Database - 30

Ordinary Least Squares - 29

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 26

National Bureau of Economic Research - 25

National Science Foundation - 24

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 23

Internal Revenue Service - 22

Employer Identification Numbers - 20

Census of Manufactures - 18

Federal Reserve Bank - 18

Total Factor Productivity - 17

Annual Survey of Manufactures - 16

Business Dynamics Statistics - 14

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 13

Metropolitan Statistical Area - 13

Current Population Survey - 13

Census Bureau Business Register - 13

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 13

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 13

Economic Census - 12

Special Sworn Status - 12

Business Register - 12

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 11

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 10

County Business Patterns - 10

Federal Reserve System - 10

Decennial Census - 9

University of Chicago - 9

Kauffman Foundation - 9

Michigan Institute for Teaching and Research in Economics - 9

Disclosure Review Board - 8

Herfindahl Hirschman Index - 8

Service Annual Survey - 8

Research Data Center - 8

Quarterly Workforce Indicators - 8

Small Business Administration - 7

Social Security Administration - 7

International Trade Research Report - 7

University of Maryland - 7

Review of Economics and Statistics - 7

American Community Survey - 6

Cobb-Douglas - 6

Board of Governors - 6

New York University - 6

Environmental Protection Agency - 6

Department of Homeland Security - 5

Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages - 5

Boston College - 5

Census of Manufacturing Firms - 5

Longitudinal Firm Trade Transactions Database - 5

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 5

Local Employment Dynamics - 5

Department of Economics - 5

Energy Information Administration - 5

Census Bureau Business Dynamics Statistics - 5

Financial, Insurance and Real Estate Industries - 5

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development - 5

Medical Expenditure Panel Survey - 5

Patent and Trademark Office - 5

Business Employment Dynamics - 5

Stanford University - 5

Survey of Industrial Research and Development - 5

Department of Commerce - 5

European Union - 5

Securities and Exchange Commission - 4

Business Services - 4

Columbia University - 4

Federal Trade Commission - 4

Retail Trade - 4

General Accounting Office - 4

Core Based Statistical Area - 4

Technical Services - 4

Cornell University - 4

Department of Labor - 4

Social Security - 4

American Economic Review - 4

Journal of Economic Perspectives - 4

Public Administration - 4

Retirement History Survey - 4

Survey of Income and Program Participation - 4

Harmonized System - 4

Census Bureau Center for Economic Studies - 4

Pollution Abatement Costs and Expenditures - 4

American Economic Association - 3

Characteristics of Business Owners - 3

Survey of Business Owners - 3

Bureau of Labor - 3

Journal of Economic Literature - 3

Carnegie Mellon University - 3

Code of Federal Regulations - 3

Department of Justice - 3

European Commission - 3

Protected Identification Key - 3

Individual Characteristics File - 3

Census Numident - 3

Arts, Entertainment - 3

Office of Management and Budget - 3

VAR - 3

Journal of Political Economy - 3

Journal of Labor Economics - 3

University of Toronto - 3

Labor Productivity - 3

New York Times - 3

COMPUSTAT - 3

Postal Service - 3

Duke University - 3

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention - 3

Cambridge University Press - 3

Journal of International Economics - 3

Department of Energy - 3

National Ambient Air Quality Standards - 3

Harvard University - 3

National Institutes of Health - 3

Geographic Information Systems - 3

Consolidated Metropolitan Statistical Areas - 3

growth - 36

recession - 26

manufacturing - 24

econometric - 23

entrepreneurship - 20

employ - 20

production - 20

market - 19

revenue - 18

entrepreneur - 17

labor - 17

economist - 17

estimating - 17

gdp - 16

company - 15

expenditure - 15

macroeconomic - 15

employed - 15

sector - 14

workforce - 13

entrepreneurial - 13

industrial - 13

investment - 12

enterprise - 12

acquisition - 11

productivity growth - 11

economically - 11

startup - 11

produce - 11

corporation - 10

employee - 10

employment growth - 10

innovation - 10

demand - 10

quarterly - 10

sale - 10

profit - 9

endogeneity - 9

manufacturer - 9

financial - 8

technological - 8

merger - 8

organizational - 8

venture - 8

aggregate - 8

efficiency - 8

agency - 7

growth productivity - 7

metropolitan - 7

export - 7

report - 7

trend - 7

establishment - 7

firms grow - 7

spillover - 7

proprietorship - 7

statistical - 7

decline - 7

estimation - 7

city - 6

competitor - 6

payroll - 6

earnings - 6

shock - 6

proprietor - 6

producing - 6

geographically - 6

pollution - 6

epa - 6

environmental - 6

finance - 5

longitudinal - 5

younger firms - 5

diversification - 5

regulation - 5

federal - 5

salary - 5

corporate - 5

opportunity - 5

impact - 5

employment dynamics - 5

declining - 5

productivity dynamics - 5

regression - 5

regional - 5

lending - 5

acquirer - 5

exporter - 5

incorporated - 5

emission - 5

state - 5

investor - 4

employment data - 4

loan - 4

larger firms - 4

growth employment - 4

specialization - 4

industry concentration - 4

industry variation - 4

survey - 4

worker - 4

startup firms - 4

founder - 4

competitiveness - 4

leverage - 4

debt - 4

firm growth - 4

growth firms - 4

researcher - 4

firms young - 4

data census - 4

area - 4

region - 4

multinational - 4

regulatory - 4

polluting - 4

profitability - 4

disclosure - 3

financing - 3

firms employment - 3

urban - 3

relocation - 3

subsidy - 3

diversified - 3

diversify - 3

policymakers - 3

microdata - 3

monopolistic - 3

heterogeneity - 3

wages productivity - 3

regress - 3

estimates employment - 3

employment estimates - 3

reporting - 3

takeover - 3

stock - 3

union - 3

institutional - 3

labor markets - 3

unemployed - 3

indicator - 3

employment trends - 3

prospect - 3

accounting - 3

recessionary - 3

trends employment - 3

econometrician - 3

businesses grow - 3

aging - 3

inventory - 3

profitable - 3

firms productivity - 3

data - 3

respondent - 3

statistician - 3

use census - 3

downturn - 3

productive - 3

labor productivity - 3

country - 3

supermarket - 3

bank - 3

economic census - 3

recession employment - 3

exporting - 3

job - 3

hiring - 3

pollutant - 3

manufacturing industries - 3

neighborhood - 3

retail - 3

endogenous - 3

chemical - 3

strategic - 3

productivity measures - 3

analysis productivity - 3

plant productivity - 3

productivity plants - 3

manufacturing plants - 3

environmental regulation - 3

plant - 3

Viewing papers 21 through 30 of 91


  • Working Paper

    Age and High-Growth Entrepreneurship

    April 2018

    Working Paper Number:

    carra-2018-03

    Many observers, and many investors, believe that young people are especially likely to produce the most successful new firms. We use administrative data at the U.S. Census Bureau to study the ages of founders of growth-oriented start-ups in the past decade. Our primary finding is that successful entrepreneurs are middle-aged, not young. The mean founder age for the 1 in 1,000 fastest growing new ventures is 45.0. The findings are broadly similar when considering high-technology sectors, entrepreneurial hubs, and successful firm exits. Prior experience in the specific industry predicts much greater rates of entrepreneurial success. These findings strongly reject common hypotheses that emphasize youth as a key trait of successful entrepreneurs.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    High Growth Young Firms: Contribution to Job, Output and Productivity Growth

    February 2017

    Working Paper Number:

    carra-2017-03

    Recent research shows that the job creating prowess of small firms in the U.S. is better attributed to startups and young firms that are small. But most startups and young firms either fail or don't create jobs. A small proportion of young firms grow rapidly and they account for the long lasting contribution of startups to job growth. High growth firms are not well understood in terms of either theory or evidence. Although the evidence of their role in job creation is mounting, little is known about their life cycle dynamics, or their contribution to other key outcomes such as real output growth and productivity. In this paper, we enhance the Longitudinal Business Database with gross output (real revenue) measures. We find that the patterns for high output growth firms largely mimic those for high employment growth firms. High growth output firms are disproportionately young and make disproportionate contributions to output and productivity growth. The share of activity accounted for by high growth output and employment firms varies substantially across industries - in the post 2000 period the share of activity accounted for by high growth firms is significantly higher in the High Tech and Energy related industries. A firm in a small business intensive industry is less likely to be a high output growth firm but small business intensive industries don't have significantly smaller shares of either employment or output activity accounted for by high growth firms.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Effects of a Government-Academic Partnership: Has the NSF-Census Bureau Research Network Helped Improve the U.S. Statistical System?

    January 2017

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-59R

    The National Science Foundation-Census Bureau Research Network (NCRN) was established in 2011 to create interdisciplinary research nodes on methodological questions of interest and significance to the broader research community and to the Federal Statistical System (FSS), particularly the Census Bureau. The activities to date have covered both fundamental and applied statistical research and have focused at least in part on the training of current and future generations of researchers in skills of relevance to surveys and alternative measurement of economic units, households, and persons. This paper discusses some of the key research findings of the eight nodes, organized into six topics: (1) Improving census and survey data collection methods; (2) Using alternative sources of data; (3) Protecting privacy and confidentiality by improving disclosure avoidance; (4) Using spatial and spatio-temporal statistical modeling to improve estimates; (5) Assessing data cost and quality tradeoffs; and (6) Combining information from multiple sources. It also reports on collaborations across nodes and with federal agencies, new software developed, and educational activities and outcomes. The paper concludes with an evaluation of the ability of the FSS to apply the NCRN's research outcomes and suggests some next steps, as well as the implications of this research-network model for future federal government renewal initiatives.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Firm Dynamics, Persistent Effects of Entry Conditions, and Business Cycles

    January 2017

    Authors: Sara Moreira

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-29

    This paper examines how the state of the economy when businesses begin operations affects their size and performance over the lifecycle. Using micro-level data that covers the entire universe of businesses operating in the U.S. since the late 1970s, I provide new evidence that businesses born in downturns start on a smaller scale and remain smaller over their entire lifecycle. In fact, I find no evidence that these differences attenuate even long after entry. Using new data on the productivity and composition of startup businesses, I show that this persistence is related to selection at entry and demand-side channels.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Are firm-level idiosyncratic shocks important for U.S. aggregate volatility?

    January 2017

    Authors: Chen Yeh

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-23

    This paper quantitatively assesses whether firm-specific shocks can drive the U.S. business cycle. Firm-specific shocks to the largest firms can directly contribute to aggregate fluctuations whenever the firm size distribution is fat-tailed giving rise to the granular hypothesis. I use a novel, comprehensive data set compiled from administrative sources that contains the universe of firms and trade transactions, and find that the granular hypothesis accounts at most for 16 percent of the variation in aggregate sales growth. This is about half of that found by previous studies that imposed Gibrat's law where all firms are equally volatile regardless of their size. Using the full distribution of growth rates among U.S. firms, I find robust evidence of a negative relationship between firm-level volatility and size, i.e. the size-variance relationship. The largest firms (whose shocks drive granularity) are the least volatile under the size-variance relationship, thus their influence on aggregates is mitigated. I show that by taking this relationship into account the effect of firm-specific shocks on observed macroeconomic volatility is substantially reduced. I then investigate several plausible mechanisms that could explain the negative sizevariance relationship. After empirically ruling out some of them, I suggest a 'market power' channel in which large firms face smaller price elasticities and therefore respond less to a givensized productivity shock than small firms do. I provide direct evidence for this mechanism by estimating demand elasticities among U.S. manufactures. Lastly, I construct an analytically tractable framework that is consistent with several empirical regularities related to firm size.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Declining Dynamism, Allocative Efficiency, and the Productivity Slowdown

    January 2017

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-17

    A large literature documents declining measures of business dynamism including high-growth young firm activity and job reallocation. A distinct literature describes a slowdown in the pace of aggregate labor productivity growth. We relate these patterns by studying changes in productivity growth from the late 1990s to the mid 2000s using firm-level data. We find that diminished allocative efficiency gains can account for the productivity slowdown in a manner that interacts with the within firm productivity growth distribution. The evidence suggests that the decline in dynamism is reason for concern and sheds light on debates about the causes of slowing productivity growth.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Redistribution of Local Labor Market Shocks through Firms' Internal Networks

    January 2017

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-03

    Local labor market shocks are difficult to insure against. Using confidential micro data from the U.S. Census Bureau's Longitudinal Business Database, we document that firms redistribute the employment impacts of local demand shocks across regions through their internal networks of establishments. During the Great Recession, the massive decline in house prices caused a sharp drop in consumer demand, leading to large employment losses in the non-tradable sector. Consistent with firms smoothing out the impacts of these shocks across regions, we find large elasticities of non-tradable establishment-level employment with respect to house prices in other counties in which the firm has establishments. At the same time, establishments of firms with larger regional networks exhibit lower employment elasticities with respect to local house prices in the establishment's own county. To account for general equilibrium adjustments, we aggregate non-tradable employment at the county level. Similar to what we found at the establishment level, we find that non-tradable county-level employment responds strongly to local demand shocks in other counties linked through firms' internal networks. These results are not driven by direct demand spillovers from nearby counties, common shocks to house prices, or local demand shocks affecting non-tradable employment in distant counties indirectly via the trade channel. Our results suggest that firms play an important role in the extent to which local labor market risks areshared across regions.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    State Taxation and the Reallocation of Business Activity: Evidence from Establishment-Level Data

    January 2017

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-02

    Using Census microdata on multi-state firms, we estimate the impact of state taxes on business activity. For C corporations, employment and the number of establishments have corporate tax elasticities of -0.4, and do not vary with changes in personal tax rates. Pass-through entity activities show tax elasticities of -0.2 to -0.3 with respect to personal tax rates, and are invariant with respect to corporate tax rates. Reallocation of productive resources to other states drives around half the effect. Capital shows similar patterns but is 36% less elastic than labor. The responses are strongest for firms in tradable and footloose industries.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Firm Leverage, Consumer Demand, and Employment Losses during the Great Recession

    January 2017

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-01

    We argue that firms' balance sheets were instrumental in the propagation of consumer demand shocks during the Great Recession. Using establishment-level data, we show that establishments of more highly levered firms exhibit a significantly larger decline in employment in response to a drop in consumer demand. These results are not driven by firms being less productive, having expanded too much prior to the Great Recession, or being generally more sensitive to fluctuations in either aggregate employment or house prices. At the county level, we find that counties with more highly levered firms experience significantly larger job losses in response to county-wide consumer demand shocks. Thus, firms' balance sheets also matter for aggregate employment. Our research suggests a possible role for employment policies that target firms directly besides conventional stimulus.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Asset Allocation in Bankruptcy

    February 2016

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-16-13

    This paper investigates the consequences of liquidation and reorganization on the allocation and subsequent utilization of assets in bankruptcy. We identify 129,000 bankrupt establishments and construct a novel dataset that tracks the occupancy, employment and wages paid at real estate assets over time. Using the random assignment of judges to bankruptcy cases as a natural experiment that forces some firms into liquidation, we find that even after accounting for reallocation, the long-run utilization of assets of liquidated firms is lower relative to assets of reorganized firms. These effects are concentrated in thin markets with few potential users, in areas with low access to finance, and in areas with low economic growth. The results highlight that different bankruptcy approaches affect asset allocation and utilization particularly when search frictions and financial frictions are present.
    View Full Paper PDF