CREAT: Census Research Exploration and Analysis Tool

Papers Containing Tag(s): 'W-2'

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

Internal Revenue Service - 59

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 47

American Community Survey - 45

Protected Identification Key - 41

Social Security Number - 39

Social Security Administration - 37

Social Security - 33

Current Population Survey - 27

Employer Identification Numbers - 27

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 21

Longitudinal Business Database - 20

Disclosure Review Board - 20

Person Validation System - 19

Decennial Census - 18

North American Industry Classification System - 18

Adjusted Gross Income - 17

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 13

Business Register - 13

Survey of Income and Program Participation - 13

Earned Income Tax Credit - 13

Ordinary Least Squares - 12

National Science Foundation - 12

Census Numident - 11

2010 Census - 10

Master Address File - 10

Census Bureau Business Register - 10

Housing and Urban Development - 9

Department of Housing and Urban Development - 9

Temporary Assistance for Needy Families - 9

Detailed Earnings Records - 9

Social and Economic Supplement - 8

Individual Taxpayer Identification Numbers - 8

PSID - 8

National Bureau of Economic Research - 8

SSA Numident - 7

COVID-19 - 7

CPS ASEC - 7

Opportunity Atlas - 7

Center for Economic Studies - 7

Personally Identifiable Information - 7

MAF-ARF - 7

Census Household Composition Key - 6

Person Identification Validation System - 6

Harvard University - 6

National Institutes of Health - 6

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 6

Quarterly Workforce Indicators - 6

Center for Administrative Records Research and Applications - 6

Office of Management and Budget - 6

Disability Insurance - 6

Federal Insurance Contribution Act - 6

Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program - 6

Metropolitan Statistical Area - 6

Data Management System - 6

ASEC - 6

General Accounting Office - 5

Survey of Consumer Finances - 5

Accommodation and Food Services - 5

Department of Defense - 5

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 5

Master Beneficiary Record - 5

Computer Assisted Personal Interview - 5

National Center for Health Statistics - 5

County Business Patterns - 5

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 5

MTO - 4

Federal Reserve Bank - 4

Patent and Trademark Office - 4

Integrated Longitudinal Business Database - 4

Business Dynamics Statistics - 4

Cornell University - 4

Supreme Court - 4

Center for Administrative Records Research - 4

Administrative Records - 4

Census Bureau Person Identification Validation System - 4

Social Science Research Institute - 4

Herfindahl Hirschman Index - 4

Current Population Survey Annual Social and Economic Supplement - 4

Robert Wood Johnson Foundation - 4

Research Data Center - 4

Federal Reserve System - 3

National Employer Survey - 3

Unemployment Insurance - 3

Office of Personnel Management - 3

Legal Form of Organization - 3

Department of Labor - 3

Consumer Expenditure Survey - 3

Small Business Administration - 3

Environmental Protection Agency - 3

Individual Characteristics File - 3

Economic Census - 3

COVID - 3

Service Annual Survey - 3

Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages - 3

Postal Service - 3

National Institute on Aging - 3

National Longitudinal Survey of Youth - 3

Census 2000 - 3

Master Earnings File - 3

earnings - 22

labor - 19

employed - 19

recession - 19

socioeconomic - 18

earner - 17

employ - 17

poverty - 16

ethnicity - 16

intergenerational - 15

population - 15

disadvantaged - 14

workforce - 13

irs - 13

tax - 13

survey - 12

race - 12

family - 12

salary - 12

welfare - 11

racial - 11

minority - 10

payroll - 10

ethnic - 10

segregation - 9

earn - 9

respondent - 9

entrepreneur - 9

entrepreneurship - 9

disparity - 9

taxpayer - 9

1040 - 9

unemployed - 9

generation - 8

neighborhood - 8

hispanic - 8

heterogeneity - 8

immigrant - 8

housing - 7

census bureau - 7

mobility - 7

poorer - 7

income data - 7

retirement - 7

employee - 7

wealth - 6

job - 6

estimating - 6

hiring - 6

economist - 6

proprietor - 6

child - 6

medicaid - 6

opportunity - 5

parents income - 5

enterprise - 5

entrepreneurial - 5

parent - 5

native - 5

longitudinal - 5

dependent - 5

expenditure - 5

agency - 5

survey income - 5

assessed - 5

income white - 5

statistical - 5

funding - 5

venture - 5

migrant - 5

immigration - 5

economically - 4

residential - 4

rent - 4

estimates intergenerational - 4

occupation - 4

fertility - 4

career - 4

bias - 4

sampling - 4

household surveys - 4

earns - 4

parental - 4

trend - 4

eligibility - 4

incentive - 4

data - 4

census data - 4

citizen - 4

segregated - 4

income children - 4

discrimination - 4

percentile - 4

white - 4

filing - 4

black - 4

migration - 4

rural - 3

residence - 3

educated - 3

enrollment - 3

schooling - 3

adulthood - 3

adoption - 3

grandparent - 3

graduate - 3

proprietorship - 3

indian - 3

worker - 3

eligible - 3

taxable - 3

revenue - 3

data census - 3

survey households - 3

propensity - 3

income survey - 3

recessionary - 3

decade - 3

researcher - 3

earnings inequality - 3

imputation - 3

family income - 3

regress - 3

migrate - 3

quarterly - 3

census use - 3

corporation - 3

founder - 3

increase employment - 3

assimilation - 3

earnings mobility - 3

ssa - 3

employment wages - 3

cohort - 3

econometric - 3

Viewing papers 31 through 40 of 73


  • Working Paper

    Universal Preschool Lottery Admissions and Its Effects on Long-Run Earnings and Outcomes

    March 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-09

    We use an admissions lottery to estimate the effect of a universal (non-means tested) preschool program on students' long-run earnings, income, marital status, fertility and geographic mobility. We observe long-run outcomes by linking both admitted and non-admitted individuals to confidential administrative data including tax records. Funding for this preschool program comes from an Indigenous organization, which grants Indigenous students admissions preference and free tuition. We find treated children have between 5 to 6 percent higher earnings as young adults. The results are strongest for individuals from the lower half of the household income distribution in childhood. Likely mechanisms include high-quality teachers and curriculum.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Criminal court fees, earnings, and expenditures: A multi-state RD analysis of survey and administrative data

    February 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-06

    Millions of people in the United States face fines and fees in the criminal court system each year, totaling over $27 billion in overall criminal debt to-date. In this study, we leverage five distinct natural experiments in Florida, Michigan, North Carolina, Texas, and Wisconsin using regression discontinuity designs to evaluate the causal impact of such financial sanctions and user fees. We consider a range of long-term outcomes including employment, recidivism, household expenditures, and other self-reported measures of well-being, which we measure through a combination of administrative records on earnings and employment, the Criminal Justice Administrative Records System, and household surveys. We find consistent evidence across the range of natural experiments and subgroup analyses of precise null effects on the population, ruling out long-run impacts larger than +/-3.6% on total earnings and +/-4.7% on total recidivism. Failure to find changes in outcomes undermines popular narratives of poverty traps arising from criminal debt but argues against the use of fines and fees as a source of local revenue and as a crime control tool.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    National Experimental Wellbeing Statistics - Version 1

    February 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-04

    This is the U.S. Census Bureau's first release of the National Experimental Wellbeing Statistics (NEWS) project. The NEWS project aims to produce the best possible estimates of income and poverty given all available survey and administrative data. We link survey, decennial census, administrative, and third-party data to address measurement error in income and poverty statistics. We estimate improved (pre-tax money) income and poverty statistics for 2018 by addressing several possible sources of bias documented in prior research. We address biases from 1) unit nonresponse through improved weights, 2) missing income information in both survey and administrative data through improved imputation, and 3) misreporting by combining or replacing survey responses with administrative information. Reducing survey error substantially affects key measures of well-being: We estimate median household income is 6.3 percent higher than in survey estimates, and poverty is 1.1 percentage points lower. These changes are driven by subpopulations for which survey error is particularly relevant. For house holders aged 65 and over, median household income is 27.3 percent higher and poverty is 3.3 percentage points lower than in survey estimates. We do not find a significant impact on median household income for householders under 65 or on child poverty. Finally, we discuss plans for future releases: addressing other potential sources of bias, releasing additional years of statistics, extending the income concepts measured, and including smaller geographies such as state and county.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Estimating the Impact of the Age of Criminal Majority: Decomposing Multiple Treatments in a Regression Discontinuity Framework

    January 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-01

    This paper studies the impact of adult prosecution on recidivism and employment trajectories for adolescent, first-time felony defendants. We use extensive linked Criminal Justice Administrative Record System and socio-economic data from Wayne County, Michigan (Detroit). Using the discrete age of majority rule and a regression discontinuity design, we find that adult prosecution reduces future criminal charges over 5 years by 0.48 felony cases (? 20%) while also worsening labor market outcomes: 0.76 fewer employers (? 19%) and $674 fewer earnings (? 21%) per year. We develop a novel econometric framework that combines standard regression discontinuity methods with predictive machine learning models to identify mechanism-specific treatment effects that underpin the overall impact of adult prosecution. We leverage these estimates to consider four policy counterfactuals: (1) raising the age of majority, (2) increasing adult dismissals to match the juvenile disposition rates, (3) eliminating adult incarceration, and (4) expanding juvenile record sealing opportunities to teenage adult defendants. All four scenarios generate positive returns for government budgets. When accounting for impacts to defendants as well as victim costs borne by society stemming from increases in recidivism, we find positive social returns for juvenile record sealing expansions and dismissing marginal adult charges; raising the age of majority breaks even. Eliminating prison for first-time adult felony defendants, however, increases net social costs. Policymakers may still find this attractive if they are willing to value beneficiaries (taxpayers and defendants) slightly higher (124%) than potential victims.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Business Dynamics Statistics for Single-Unit Firms

    December 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-57

    The Business Dynamics Statistics of Single Unit Firms (BDS-SU) is an experimental data product that provides information on employment and payroll dynamics for each quarter of the year at businesses that operate in one physical location. This paper describes the creation of the data tables and the value they add to the existing Business Dynamics Statistics (BDS) product. We then present some analysis of the published statistics to provide context for the numbers and demonstrate how they can be used to understand both national and local business conditions, with a particular focus on 2020 and the recession induced by the COVID-19 pandemic. We next examine how firms fared in this recession compared to the Great Recession that began in the fourth quarter of 2007. We also consider the heterogenous impact of the pandemic on various industries and areas of the country, showing which types of businesses in which locations were particularly hard hit. We examine business exit rates in some detail and consider why different metro areas experienced the pandemic in different ways. We also consider entry rates and look for evidence of a surge in new businesses as seen in other data sources. We finish by providing a preview of on-going research to match the BDS to worker demographics and show statistics on the relationship between the characteristics of the firm's workers and outcomes such as firm exit and net job creation.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Maternal and Infant Health Inequality: New Evidence from Linked Administrative Data

    November 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-55

    We use linked administrative data that combines the universe of California birth records, hospitalizations, and death records with parental income from Internal Revenue Service tax records and the Longitudinal Employer-Household Dynamics file to provide novel evidence on economic inequality in infant and maternal health. We find that birth outcomes vary nonmonotonically with parental income, and that children of parents in the top ventile of the income distribution have higher rates of low birth weight and preterm birth than those in the bottom ventile. However, unlike birth outcomes, infant mortality varies monotonically with income, and infants of parents in the top ventile of the income distribution---who have the worst birth outcomes---have a death rate that is half that of infants of parents in the bottom ventile. When studying maternal health, we find a similar pattern of non-monotonicity between income and severe maternal morbidity, and a monotonic and decreasing relationship between income and maternal mortality. At the same time, these disparities by parental income are small when compared to racial disparities, and we observe virtually no convergence in health outcomes across racial and ethnic groups as income rises. Indeed, infant and maternal health in Black families at the top of the income distribution is markedly worse than that of white families at the bottom of the income distribution. Lastly, we benchmark the health gradients in California to those in Sweden, finding that infant and maternal health is worse in California than in Sweden for most outcomes throughout the entire income distribution.
    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

    Earnings Inequality and Immobility for Hispanics and Asians: An Examination of Variation Across Subgroups

    September 2021

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-30

    Our analysis provides the rst disaggregated examination of earnings inequality and immobility within the Hispanic ethnic group and the Asian race group in the U.S. over the period of 2005-2015. Our analysis differentiates between long-term immigrant and native-born Hispanics and Asians relative to recent immigrants to the U.S. (post 2005) and new labor market entrants. Our results show that for the Asian and Hispanic population aged 18-45, earnings inequality is constant or slightly decreasing for the long-term immigrant and native-born populations. However, including new labor market entrants and recent immigrants to the U.S. contributes significantly to the earnings inequality for these groups at both the aggregate and disaggregated race or ethnic group levels. These findings have important implications for the measurement of inequality for racial and ethnic groups that have higher proportions of new immigrants and new labor market entrants in the U.S.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    The Color of Money: Federal vs. Industry Funding of University Research

    September 2021

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-26

    U.S. universities, which are important producers of new knowledge, have experienced a shift in research funding away from federal and towards private industry sources. This paper compares the effects of federal and private university research funding, using data from 22 universities that include individual-level payments for everyone employed on all grants for each university year and that are linked to patent and Census data, including IRS W-2 records. We instrument for an individual's source of funding with government-wide R&D expenditure shocks within a narrow field of study. We find that a higher share of federal funding causes fewer but more general patents, more high-tech entrepreneurship, a higher likelihood of remaining employed in academia, and a lower likelihood of joining an incumbent firm. Increasing the private share of funding has opposite effects for most outcomes. It appears that private funding leads to greater appropriation of intellectual property by incumbent firms.
    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