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Papers Containing Tag(s): 'Federal Statistical Research Data Center'

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Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 118

North American Industry Classification System - 88

Longitudinal Business Database - 85

Disclosure Review Board - 74

Center for Economic Studies - 54

National Science Foundation - 53

American Community Survey - 50

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 47

National Bureau of Economic Research - 41

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 41

Annual Survey of Manufactures - 35

Economic Census - 34

Federal Reserve Bank - 32

Current Population Survey - 32

Internal Revenue Service - 32

Decennial Census - 31

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 30

Ordinary Least Squares - 30

Standard Industrial Classification - 30

Business Dynamics Statistics - 29

Employer Identification Numbers - 29

Census of Manufactures - 28

Census of Manufacturing Firms - 27

Social Security Administration - 27

Total Factor Productivity - 24

Business Register - 22

Research Data Center - 22

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 21

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development - 20

Protected Identification Key - 20

County Business Patterns - 20

Metropolitan Statistical Area - 19

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 17

Census Bureau Business Register - 16

Special Sworn Status - 16

Department of Homeland Security - 15

Social Security Number - 15

Cobb-Douglas - 14

Longitudinal Firm Trade Transactions Database - 13

National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics - 13

Quarterly Workforce Indicators - 13

Service Annual Survey - 13

Patent and Trademark Office - 12

International Trade Research Report - 12

Energy Information Administration - 12

Social Security - 11

Survey of Business Owners - 11

Individual Characteristics File - 11

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 11

Herfindahl Hirschman Index - 11

Federal Reserve System - 10

COVID-19 - 10

University of Michigan - 10

Person Validation System - 10

University of Chicago - 10

Department of Economics - 10

2010 Census - 10

Business Research and Development and Innovation Survey - 10

Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages - 10

Census Bureau Longitudinal Business Database - 10

Business R&D and Innovation Survey - 9

Small Business Administration - 9

Annual Business Survey - 9

Employment History File - 9

Retail Trade - 9

Environmental Protection Agency - 9

Survey of Income and Program Participation - 9

Generalized Method of Moments - 8

Housing and Urban Development - 8

Manufacturing Energy Consumption Survey - 8

Financial, Insurance and Real Estate Industries - 8

Postal Service - 8

Information and Communication Technology Survey - 8

Annual Survey of Entrepreneurs - 8

European Union - 7

United States Census Bureau - 7

Department of Agriculture - 7

National Longitudinal Survey of Youth - 7

World Trade Organization - 7

Wholesale Trade - 7

Unemployment Insurance - 7

PSID - 7

State Energy Data System - 7

Statistics Canada - 7

Cornell University - 7

Sloan Foundation - 7

Accommodation and Food Services - 7

Company Organization Survey - 7

Kauffman Foundation - 7

Management and Organizational Practices Survey - 7

Board of Governors - 6

Harmonized System - 6

Survey of Industrial Research and Development - 6

National Academy of Sciences - 6

Technical Services - 6

Professional Services - 6

University of Toronto - 6

Integrated Public Use Microdata Series - 6

Securities and Exchange Commission - 6

National Establishment Time Series - 6

Duke University - 6

University of Maryland - 6

Boston College - 6

Core Based Statistical Area - 6

Herfindahl-Hirschman - 6

National Institute on Aging - 6

Master Address File - 6

Department of Labor - 6

Supreme Court - 6

American Economic Association - 6

Review of Economics and Statistics - 6

IQR - 6

Federal Register - 5

Princeton University - 5

National Center for Health Statistics - 5

Longitudinal Research Database - 5

Department of Energy - 5

IBM - 5

Office of Management and Budget - 5

Russell Sage Foundation - 5

NBER Summer Institute - 5

Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation - 5

Employer Characteristics File - 5

Geographic Information Systems - 5

Department of Housing and Urban Development - 5

American Housing Survey - 5

Cornell Institute for Social and Economic Research - 5

UC Berkeley - 5

General Accounting Office - 5

World Bank - 5

Characteristics of Business Owners - 5

Commodity Flow Survey - 4

AKM - 4

Initial Public Offering - 4

Michigan Institute for Teaching and Research in Economics - 4

National Income and Product Accounts - 4

Paycheck Protection Program - 4

IZA - 4

Business Employment Dynamics - 4

Social Science Research Institute - 4

Columbia University - 4

Indian Health Service - 4

Journal of Political Economy - 4

American Economic Review - 4

Council of Economic Advisers - 4

Bureau of Labor - 4

TFPR - 4

TFPQ - 4

European Commission - 4

Personally Identifiable Information - 4

W-2 - 4

Census Numident - 4

Data Management System - 4

National Institutes of Health - 4

Economic Research Service - 4

North American Industry Classi - 4

Department of Commerce - 4

Kauffman Firm Survey - 4

United Nations - 3

Customs and Border Protection - 3

Department of Education - 3

Yale University - 3

Public Administration - 3

Standard Occupational Classification - 3

Penn State University - 3

New York University - 3

Harvard Business School - 3

Federal Reserve Board of Governors - 3

Quarterly Journal of Economics - 3

Center for Research in Security Prices - 3

Business Register Bridge - 3

Retirement History Survey - 3

Person Identification Validation System - 3

MAF-ARF - 3

Occupational Employment Statistics - 3

1940 Census - 3

Census Edited File - 3

Federal Trade Commission - 3

Department of Justice - 3

Census Bureau Business Dynamics Statistics - 3

National Research Council - 3

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention - 3

Public Use Micro Sample - 3

Disability Insurance - 3

Employer-Household Dynamics - 3

Composite Person Record - 3

Local Employment Dynamics - 3

Office of Personnel Management - 3

Federal Tax Information - 3

Department of Health and Human Services - 3

Educational Services - 3

Health Care and Social Assistance - 3

Current Employment Statistics - 3

Health and Retirement Study - 3

Brookings Institution - 3

Integrated Longitudinal Business Database - 3

Nonemployer Statistics - 3

Arts, Entertainment - 3

HHS - 3

Pew Research Center - 3

Federal Insurance Contribution Act - 3

MIT Press - 3

Journal of International Economics - 3

employ - 35

market - 31

recession - 29

manufacturing - 28

innovation - 27

labor - 26

employed - 25

sector - 25

workforce - 25

survey - 23

growth - 23

econometric - 23

company - 22

industrial - 22

investment - 21

patent - 21

earnings - 20

employee - 20

macroeconomic - 20

production - 20

gdp - 20

neighborhood - 19

enterprise - 19

export - 18

resident - 18

revenue - 18

sale - 18

estimating - 18

economically - 17

financial - 16

economist - 16

expenditure - 16

payroll - 16

entrepreneurship - 15

demand - 15

report - 14

disclosure - 14

population - 14

housing - 14

finance - 14

agency - 14

respondent - 14

import - 13

exporter - 13

rural - 13

entrepreneur - 13

incentive - 13

quarterly - 13

microdata - 13

hiring - 13

technological - 12

patenting - 12

metropolitan - 12

immigrant - 12

immigration - 12

data census - 12

importer - 11

disadvantaged - 11

debt - 11

produce - 11

inventory - 11

innovative - 11

hire - 11

socioeconomic - 11

minority - 11

statistical - 11

census data - 11

spillover - 10

venture - 10

investor - 10

rent - 10

innovate - 10

residential - 10

efficiency - 10

census bureau - 10

poverty - 9

disparity - 9

residence - 9

invention - 9

acquisition - 9

endogeneity - 9

organizational - 9

racial - 9

race - 9

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hispanic - 9

shipment - 8

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incorporated - 8

loan - 8

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manufacturer - 8

monopolistic - 8

corporation - 8

productivity growth - 8

developed - 8

profit - 8

employment growth - 8

research - 8

leverage - 8

city - 8

ethnic - 8

segregation - 8

unemployed - 8

aggregate - 8

emission - 8

salary - 8

earner - 8

entrepreneurial - 8

establishment - 8

wholesale - 8

data - 8

datasets - 8

multinational - 7

impact - 7

community - 7

earn - 7

relocation - 7

firms patents - 7

researcher - 7

borrowing - 7

job - 7

urban - 7

worker - 7

trend - 7

consumption - 7

energy - 7

discrimination - 7

home - 7

saving - 7

use census - 7

bankruptcy - 7

record - 7

firms export - 6

trading - 6

investing - 6

equity - 6

invest - 6

intergenerational - 6

estimation - 6

patents firms - 6

productive - 6

depreciation - 6

innovator - 6

patenting firms - 6

shift - 6

credit - 6

exogeneity - 6

agriculture - 6

warehousing - 6

black - 6

heterogeneity - 6

electricity - 6

epa - 6

state - 6

geographically - 6

bias - 6

migrant - 6

research census - 6

renewable - 6

econometrically - 6

accounting - 6

price - 5

importing - 5

exported - 5

trader - 5

sociology - 5

welfare - 5

crime - 5

founder - 5

enrollment - 5

filing - 5

subsidy - 5

firm innovation - 5

firm patenting - 5

technology - 5

productivity estimates - 5

productivity shocks - 5

innovating - 5

patented - 5

stock - 5

tax - 5

banking - 5

labor markets - 5

development - 5

outsourced - 5

monopolistically - 5

regional - 5

segregated - 5

supplier - 5

fuel - 5

competitor - 5

wealth - 5

homeowner - 5

suburb - 5

mortgage - 5

growth productivity - 5

analysis - 5

productivity dispersion - 5

externality - 5

aggregate productivity - 5

economic census - 5

energy efficiency - 5

regulation - 5

federal - 5

confidentiality - 5

tenure - 5

creditor - 5

energy prices - 5

employment statistics - 5

census research - 5

white - 5

retailer - 5

agricultural - 5

business data - 5

sourcing - 4

town - 4

parent - 4

family - 4

parental - 4

prevalence - 4

factor productivity - 4

innovation productivity - 4

specialization - 4

occupation - 4

shareholder - 4

lending - 4

bank - 4

lender - 4

employment dynamics - 4

growth employment - 4

product - 4

custom - 4

exporting firms - 4

sectoral - 4

tariff - 4

country - 4

region - 4

labor productivity - 4

ownership - 4

neighbor - 4

policymakers - 4

house - 4

suburbanization - 4

recessionary - 4

cost - 4

average - 4

productivity measures - 4

percentile - 4

efficient - 4

regulatory - 4

enforcement - 4

statistician - 4

privacy - 4

statistical disclosure - 4

study - 4

irs - 4

regression - 4

mexican - 4

work census - 4

information - 4

2010 census - 4

merchandise - 4

census business - 4

censuses surveys - 4

census survey - 4

borrow - 4

collateral - 4

database - 4

reporting - 4

manager - 4

commodity - 3

imported - 3

export market - 3

citizen - 3

effects employment - 3

wage earnings - 3

employment earnings - 3

earnings employees - 3

financing - 3

funding - 3

fund - 3

asset - 3

prospect - 3

profitability - 3

benefit - 3

compensation - 3

wage growth - 3

layoff - 3

shock - 3

geographic - 3

pandemic - 3

foreign - 3

globalization - 3

firms import - 3

multinational firms - 3

job growth - 3

employment trends - 3

subsidiary - 3

location - 3

outsourcing - 3

gain - 3

productivity size - 3

practices productivity - 3

opportunity - 3

eligibility - 3

aggregation - 3

graduate - 3

imputation - 3

woman - 3

institutional - 3

corporate - 3

earnings age - 3

relocate - 3

employment effects - 3

employing - 3

workers earnings - 3

impact employment - 3

taxation - 3

income households - 3

transition - 3

immigrant workers - 3

marketing - 3

recession exposure - 3

good - 3

pricing - 3

firms census - 3

labor statistics - 3

estimator - 3

census responses - 3

industry concentration - 3

area - 3

customer - 3

policy - 3

utility - 3

plant productivity - 3

merger - 3

public - 3

publicly - 3

startup - 3

debtor - 3

worker demographics - 3

union - 3

electricity prices - 3

latino - 3

pollution - 3

pollutant - 3

amenity - 3

longitudinal employer - 3

employee data - 3

census employment - 3

corp - 3

subsidized - 3

geography - 3

trademark - 3

productivity firms - 3

firms grow - 3

retirement - 3

commerce - 3

retail - 3

business startups - 3

proprietor - 3

buyer - 3

linked census - 3

proprietorship - 3

decade - 3

farm - 3

industry productivity - 3

dispersion productivity - 3

ancestry - 3

immigrant entrepreneurs - 3

information census - 3

businesses census - 3

divorced - 3

surveys censuses - 3

bankrupt - 3

Viewing papers 31 through 40 of 177


  • Working Paper

    Who Scars the Easiest? College Quality and the Effects of Graduating into a Recession

    September 2024

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-47

    Graduating from college into a recession is associated with earnings losses, but less is known about how these effects vary across colleges. Using restricted-use data from the National Survey of College Graduates, we study how the effects of graduating into worse economic conditions vary over college quality in the context of the Great Recession. We find that earnings losses are concentrated among graduates from relatively high-quality colleges. Key mechanisms include substitution out of the labor force and into graduate school, decreased graduate degree completion, and differences in the economic stability of fields of study between graduates of high- and low-quality colleges.
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  • Working Paper

    Empirical Distribution of the Plant-Level Components of Energy and Carbon Intensity at the Six-digit NAICS Level Using a Modified KAYA Identity

    September 2024

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-46

    Three basic pillars of industry-level decarbonization are energy efficiency, decarbonization of energy sources, and electrification. This paper provides estimates of a decomposition of these three components of carbon emissions by industry: energy intensity, carbon intensity of energy, and energy (fuel) mix. These estimates are constructed at the six-digit NAICS level from non-public, plant-level data collected by the Census Bureau. Four quintiles of the distribution of each of the three components are constructed, using multiple imputation (MI) to deal with non-reported energy variables in the Census data. MI allows the estimates to avoid non-reporting bias. MI also allows more six-digit NAICS to be estimated under Census non-disclosure rules, since dropping non-reported observations may have reduced the sample sizes unnecessarily. The estimates show wide variation in each of these three components of emissions (intensity) and provide a first empirical look into the plant-level variation that underlies carbon emissions.
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  • Working Paper

    Socially Responsible Investment and Gender Equality in the United States Census

    August 2024

    Authors: Minsu Ko, Cynthia Yin

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-44

    With administrative data, we test whether institutional ownership with a social preference is related to employee-level gender equality. We show that the gender pay gap, which is an unexplained part of the lower wages of female employees, does not have a significant relation with socially responsible investments. Next, we show that female directorship strengthens the relation between socially responsible investments and the gender pay gap. When there are female directors, socially responsible investments have a robust correlation with a lower gender pay gap. This is because female directorship alleviates information asymmetry in gender equality.
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  • Working Paper

    Employer Dominance and Worker Earnings in Finance

    August 2024

    Authors: Wenting Ma

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-41

    Large firms in the U.S. financial system achieve substantial economic gains. Their dominance sets them apart while also raising concerns about the suppression of worker earnings. Utilizing administrative data, this study reveals that the largest financial firms pay workers an average of 30.2% more than their smallest counterparts, significantly exceeding the 7.9% disparity in nonfinance sectors. This positive size-earnings relationship is consistently more pronounced in finance, even during the 2008 crisis or compared to the hightech sector. Evidence suggests that large financial firms' excessive gains, coupled with their workers' sought-after skills, explain this distinct relationship.
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  • Working Paper

    Competition, Firm Innovation, and Growth under Imperfect Technology Spillovers

    July 2024

    Authors: Karam Jo, Seula Kim

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-40

    We study how friction in learning others' technology, termed 'imperfect technology spillovers,' incentivizes firms to use different types of innovation and impacts the implications of competition through changes in innovation composition. We build an endogenous growth model in which multi-product firms enhance their products via internal innovation and enter new product markets through external innovation. When learning others' technology takes time due to this friction, increased competitive pressure leads firms with technological advantages to intensify internal innovation to protect their markets, thereby reducing others' external innovation. Using the U.S. administrative firm-level data, we provide regression results supporting the model predictions. Our findings highlight the importance of strategic firm innovation choices and changes in their composition in shaping the aggregate implications of competition.
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  • Working Paper

    Household Wealth and Entrepreneurial Career Choices: Evidence from Climate Disasters

    July 2024

    Authors: Xiao Cen

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-39

    This study investigates how household wealth affects the human capital of startups, based on U.S. Census individual-level employment data, deed records, and geographic information system (GIS) data. Using floods as a wealth shock, a regression discontinuity analysis shows inundated residents are 7% less likely to work in startups relative to their neighbors outside the flood boundary, within a 0.1-mile-wide band. The effect is more pronounced for homeowners, consistent with the wealth effect. The career distortion leads to a significant long-run income loss, highlighting the importance of self-insurance for human capital allocation.
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  • Working Paper

    Contrasting the Local and National Demographic Incidence of Local Labor Demand Shocks

    July 2024

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-36

    This paper examines how spatial frictions that differ among heterogeneous workers and establishments shape the geographic and demographic incidence of alternative local labor demand shocks, with implications for the appropriate level of government at which to fund local economic initiatives. LEHD data featuring millions of job transitions facilitate estimation of a rich two-sided labor market assignment model. The model generates simulated forecasts of many alternative local demand shocks featuring different establishment compositions and local areas. Workers within 10 miles receive only 11.2% (6.6%) of nationwide welfare (employment) short-run gains, with at least 35.9% (62.0%) accruing to out-of-state workers, despite much larger per-worker impacts for the closest workers. Local incidence by demographic category is very sensitive to shock composition, but different shocks produce similar demographic incidence farther from the shock. Furthermore, the remaining heterogeneity in incidence at the state or national level can reverse patterns of heterogeneous demographic impacts at the local level. Overall, the results suggest that reduced-form approaches using distant locations as controls can produce accurate estimates of local shock impacts on local workers, but that the distribution of local impacts badly approximates shocks' statewide or national incidence.
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  • Working Paper

    Payroll Tax Incidence: Evidence from Unemployment Insurance

    June 2024

    Authors: Audrey Guo

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-35

    Economic models assume that payroll tax burdens fall fully on workers, but where does tax incidence fall when taxes are firm-specific and time-varying? Unemployment insurance in the United States has the key feature of varying both across employers and over time, creating the potential for labor demand responses if tax costs cannot be fully passed through to worker wages. Using state policy changes and administrative data of matched employer-employee job spells, I study how employment and earnings respond to unexpected payroll tax increases for highly exposed employers. I find significant drops in employment growth driven by lower hiring, and minimal evidence of passthrough to earnings. The negative employment effects are strongest for young workers and single-establishment firms.
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  • Working Paper

    The Impact of Parental Resources on Human Capital Investment and Labor Market Outcomes: Evidence from the Great Recession

    June 2024

    Authors: Jeremy Kirk

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-34

    I study the impact of parents' financial resources during adolescence on postsecondary human capital investment and labor market outcomes, using house value changes during the Great Recession of 2007-2009 as a natural experiment. I use several restricted-access datasets from the U.S. Census Bureau to create a novel dataset that includes intergenerational linkages between children and their parents. This data allows me to exploit house value variation within labor markets, addressing the identification concern that local house values are related to local economic conditions. I find that the average decrease to parents' home values lead to persistent decreases in bachelor's degree attainment of 1.26%, earnings of 1.96%, and full-time employment of 1.32%. Children of parents suffering larger house value shocks are more likely to substitute into two-year degree programs, drop out of college, or be enrolled in a college program in their late 20s.
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  • Working Paper

    Urban-Biased Growth: A Macroeconomic Analysis

    June 2024

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-33

    After 1980, larger US cities experienced substantially faster wage growth than smaller ones. We show that this urban bias mainly reflected wage growth at large Business Services firms. These firms stand out through their high per-worker expenditure on information technology and disproportionate presence in big cities. We introduce a spatial model of investment-specific technical change that can rationalize these patterns. Using the model as an accounting framework, we find that the observed decline in the investment price of information technology capital explains most urban-biased growth by raising the profits of large Business Services firms in big cities.
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