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Papers Containing Tag(s): 'Housing and Urban Development'

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Department of Housing and Urban Development - 31

American Community Survey - 29

Internal Revenue Service - 24

Protected Identification Key - 22

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 21

Master Address File - 17

Decennial Census - 17

Person Validation System - 16

2010 Census - 15

Social Security Administration - 14

Indian Health Service - 14

Social Security - 13

Social Security Number - 13

Disclosure Review Board - 13

Current Population Survey - 12

Metropolitan Statistical Area - 12

American Housing Survey - 10

Indian Housing Information Center - 10

Person Identification Validation System - 10

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 9

W-2 - 8

Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program - 8

MAFID - 8

Temporary Assistance for Needy Families - 8

Computer Assisted Personal Interview - 8

MAF-ARF - 8

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 8

Employer Identification Numbers - 7

Personally Identifiable Information - 7

MTO - 7

Some Other Race - 7

Ordinary Least Squares - 7

Center for Economic Studies - 6

Census Numident - 6

Administrative Records - 6

Disability Insurance - 6

Social Science Research Institute - 6

Census 2000 - 6

Supreme Court - 5

Survey of Income and Program Participation - 5

Medicaid Services - 5

Centers for Medicare - 5

Census Bureau Person Identification Validation System - 5

Census Household Composition Key - 5

Master Beneficiary Record - 5

Postal Service - 5

Individual Taxpayer Identification Numbers - 5

National Science Foundation - 5

Federal Reserve Bank - 5

Longitudinal Business Database - 4

Department of Health and Human Services - 4

Census Bureau Business Register - 4

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 4

Composite Person Record - 4

American Economic Association - 4

Adjusted Gross Income - 4

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 4

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 4

Service Annual Survey - 4

Office of Management and Budget - 4

Census Bureau Master Address File - 4

Center for Administrative Records Research and Applications - 4

General Accounting Office - 3

North American Industry Classification System - 3

HHS - 3

Department of Agriculture - 3

Earned Income Tax Credit - 3

UC Berkeley - 3

Business Register - 3

SSA Numident - 3

Unemployment Insurance - 3

Individual Characteristics File - 3

National Bureau of Economic Research - 3

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 3

Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages - 3

1940 Census - 3

Department of Homeland Security - 3

Department of Labor - 3

NUMIDENT - 3

Census Edited File - 3

Data Management System - 3

Department of Economics - 3

PIKed - 3

Computer Assisted Telephone Interviews and Computer Assisted Personal Interviews - 3

CATI - 3

Geographic Information Systems - 3

National Opinion Research Center - 3

population - 18

housing - 18

residential - 17

neighborhood - 17

survey - 15

poverty - 15

respondent - 14

disadvantaged - 14

ethnicity - 14

census data - 12

resident - 12

data census - 10

rent - 10

data - 10

minority - 10

ethnic - 10

hispanic - 10

racial - 9

residence - 9

socioeconomic - 8

datasets - 8

renter - 8

medicaid - 7

welfare - 7

segregation - 7

race - 7

record - 7

assessed - 6

apartment - 6

agency - 6

census bureau - 6

imputation - 6

matching - 6

urban - 6

home - 6

estimating - 6

state - 6

city - 6

employed - 5

indian - 5

household surveys - 5

census survey - 5

eligibility - 5

eligible - 5

expenditure - 5

coverage - 5

black - 5

segregated - 5

neighbor - 5

statistical - 5

enrollment - 5

reside - 5

income neighborhoods - 5

family - 5

metropolitan - 5

econometric - 5

rural - 4

native - 4

subsidy - 4

sampling - 4

population survey - 4

homeowner - 4

citizen - 4

bias - 4

income data - 4

federal - 4

income households - 4

subsidized - 4

immigrant - 4

impact - 4

tax - 4

employ - 4

records census - 4

census research - 4

census records - 4

workforce - 4

area - 3

tribe - 3

ssa - 3

survey households - 3

prevalence - 3

intergenerational - 3

child - 3

propensity - 3

survey income - 3

residential segregation - 3

asian - 3

race census - 3

percentile - 3

1040 - 3

relocation - 3

suburb - 3

use census - 3

discrimination - 3

estimation - 3

economist - 3

recession - 3

disparity - 3

immigration - 3

census responses - 3

microdata - 3

poor - 3

house - 3

assessing - 3

housing survey - 3

white - 3

2010 census - 3

employee - 3

job - 3

geographically - 3

department - 3

labor - 3

enterprise - 3

Viewing papers 41 through 48 of 48


  • Working Paper

    Job Referral Networks and the Determination of Earnings in Local Labor Markets

    December 2010

    Authors: Ian M. Schmutte

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-10-40

    Referral networks may affect the efficiency and equity of labor market outcomes, but few studies have been able to identify earnings effects empirically. To make progress, I set up a model of on-the-job search in which referral networks channel information about high-paying jobs. I evaluate the model using employer-employee matched data for the U.S. linked to the Census block of residence for each worker. The referral effect is identified by variations in the quality of local referral networks within narrowly defined neighborhoods. I find, consistent with the model, a positive and significant role for local referral networks on the full distribution of earnings outcomes from job search.
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  • Working Paper

    Complex Survey Questions and the Impact of Enumeration Procedures: Census/American Community Survey Disability Questions

    April 2009

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-09-10

    This paper explores challenges relating to the identification of the population with disabilities,focusing on Census Bureau efforts using the 2000 Decennial Census Long-Form (Census 2000) and 2000-2005 American Community Survey (ACS). In particular, the analyses explore the impact of survey methods on responses to the work limitation (i.e., employment disability) question in these two Census products. Building on the research of Stern (2003) and Stern and Brault (2005), we look for further evidence of misreporting of an employment disability by specific sub-populations using the participation in the Supplemental Security Income program as an exogenous employment disability status indicator along with a subset of ACS disability questions. We expand upon these earlier studies by examining both false-positive and falsenegative reports of employment disability by implementing logit estimations to examine the role of respondent/enumerator error on the accuracy of the employment disability response. In this manner, we enhance our understanding of Census 2000 and ACS responses to employment disability questions through an exploration of the role of enumeration procedures in two types of misclassifications, as well as by evaluating existing data and estimates to uncover characteristics that might make an individual more likely to misreport an employment disability.
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  • Working Paper

    Neighborhood Effects on High-School Drop-Out Rates and Teenage Childbearing: Tests for Non-Linearities, Race-Specific Effects, Interactions with Family Characteristics, and Endogenous Causation using Geocoded California Census Microdata

    May 2008

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-08-12

    This paper examines the relationship between neighborhood characteristics and the likelihood that a youth will drop out of high school or have a child during the teenage years. Using a dataset that is uniquely wellsuited to the study of neighborhood effects, the impact of the neighborhood poverty rate and the percentage of professionals in the local labor force on youth outcomes in California is examined. The first section of the paper tests for non-linearities in the relationship between indicators of neighborhood distress and youth outcomes. Some evidence is found for a break-point at low levels of poverty. Suggestive but inconclusive evidence is also found for a second breakpoint, at very high levels of poverty, for African-American youth only. The second part of the paper examines interactions between family background characteristics and neighborhood effects, and finds that White youth are most sensitive to neighborhood effects, while the effect of parental education depends on the neighborhood measure in question. Among White youth, those from single-parent households are more vulnerable to neighborhood conditions. The third section of the paper finds that for White youth and Hispanic youth, the relevant neighborhood variables appear to be the own-race poverty rates and the percentage of professionals of youths' own race. The final section of the paper estimates a tract-fixed effects model, using the results from the third section to define multiple relevant poverty rates within each tract. The fixed-effects specification suggests that for White and Hispanic youth in California, neighborhood effects remain significant, even with the inclusion of controls for any unobserved family and neighborhood characteristics that are constant within tracts.
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  • Working Paper

    How Does Geography Matter in Ethnic Labor Market Segmentation Process? A Case Study of Chinese Immigrants in the San Francisco CMSA

    March 2007

    Authors: Qingfang Wang

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-07-09

    In the context of continuing influxes of large numbers of immigrants to the United States, urban labor market segmentation along the lines of race/ethnicity, gender, and class has drawn considerable growing attention. Using a confidential dataset extracted from the United States Decennial Long Form Data 2000 and a multilevel regression modeling strategy, this paper presents a case study of Chinese immigrants in the San Francisco metropolitan area. Correspondent with the highly segregated nature of the labor market as between Chinese immigrant men and women, different socioeconomic characteristics at the census tract level are significantly related to their occupational segregation. This suggests the social process of labor market segmentation is contingent on the immigrant geography of residence and workplace. With different direction and magnitude of the spatial contingency between men and women in the labor market, residency in Chinese immigrant concentrated areas is perpetuating the gender occupational segregation by skill level. Whereas abundant ethnic resources may exist in ethnic neighborhoods and enclaves for certain types of employment opportunities, these resources do not necessarily help Chinese immigrant workers, especially women, to move upward along the labor market hierarchy.
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  • Working Paper

    Identifying Individual and Group Effects in the Presence of Sorting: A Neighborhood Effects Application

    January 2007

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-07-03

    Researchers have long recognized that the non-random sorting of individuals into groups generates correlation between individual and group attributes that is likely to bias naive estimates of both individual and group effects. This paper proposes a non-parametric strategy for identifying these effects in a model that allows for both individual and group unobservables, applying this strategy to the estimation of neighborhood effects on labor market outcomes. The first part of this strategy is guided by a robust feature of the equilibrium in the canonical vertical sorting model of Epple and Platt (1998), that there is a monotonic relationship between neighborhood housing prices and neighborhood quality. This implies that under certain conditions a non-parametric function of neighborhood housing prices serves as a suitable control function for the neighborhood unobservable in the labor market outcome regression. This control function converts the problem to a model with one unobservable so that traditional instrumental variables solutions may be applied. In our application, we instrument for each individual.s observed neighborhood attributes with the average neighborhood attributes of a set of observationally identical individuals. The neighborhood effects model is estimated using confidential microdata from the 1990 Decennial Census for the Boston MSA. The results imply that the direct effects of geographic proximity to jobs, neighborhood poverty rates, and average neighborhood education are substantially larger than the conditional correlations identified using OLS, although the net effect of neighborhood quality on labor market outcomes remains small. These findings are robust across a wide variety of specifications and robustness checks.
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  • Working Paper

    Do Tax Incentives Affect Local Economic Growth? What Mean Impacts Miss in the Analysis of Enterprise Zone Policies

    September 2003

    Authors: Daniele Bondonio

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-03-17

    Geographically-targeted tax incentives remain popular initiatives in response to deteriorating economic conditions of urban and industrial areas. This paper exploits the exogenous variations of the U.S. state Enterprise Zone programs to estimate the impact of various incentive features on a number of dimensions of local economic growth. The econometric analysis uses plant level data to sort out growth outcomes into gross flows separately accounted for by new, existing, and vanishing businesses in the target areas. Results offer empirical evidence to support a number of specific policy recommendations and show that the impact of the incentives has more complex dynamics than those revealed by the null mean impact estimates obtained from analyzing net growth outcomes.
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  • Working Paper

    THE IMPACT OF STATE URBAN ENTERPRISE ZONES ON BUSINESS OUTCOMES*

    December 1998

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-98-20

    Since the early 1980s, a vast majority of states have implemented enterprise zones. This paper examines the impact of zone programs in the urban areas of six states on business outcomes, the main target of zone incentives. The primary source of outcome data is the U.S. Bureau of Census' Longitudinal Research Database (LRD), which tracks manufacturing establishments over time. Matched sample and geographic comparison groups are created to measure of the impact of zone policy on employment, establishment, shipment, payroll, and capital spending outcomes. Consistent with previous research findings, the difference in difference estimates indicate that zones appears to have little impact on average. However, by exploiting the establishment-level data, the paper finds that zones have a positive impact on the outcomes of new establishments and a negative impact on the outcomes of previously existing establishments.
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  • Working Paper

    Small Businesses Do Appear To Benefit From State/Local Government Economic Development Assistance

    February 1995

    Authors: Timothy Bates

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-95-02

    This study analyzes traits of small businesses that received state/local government aid in such forms as managerial, technical assistance, help in obtaining loans or bonding, and procurement assistance. Over 13 percent of small firms nationwide were found to be involved in selling goods/services to state/local government. Among firms owned by nonminorities, aid recipients tend to be the larger small businesses, but this pattern did not typify minority-owned firms. Among the nonminority businesses, furthermore, those aided by state/local government are more likely than nonassisted firms to remain in operation, even when various form and owner characteristics are controlled for statistically; this pattern did not typify minority-owned firms. State/local government aid flows disproportionately to women- owned businesses and to firm owners who lack managerial experience. No evidence was found indicating targeting of assistance to specific industry groups.
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