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Papers Containing Tag(s): 'Employer Identification Numbers'

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Longitudinal Business Database - 108

Internal Revenue Service - 98

North American Industry Classification System - 94

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 82

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 77

Business Register - 67

Center for Economic Studies - 67

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 60

Census Bureau Business Register - 54

Social Security Administration - 50

Current Population Survey - 44

Standard Industrial Classification - 44

National Science Foundation - 43

American Community Survey - 42

Protected Identification Key - 42

Ordinary Least Squares - 42

Social Security Number - 40

Economic Census - 40

Business Dynamics Statistics - 35

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 33

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 33

Disclosure Review Board - 33

Decennial Census - 32

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 32

County Business Patterns - 31

Social Security - 31

National Bureau of Economic Research - 30

Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages - 28

Annual Survey of Manufactures - 28

Quarterly Workforce Indicators - 28

Metropolitan Statistical Area - 28

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 28

W-2 - 27

Service Annual Survey - 27

Federal Reserve Bank - 24

Survey of Income and Program Participation - 24

Research Data Center - 23

Total Factor Productivity - 22

Unemployment Insurance - 20

Census Bureau Longitudinal Business Database - 20

Department of Labor - 19

Small Business Administration - 19

Cornell University - 19

Retail Trade - 18

Individual Characteristics File - 17

University of Maryland - 17

University of Chicago - 17

Employer Characteristics File - 16

Census of Manufactures - 16

Department of Homeland Security - 16

Master Address File - 15

Longitudinal Research Database - 15

Office of Management and Budget - 14

Company Organization Survey - 14

Employment History File - 14

Postal Service - 14

Person Validation System - 13

Integrated Longitudinal Business Database - 13

Business Employment Dynamics - 13

Financial, Insurance and Real Estate Industries - 13

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 13

Local Employment Dynamics - 12

Census of Manufacturing Firms - 12

LEHD Program - 12

Annual Business Survey - 11

Technical Services - 11

Successor Predecessor File - 11

Accommodation and Food Services - 11

Core Based Statistical Area - 11

Longitudinal Firm Trade Transactions Database - 11

Federal Reserve System - 10

Survey of Business Owners - 10

COVID-19 - 10

Cornell Institute for Social and Economic Research - 10

Business Formation Statistics - 10

Initial Public Offering - 10

International Trade Research Report - 10

Kauffman Foundation - 10

American Economic Review - 10

Securities and Exchange Commission - 9

Census Numident - 9

2010 Census - 9

National Institute on Aging - 9

Medical Expenditure Panel Survey - 9

Business Master File - 9

Business Register Bridge - 9

Department of Economics - 8

Employer-Household Dynamics - 8

Herfindahl Hirschman Index - 8

Office of Personnel Management - 8

Legal Form of Organization - 8

Educational Services - 8

Arts, Entertainment - 8

American Economic Association - 8

Characteristics of Business Owners - 8

Data Management System - 8

Department of Housing and Urban Development - 8

Patent and Trademark Office - 8

Detailed Earnings Records - 8

Review of Economics and Statistics - 8

Permanent Plant Number - 8

SSA Numident - 7

Cumulative Density Function - 7

Michigan Institute for Teaching and Research in Economics - 7

Standard Occupational Classification - 7

Occupational Employment Statistics - 7

National Employer Survey - 7

Nonemployer Statistics - 7

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development - 7

Housing and Urban Development - 7

AKM - 7

Paycheck Protection Program - 7

Wholesale Trade - 7

Computer Assisted Personal Interview - 7

American Housing Survey - 7

New York University - 7

Linear Probability Models - 7

National Center for Health Statistics - 7

Federal Tax Information - 7

MIT Press - 7

Public Administration - 7

Annual Survey of Entrepreneurs - 6

Health Care and Social Assistance - 6

General Accounting Office - 6

MAF-ARF - 6

Board of Governors - 6

Cobb-Douglas - 6

Department of Defense - 6

CDF - 6

Journal of Labor Economics - 6

Customs and Border Protection - 6

Establishment Micro Properties - 6

IQR - 5

Oil and Gas Extraction - 5

Adjusted Gross Income - 5

HHS - 5

Agriculture, Forestry - 5

National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics - 5

Generalized Method of Moments - 5

Economic Research Service - 5

Disability Insurance - 5

Limited Liability Company - 5

Kauffman Firm Survey - 5

COVID - 5

Sloan Foundation - 5

Ohio State University - 5

Guzman and Stern - 5

Personally Identifiable Information - 5

Composite Person Record - 5

North American Industry Classi - 5

Statistics Canada - 5

University of California Los Angeles - 5

PSID - 5

Journal of Political Economy - 5

Department of Commerce - 5

Boston College - 4

Professional Services - 4

NBER Summer Institute - 4

World Trade Organization - 4

Brookings Institution - 4

Federal Insurance Contribution Act - 4

Individual Taxpayer Identification Numbers - 4

Temporary Assistance for Needy Families - 4

Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program - 4

Census Bureau Person Identification Validation System - 4

Social Science Research Institute - 4

Columbia University - 4

Council of Economic Advisers - 4

Master Earnings File - 4

Society of Labor Economists - 4

Person Identification Validation System - 4

DOB - 4

TFPQ - 4

Probability Density Function - 4

Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality - 4

Information and Communication Technology Survey - 4

University of Michigan - 4

VAR - 4

United Nations - 4

Harmonized System - 4

Census 2000 - 4

Net Present Value - 4

Quarterly Journal of Economics - 4

Bureau of Labor - 4

State Energy Data System - 4

COMPUSTAT - 4

Special Sworn Status - 4

Journal of Economic Literature - 4

Energy Information Administration - 3

Department of Energy - 3

Environmental Protection Agency - 3

Health and Retirement Study - 3

Center for Research in Security Prices - 3

Federal Trade Commission - 3

National Establishment Time Series - 3

Supreme Court - 3

Department of Health and Human Services - 3

IZA - 3

Department of Agriculture - 3

Federal Register - 3

Administrative Records - 3

Master Beneficiary Record - 3

Indian Health Service - 3

2SLS - 3

IBM - 3

National Institutes of Health - 3

Georgetown University - 3

Retirement History Survey - 3

National Income and Product Accounts - 3

Foreign Direct Investment - 3

European Union - 3

Center for Administrative Records Research - 3

Journal of Human Resources - 3

Wal-Mart - 3

Federal Reserve Board of Governors - 3

Business R&D and Innovation Survey - 3

George Mason University - 3

Stanford University - 3

Harvard University - 3

Journal of Economic Perspectives - 3

Labor Productivity - 3

Census Bureau Business Dynamics Statistics - 3

Northwestern University - 3

Fabricated Metal Products - 3

World Bank - 3

Journal of International Economics - 3

National Longitudinal Survey of Youth - 3

Computer Aided Design - 3

employed - 64

employ - 58

workforce - 50

employee - 49

payroll - 49

labor - 41

recession - 39

earnings - 36

survey - 34

entrepreneur - 33

enterprise - 32

entrepreneurship - 29

quarterly - 29

economist - 27

sector - 27

worker - 25

company - 24

agency - 24

market - 23

proprietor - 22

hiring - 22

census bureau - 21

revenue - 21

respondent - 20

entrepreneurial - 20

occupation - 19

estimating - 19

proprietorship - 19

acquisition - 19

growth - 19

corporation - 18

venture - 18

employment growth - 18

econometric - 18

longitudinal - 18

report - 18

macroeconomic - 17

incorporated - 17

population - 17

employment data - 17

gdp - 17

manufacturing - 17

sale - 17

data census - 16

census employment - 16

earner - 16

establishment - 16

finance - 16

job - 15

statistical - 15

startup - 15

unemployed - 15

endogeneity - 15

economic census - 15

census data - 14

data - 14

industrial - 14

export - 14

economically - 13

layoff - 13

organizational - 13

salary - 13

leverage - 13

heterogeneity - 12

hire - 12

microdata - 12

employment statistics - 11

irs - 11

employing - 11

employee data - 11

exporter - 11

earn - 10

labor statistics - 10

investment - 10

investor - 10

incentive - 10

longitudinal employer - 10

financial - 10

loan - 10

bank - 10

debt - 10

immigrant - 10

bankruptcy - 10

matching - 10

employer household - 10

production - 10

import - 10

record - 9

business startups - 9

work census - 9

trend - 9

employment estimates - 9

workplace - 9

employment dynamics - 9

prospect - 9

econometrician - 9

wage data - 9

importer - 9

research census - 9

socioeconomic - 8

department - 8

expenditure - 8

nonemployer businesses - 8

equity - 8

lending - 8

coverage - 8

assessed - 8

patent - 8

innovation - 8

insurance - 8

aggregate - 8

multinational - 8

census business - 8

business data - 8

tenure - 8

migration - 7

state - 7

merger - 7

spillover - 7

lender - 7

banking - 7

younger firms - 7

funding - 7

residential - 7

decline - 7

startup firms - 7

inventory - 7

clerical - 7

regress - 6

information census - 6

wholesale - 6

startups employees - 6

turnover - 6

worker demographics - 6

financing - 6

borrowing - 6

migrant - 6

survey income - 6

neighborhood - 6

shock - 6

patenting - 6

corp - 6

researcher - 6

ethnicity - 6

workforce indicators - 6

demand - 6

importing - 6

custom - 6

filing - 6

exporting - 6

accounting - 6

censuses surveys - 6

creditor - 6

businesses census - 6

census years - 6

measures employment - 6

manufacturer - 6

statistician - 6

relocation - 5

disclosure - 5

executive - 5

corporate - 5

subsidiary - 5

identifier - 5

monopolistic - 5

employees startups - 5

opportunity - 5

employment trends - 5

borrower - 5

credit - 5

firms employment - 5

firms young - 5

tariff - 5

immigration - 5

migrate - 5

minority - 5

household surveys - 5

medicaid - 5

pandemic - 5

bias - 5

declining - 5

rent - 5

graduate - 5

discrimination - 5

housing - 5

healthcare - 5

metropolitan - 5

matched - 5

datasets - 5

imputation - 5

warehousing - 5

downturn - 5

employment count - 5

foreign - 5

imported - 5

employment measures - 5

shipment - 5

firms export - 5

trading - 5

linked census - 5

employment earnings - 5

estimation - 5

census survey - 5

yearly - 5

federal - 5

research - 5

employment wages - 5

founder - 5

firm growth - 5

firms grow - 5

fluctuation - 5

employed census - 5

bankrupt - 5

productivity growth - 5

aging - 5

endogenous - 5

estimates employment - 5

exogeneity - 4

shift - 4

employment flows - 4

relocate - 4

retirement - 4

pension - 4

intergenerational - 4

database - 4

firm data - 4

percentile - 4

businesses grow - 4

shareholder - 4

trends employment - 4

wage regressions - 4

mortgage - 4

hispanic - 4

migrating - 4

poverty - 4

sampling - 4

income data - 4

ethnic - 4

segregation - 4

neighbor - 4

transition - 4

borrow - 4

study - 4

impact - 4

career - 4

use census - 4

health insurance - 4

geographically - 4

retail - 4

industry productivity - 4

tax - 4

buyer - 4

exported - 4

census research - 4

linkage - 4

invention - 4

collateral - 4

census use - 4

surveys censuses - 4

exporting firms - 4

ownership - 4

innovative - 4

growth firms - 4

wage variation - 4

acquirer - 4

census file - 4

growth productivity - 4

liquidation - 4

technological - 4

contract - 4

regression - 4

restructuring - 4

empirical - 4

assessing - 4

wealth - 3

consolidated - 3

measures productivity - 3

paper census - 3

employment effects - 3

profit - 3

firms productivity - 3

area - 3

region - 3

native - 3

unobserved - 3

labor markets - 3

employment distribution - 3

wages employment - 3

wage growth - 3

firms age - 3

fund - 3

employment entrepreneurship - 3

citizen - 3

survey households - 3

population survey - 3

propensity - 3

provided census - 3

income survey - 3

disadvantaged - 3

earnings growth - 3

applicant - 3

estimator - 3

welfare - 3

resident - 3

patented - 3

subsidy - 3

medicare - 3

insured - 3

discrepancy - 3

international trade - 3

country - 3

supplier - 3

firms trade - 3

associate - 3

regressing - 3

compensation - 3

retailer - 3

trade models - 3

earnings employees - 3

recession employment - 3

autoregressive - 3

establishments data - 3

customer - 3

enrollment - 3

commodity - 3

regional - 3

industry employment - 3

diversification - 3

firms patents - 3

profitability - 3

partnership - 3

classification - 3

wages productivity - 3

debtor - 3

heterogeneous - 3

recessionary - 3

stock - 3

volatility - 3

state employment - 3

2010 census - 3

rates employment - 3

prevalence - 3

technology - 3

analysis - 3

measure - 3

firms census - 3

Viewing papers 41 through 50 of 183


  • Working Paper

    Global Sourcing and Multinational Activity: A Unified Approach

    September 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-36

    Multinational firms (MNEs) accounted for 42 percent of US manufacturing employment, 87 percent of US imports, and 84 of US exports in 2007. Despite their disproportionate share of global trade, MNEs' input sourcing and final-good production decisions are often studied separately. Using newly merged data on firms' trade and FDI activity by country, we show that US MNEs are more likely to import not only from the countries in which they have affiliates, but also from other countries within their affiliates' region. We rationalize these patterns in a unified framework in which firms jointly determine the countries in which to produce final goods, and the countries from which to source inputs. The model generates a new source of scale economies that arises because a firm incurs a country specific fixed cost that allows all its assembly plants to source inputs from that country. This shared fixed cost across plants creates interdependencies between firms' assembly and sourcing locations, and leads to non-monotonic responses in third markets to bilateral trade cost changes.
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  • Working Paper

    Introducing the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey-Insurance Component with Administrative Records (MEPS-ICAR): Description, Data Construction Methodology, and Quality Assessment

    August 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-29

    This report introduces a new dataset, the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey-Insurance Component with Administrative Records (MEPS-ICAR), consisting of MEPS-IC survey data on establishments and their health insurance benefits packages linked to Decennial Census data and administrative tax records on MEPS-IC establishments' workforces. These data include new measures of the characteristics of MEPS-IC establishments' parent firms, employee turnover, the full distribution of MEPS-IC workers' personal and family incomes, the geographic locations where those workers live, and improved workforce demographic detail. Next, this report details the methods used for producing the MEPS-ICAR. Broadly, the linking process begins by matching establishments' parent firms to their workforces using identifiers appearing in tax records. The linking process concludes by matching establishments to their own workforces by identifying the subset of their parent firm's workforce that best matches the expected size, total payroll, and residential geographic distribution of the establishment's workforce. Finally, this report presents statistics characterizing the match rate and the MEPS-ICAR data itself. Key results include that match rates are consistently high (exceeding 90%) across nearly all data subgroups and that the matched data exhibit a reasonable distribution of employment, payroll, and worker commute distances relative to expectations and external benchmarks. Notably, employment measures derived from tax records, but not used in the match itself, correspond with high fidelity to the employment levels that establishments report in the MEPS-IC. Cumulatively, the construction of the MEPS-ICAR significantly expands the capabilities of the MEPS-IC and presents many opportunities for analysts.
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  • 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.
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  • Working Paper

    The impact of manufacturing credentials on earnings and the probability of employment

    May 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-15

    This paper examines the labor market returns to earning industry-certified credentials in the manufacturing sector. Specifically, we are interested in estimating the impact of a manufacturing credential on wages, probability of employment, and probability of employment specifically in the manufacturing sector post credential attainment. We link students who earned manufacturing credentials to their enrollment and completion records, and then further link them to their IRS tax records for earnings and employment (Form W2 and 1040) and to the American Community Survey and decennial census for demographic information. We present earnings trajectories for workers with credentials by type of credential, industry of employment, age, race and ethnicity, gender, and state. To obtain a more causal estimate of the impact of a credential on earnings, we implement a coarsened exact matching strategy to compare outcomes between otherwise similar people with and without a manufacturing credential. We find that the attainment of a manufacturing industry credential is associated with higher earnings and a higher likelihood of labor market participation when we compare attainers to a group of non-attainers who are otherwise similar.
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  • Working Paper

    Can Displaced Labor Be Retrained? Evidence from Quasi-Random Assignment to Trade Adjustment Assistance

    February 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-05

    The extent to which workers adjust to labor market disruptions in light of increasing pressure from trade and automation commands widespread concern. Yet little is known about efforts that deliberately target the adjustment process. This project studies 20 years of worker-level earnings and re-employment responses to Trade Adjustment Assistance (TAA)'a large social insurance program that couples retraining incentives with extended unemployment insurance (UI) for displaced workers. I estimate causal effects from the quasi-random assignment of TAA cases to investigators of varying approval leniencies. Using employer-employee matched Census data on 300,000 workers, I find TAA approved workers have $50,000 greater cumulative earnings ten years out'driven by both higher incomes and greater labor force participation. Yet annual returns fully depreciate over the same period. In the most disrupted regions, workers are more likely to switch industries and move to labor markets with better opportunities in response to TAA. Combined with evidence that sustained returns are delivered by training rather than UI transfers, the results imply a potentially important role for human capital in overcoming adjustment frictions.
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  • Working Paper

    Two-sided Search in International Markets

    January 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-02

    We develop a dynamic model of international business-to-business transactions in which sellers and buyers search for each other, with the probability of a match depending on both individual and aggregate search effort. Fit to customs records on U.S. apparel imports, the model captures key cross-sectional and dynamic features of international buyer-seller relationships. We use the model to make several quantitative inferences. First, we calculate the search costs borne by heterogeneous importers and exporters. Second, we provide a structural interpretation for the life cycles of importers and exporters as they endogenously acquire and lose foreign business partners. Third, we pursue counterfactuals that approximate the phaseout of the Agreement on Textiles and Clothing (the 'China shock") and the IT revolution. Lower search costs can significantly improve consumer welfare, but at the expense of importer pro ts. On the other hand, an increase in the population of foreign exporters can congest matching to the extent of dampening or even reversing the gains consumers enjoy from access to extra varieties and more retailers.
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  • Working Paper

    A Long View of Employment Growth and Firm Dynamics in the United States: Importers vs. Exporters vs. Non-Traders

    December 2021

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-38

    The first experimental product from the U.S. Census Bureau's Business Dynamics Statistics (BDS) program -- BDS-Goods Traders -- provides annual, public-use measures of business dynamics by four mutually exclusive goods-trading classifications: exporter only, importer only, exporter and importer, and non-trader. The BDS-Goods Traders offers a comprehensive view of employment growth at firms associated with goods trading activities in the United States from 1992-2019. We highlight three patterns. First, employment is skewed towards goods traders in several ways. Only 6% of all U.S. firms are goods traders but they account for half of total employment. Moreover, 80% of large firms and 70% of older firms are goods traders. Second, exporter-importer firms represent 70% of manufacturing employment and over half of employment in services-producing industries (management, retail, transportation, utilities, and wholesale). Third, goods-traders exhibit higher net job creation rates than non-traders controlling for firm size, age, and sector. Goods traders contribution to total job creation grows over time, rising to more than half after 2008.
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  • Working Paper

    Finding Needles in Haystacks: Multiple-Imputation Record Linkage Using Machine Learning

    November 2021

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-35

    This paper considers the problem of record linkage between a household-level survey and an establishment-level frame in the absence of unique identifiers. Linkage between frames in this setting is challenging because the distribution of employment across establishments is highly skewed. To address these difficulties, this paper develops a probabilistic record linkage methodology that combines machine learning (ML) with multiple imputation (MI). This ML-MI methodology is applied to link survey respondents in the Health and Retirement Study to their workplaces in the Census Business Register. The linked data reveal new evidence that non-sampling errors in household survey data are correlated with respondents' workplace characteristics.
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  • Working Paper

    Pay, Productivity and Management

    September 2021

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-21-31

    Using confidential Census matched employer-employee earnings data we find that employees at more productive firms, and firms with more structured management practices, have substantially higher pay, both on average and across every percentile of the pay distribution. This pay-performance relationship is particularly strong amongst higher paid employees, with a doubling of firm productivity associated with 11% more pay for the highest-paid employee (likely the CEO) compared to 4.7% for the median worker. This pay-performance link holds in public and private firms, although it is almost twice as strong in public firms for the highest-paid employees. Top pay volatility is also strongly related to productivity and structured management, suggesting this performance-pay relationship arises from more aggressive monitoring and incentive practices for top earners.
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  • 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.
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