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Papers Containing Tag(s): 'Survey of Income and Program Participation'

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Current Population Survey - 78

Social Security Administration - 67

Internal Revenue Service - 52

Social Security - 48

American Community Survey - 43

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 40

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 37

Social Security Number - 34

Protected Identification Key - 33

PSID - 30

Center for Economic Studies - 29

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 27

National Science Foundation - 24

Employer Identification Numbers - 24

Ordinary Least Squares - 23

Research Data Center - 22

Detailed Earnings Records - 21

North American Industry Classification System - 20

Decennial Census - 20

Disclosure Review Board - 19

Cornell University - 19

National Longitudinal Survey of Youth - 18

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 18

Service Annual Survey - 17

Longitudinal Business Database - 17

Business Register - 17

Federal Reserve Bank - 16

Unemployment Insurance - 15

Metropolitan Statistical Area - 15

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 15

Standard Industrial Classification - 15

Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages - 14

W-2 - 13

2010 Census - 13

Person Validation System - 13

Census Bureau Business Register - 13

Health and Retirement Study - 12

Master Address File - 12

Computer Assisted Personal Interview - 12

National Institute on Aging - 12

Quarterly Workforce Indicators - 12

ASEC - 11

American Housing Survey - 11

Temporary Assistance for Needy Families - 11

National Bureau of Economic Research - 11

Summary Earnings Records - 11

Department of Labor - 10

Earned Income Tax Credit - 10

Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program - 10

Economic Census - 10

Special Sworn Status - 10

Office of Management and Budget - 9

Disability Insurance - 9

Master Earnings File - 9

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 9

Social and Economic Supplement - 8

Federal Insurance Contribution Act - 8

Individual Taxpayer Identification Numbers - 8

Cornell Institute for Social and Economic Research - 8

Local Employment Dynamics - 8

LEHD Program - 8

Urban Institute - 8

Department of Housing and Urban Development - 7

Medicaid Services - 7

Master Beneficiary Record - 7

University of Michigan - 7

Stern School of Business - 7

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 7

Employer Characteristics File - 7

Business Dynamics Statistics - 7

University of Maryland - 6

General Accounting Office - 6

Federal Reserve System - 6

Survey of Consumer Finances - 6

Department of Agriculture - 6

Person Identification Validation System - 6

National Center for Health Statistics - 6

Employment History File - 6

County Business Patterns - 6

Financial, Insurance and Real Estate Industries - 6

Core Based Statistical Area - 6

Characteristics of Business Owners - 6

American Economic Review - 6

Journal of Labor Economics - 6

Business Employment Dynamics - 6

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 6

Personally Identifiable Information - 5

Housing and Urban Development - 5

Journal of Economic Literature - 5

Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality - 5

Administrative Records - 5

Small Business Administration - 5

Longitudinal Research Database - 5

Department of Health and Human Services - 5

American Economic Association - 5

University of Chicago - 5

Individual Characteristics File - 5

CDF - 5

Cumulative Density Function - 5

Permanent Plant Number - 5

Public Use Micro Sample - 5

Medical Expenditure Panel Survey - 5

Social Security Disability Insurance - 4

CPS ASEC - 4

Board of Governors - 4

Centers for Medicare - 4

Census Numident - 4

SSA Numident - 4

Census Household Composition Key - 4

Supreme Court - 4

Census Bureau Master Address File - 4

Census Edited File - 4

Computer Assisted Telephone Interviews and Computer Assisted Personal Interviews - 4

CATI - 4

Department of Homeland Security - 4

Department of Economics - 4

National Health Interview Survey - 4

Current Population Survey Annual Social and Economic Supplement - 4

1940 Census - 4

PIKed - 4

Public Administration - 4

National Opinion Research Center - 4

American Statistical Association - 4

Census Bureau Longitudinal Business Database - 4

Boston College - 4

Review of Economics and Statistics - 4

Journal of Political Economy - 4

Establishment Micro Properties - 4

Business Master File - 4

Business Register Bridge - 4

Federal Tax Information - 4

Successor Predecessor File - 4

Annual Survey of Manufactures - 4

Russell Sage Foundation - 4

Boston Research Data Center - 4

Accommodation and Food Services - 3

National Institutes of Health - 3

Opportunity Atlas - 3

Census Bureau Person Identification Validation System - 3

Federal Register - 3

Economic Research Service - 3

Social Science Research Institute - 3

Indian Housing Information Center - 3

General Education Development - 3

Statistics Canada - 3

Department of Justice - 3

Postal Service - 3

NUMIDENT - 3

Citizenship and Immigration Services - 3

National Academy of Sciences - 3

International Trade Research Report - 3

North American Industry Classi - 3

Center for Administrative Records Research and Applications - 3

Sloan Foundation - 3

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development - 3

Kauffman Foundation - 3

Quarterly Journal of Economics - 3

Census Bureau Center for Economic Studies - 3

Office of Personnel Management - 3

Journal of Human Resources - 3

Securities and Exchange Commission - 3

Sample Edited Detail File - 3

Composite Person Record - 3

Harvard University - 3

Council of Economic Advisers - 3

survey - 45

respondent - 39

employed - 38

earnings - 30

labor - 29

recession - 28

employ - 27

unemployed - 21

statistical - 20

welfare - 19

data - 19

population - 19

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economist - 18

agency - 17

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census data - 17

poverty - 16

earner - 15

retirement - 15

ssa - 14

census bureau - 14

data census - 14

survey income - 13

datasets - 13

earn - 13

statistician - 12

job - 12

longitudinal - 12

econometric - 12

estimating - 11

socioeconomic - 11

microdata - 11

census employment - 11

family - 10

hispanic - 10

insurance - 10

medicaid - 10

resident - 10

worker - 10

disparity - 9

eligibility - 9

disadvantaged - 9

payroll - 9

immigrant - 9

fertility - 9

trend - 9

tenure - 9

employee data - 9

employment data - 8

housing - 8

ethnicity - 8

sampling - 8

household surveys - 8

census survey - 8

eligible - 8

pension - 8

irs - 8

occupation - 8

labor statistics - 8

employment dynamics - 8

employer household - 8

unemployment rates - 7

benefit - 7

wealth - 7

residential - 7

intergenerational - 7

residence - 7

disability - 7

survey data - 7

assessed - 7

aging - 7

retiree - 7

parental - 7

assessing - 7

analysis - 7

information - 7

enrollment - 7

census research - 7

marriage - 7

report - 7

coverage - 7

employment statistics - 6

state - 6

sample - 6

bias - 6

percentile - 6

medicare - 6

immigration - 6

citizen - 6

disclosure - 6

confidentiality - 6

use census - 6

record - 6

longitudinal employer - 6

mobility - 6

yearly - 6

layoff - 6

study - 6

estimates employment - 6

entrepreneurial - 6

entrepreneurship - 6

enterprise - 6

incentive - 5

filing - 5

generation - 5

home - 5

homeowner - 5

mortgage - 5

estimator - 5

minority - 5

average - 5

subsidy - 5

survey households - 5

taxpayer - 5

income survey - 5

saving - 5

parent - 5

imputation - 5

dependent - 5

income households - 5

cohort - 5

linked census - 5

quarterly - 5

health - 5

censuses surveys - 5

shift - 5

database - 5

workplace - 5

income year - 5

divorced - 5

research - 5

research census - 5

metropolitan - 5

hiring - 5

financial - 5

entrepreneur - 5

employment estimates - 5

federal - 5

discrepancy - 5

state employment - 4

compensation - 4

renter - 4

racial - 4

propensity - 4

estimation - 4

finance - 4

borrower - 4

prevalence - 4

poorer - 4

expenditure - 4

census household - 4

citizenship - 4

census responses - 4

adoption - 4

mother - 4

endogeneity - 4

privacy - 4

unobserved - 4

household income - 4

clerical - 4

career - 4

heterogeneity - 4

migrate - 4

migration - 4

migrating - 4

employment trends - 4

women earnings - 4

employing - 4

researcher - 4

work census - 4

tax - 4

statistical agencies - 4

regress - 4

uninsured - 4

insured - 4

wage earnings - 4

economic census - 4

effects employment - 3

unemployment insurance - 3

endowment - 3

neighborhood - 3

house - 3

ethnic - 3

latino - 3

race - 3

aggregate - 3

population survey - 3

lending - 3

loan - 3

lender - 3

debt - 3

credit - 3

income data - 3

mexican - 3

1040 - 3

linkage - 3

statistical disclosure - 3

public - 3

publicly - 3

family income - 3

segregation - 3

sociology - 3

mortality - 3

surveys censuses - 3

provided census - 3

discrimination - 3

wage gap - 3

macroeconomic - 3

recessionary - 3

endogenous - 3

maternal - 3

pregnancy - 3

migrant - 3

wage changes - 3

recession employment - 3

wage data - 3

hire - 3

information census - 3

relocating - 3

relocate - 3

decade - 3

parents income - 3

employment growth - 3

spouse - 3

venture - 3

proprietorship - 3

schooling - 3

moving - 3

risk - 3

economically - 3

insurance employer - 3

employment earnings - 3

business data - 3

Viewing papers 41 through 50 of 116


  • Working Paper

    The Potential for Using Combined Survey and Administrative Data Sources to Study Internal Labor Migration

    January 2017

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-55

    This paper introduces a novel data set combining survey data from the American Community Survey (ACS) with administrative data on employment from the Longitudinal Employer-Household Dynamics program, in order to study geographic labor mobility. With its rich set of information about individuals at the time of the migration decision, large sample size, and near-comprehensive ability to detect labor mobility, the new combined ACS-LEHD data offers several advantages over the existing data sets that are typically used in the study of migration, such as the Decennial Census, Current Population Survey, and Internal Revenue Service data. An overview of how these different data sets can be employed, and examples demonstrating the usefulness of the newly proposed data set, are provided. Aggregate statistics and stylized facts are generated from the ACS-LEHD data which reveal many of the same features as the existing data sets, including the decline of aggregate mobility throughout the past decade, as well as many of the known demographic differences in migration propensity.
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  • Working Paper

    Local Labor Demand and Program Participation Dynamics

    November 2016

    Working Paper Number:

    carra-2016-10

    Estimates the effect of fluctuations in local labor conditions on the likelihood that existing participants are able to transition out of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). Our primary data are SNAP administrative records from New York (2007-2012) linked to the 2010 Census at the person-level. We further augment these data by linking to industry-specific labor market indicators at the county-level. We find that local labor markets matter for the length of time individuals spend on SNAP, but there is substantial heterogeneity in estimated effects across local industries. While employment growth in industries with small shares of SNAP participants has no impact on SNAP exits, growth in local industries with creases the likelihood that recipients exit the program. We also observe corresponding increases in entries when these industries experience localized contractions. Notably, estimated industry effects vary across race groups and parental status, with Black Alone non-Hispanic, Hispanic, and mothers benefiting the least from improvements in local labor market conditions.
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  • Working Paper

    The New Lifecycle of Women's Employment: Disappearing Humps, Sagging Middle, Expanding Tops

    November 2016

    Working Paper Number:

    carra-2016-07

    The new lifecycle of women's employment is initially high and flat, there is a dip in the middle and a phasing out that is more prolonged than for previous cohorts. The hump is gone, the middle is a bit sagging and the top has greatly expanded. We explore the increase in cumulative work experience for women from the 1930s to the 1970s birth cohorts using the SIPP and the HRS. We investigate the changing labor force impact of a birth event across cohorts and by education and also the impact of taking leave or quitting. We find greatly increased labor force experience across cohorts, far less time out after a birth and greater labor force recovery for those who take paid or unpaid leave. More work experience across the lifecycle is related to the increased employment of women in their older ages.
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  • Working Paper

    Evaluating the Use of Commercial Data to Improve Survey Estimates of Property Taxes

    August 2016

    Working Paper Number:

    carra-2016-06

    While commercial data sources offer promise to statistical agencies for use in production of official statistics, challenges can arise as the data are not collected for statistical purposes. This paper evaluates the use of 2008-2010 property tax data from CoreLogic, Inc. (CoreLogic), aggregated from county and township governments from around the country, to improve 2010 American Community Survey (ACS) estimates of property tax amounts for single-family homes. Particularly, the research evaluates the potential to use CoreLogic to reduce respondent burden, to study survey response error and to improve adjustments for survey nonresponse. The research found that the coverage of the CoreLogic data varies between counties as does the correspondence between ACS and CoreLogic property taxes. This geographic variation implies that different approaches toward using CoreLogic are needed in different areas of the country. Further, large differences between CoreLogic and ACS property taxes in certain counties seem to be due to conceptual differences between what is collected in the two data sources. The research examines three counties, Clark County, NV, Philadelphia County, PA and St. Louis County, MO, and compares how estimates would change with different approaches using the CoreLogic data. Mean county property tax estimates are highly sensitive to whether ACS or CoreLogic data are used to construct estimates. Using CoreLogic data in imputation modeling for nonresponse adjustment of ACS estimates modestly improves the predictive power of imputation models, although estimates of county property taxes and property taxes by mortgage status are not very sensitive to the imputation method.
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  • Working Paper

    Income Effects in Labor Supply: Evidence from Child-Related Tax Benefits

    May 2016

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-16-24

    A parent whose child is born in December can claim child-related tax benefits when she files her tax return a few months later. Parents of children born in January must wait more than a year before they can receive child-related tax benefits. As a result, families with December births have higher after-tax income in the first year of a child's life than otherwise similar families with January births. This paper estimates the corresponding income effect on maternal labor supply, testing whether mothers who give birth in December work and earn less in the months following birth. We use data from the American Community Survey, the Survey of Income and Program Participation, and the 2000 Decennial Census. We find that December mothers have a lower probability of working, particularly in the third month after a child's birth. Earnings data from the SIPP indicate that an additional dollar of child-related tax benefits reduces annual maternal earnings in the year following a child's birth by approximately one dollar.
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  • Working Paper

    How Credit Constraints Impact Job Finding Rates, Sorting & Aggregate Output*

    January 2016

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-16-25

    We empirically and theoretically examine how consumer credit access affects dis- placed workers. Empirically, we link administrative employment histories to credit reports. We show that an increase in credit limits worth 10% of prior annual earnings allows individuals to take .15 to 3 weeks longer to find a job. Conditional on finding a job, they earn more and work at more productive firms. We develop a labor sorting model with credit to provide structural estimates of the impact of credit on employ- ment outcomes, which we find are similar to our empirical estimates. We use the model to understand the impact of consumer credit on the macroeconomy. We find that if credit limits tighten during a downturn, employment recovers quicker, but output and productivity remain depressed. This is because when limits tighten, low-asset, low- productivity job losers cannot self-insure. Therefore, they search less thoroughly and take more accessible jobs at less productive firms.
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  • Working Paper

    The Shifting Job Tenure Distribution

    January 2016

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-16-12R

    There has been a shift in the U.S. job tenure distribution toward longer-duration jobs since 2000. This change is apparent both in the tenure supplements to the Current Population Survey and in matched employer-employee data. A substantial portion of this shift can be accounted for by the ageing of the workforce and the decline in the entry rate of new employer businesses. This shift is accounted for more by declines in the hiring rate, which are concentrated in the labor market downturns associated with the 2001 and 2007-2009 recessions, rather than declines in separation rates. The increase in average real earnings since 2007 is less than what would be predicted by the shift toward longer-tenure jobs because of declines in tenure-held-constant real earnings. Regression estimates of the returns to job tenure provide no evidence that the shift in the job tenure distribution is being driven by better matches between workers and employers.
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  • Working Paper

    Selection and Specialization in the Evolution of Marriage Earnings Gaps

    October 2015

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-15-36

    We examine changes in marriage and earnings patterns across four cohorts born between 1936 and 1975, using data from a series of Survey of Income and Program Participation panels linked to administrative data on earnings. We find that for both men and women, marriage has become increasingly positively associated with education and earnings potential. We compare ordinary least squares (OLS) and fixed effect (FE) estimates of the earnings differential associated with marriage. We find that the marriage earnings gap fell for women in fixed-effect estimates implying that the impact of specialization has diminished over time. We also find that increasingly positive selection into marriage means that OLS estimates overstate the reduction in the marriage earnings gap. While our findings imply that marriage is no longer associated with lower earnings among women without minor children in our most recent cohort, the motherhood gap remains large. Among men, we find that the marriage premium actually increases for more recent birth cohorts in fixed-effects regressions.
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  • Working Paper

    Wealth, Tastes, and Entrepreneurial Choice

    October 2015

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-15-34

    The nonpecuniary benefits of managing a small business are a first order consideration for many nascent entrepreneurs, yet the preference for business ownership is mostly ignored in models of entrepreneurship and occupational choice. In this paper, we study a population with varying entrepreneurial tastes and wealth in a simple general equilibrium model of occupational choice. This choice yields several important results: (1) entrepreneurship can be thought of as a normal good, generating wealth effects independent of any financing constraints; (2) nonpecuniary entrepreneurs select into small-scale firms; and (3) subsidies designed to stimulate more business entry can have regressive distributional effects. Despite abstracting from other important considerations such as risk, financing constraints, and innovation, we show that nonpecuniary compensation is particularly relevant in discussions of small businesses.
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  • Working Paper

    The Promise and Potential of Linked Employer-Employee Data for Entrepreneurship Research

    September 2015

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-15-29

    In this paper, we highlight the potential for linked employer-employee data to be used in entrepreneurship research, describing new data on business start-ups, their founders and early employees, and providing examples of how they can be used in entrepreneurship research. Linked employer-employee data provides a unique perspective on new business creation by combining information on the business, workforce, and individual. By combining data on both workers and firms, linked data can investigate many questions that owner-level or firm-level data cannot easily answer alone - such as composition of the workforce at start-ups and their role in explaining business dynamics, the flow of workers across new and established firms, and the employment paths of the business owners themselves.
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