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Papers Containing Tag(s): 'Generalized Method of Moments'

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Frequently Occurring Concepts within this Search

Center for Economic Studies - 25

Ordinary Least Squares - 23

North American Industry Classification System - 21

Total Factor Productivity - 21

Annual Survey of Manufactures - 17

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 16

Longitudinal Business Database - 15

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 14

National Science Foundation - 14

Cobb-Douglas - 13

Standard Industrial Classification - 11

National Bureau of Economic Research - 11

Federal Reserve Bank - 10

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 10

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 10

Census of Manufactures - 9

Longitudinal Research Database - 9

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 8

Census of Manufacturing Firms - 8

Metropolitan Statistical Area - 8

Special Sworn Status - 7

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 6

County Business Patterns - 6

Current Population Survey - 6

TFPQ - 6

Internal Revenue Service - 6

Employer Identification Numbers - 5

Business Dynamics Statistics - 5

Federal Reserve System - 5

Economic Census - 5

Harmonized System - 5

Fabricated Metal Products - 5

Unemployment Insurance - 4

NBER Summer Institute - 4

UC Berkeley - 4

American Community Survey - 4

Integrated Public Use Microdata Series - 4

University of Chicago - 4

Longitudinal Firm Trade Transactions Database - 4

Customs and Border Protection - 4

University of California Los Angeles - 4

Commodity Flow Survey - 4

IQR - 4

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 4

Decennial Census - 3

Postal Service - 3

2010 Census - 3

Retirement History Survey - 3

State Energy Data System - 3

Michigan Institute for Teaching and Research in Economics - 3

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 3

University of Michigan - 3

Michigan Institute for Data Science - 3

Board of Governors - 3

2SLS - 3

Core Based Statistical Area - 3

New York University - 3

Permanent Plant Number - 3

Viewing papers 41 through 45 of 45


  • Working Paper

    The Agglomeration of Headquarters

    February 2004

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-04-02

    This paper uses a micro data set on auxiliary establishments from 1977 to 1997 in order to investigate the determinants of headquarter agglomerations and the underlying economic base of many larger metro areas. The significance of headquarters in large urban settings is their ability to facilitate the spatial separation of their white collar activities from remote production plants. The results show that separation benefits headquarters in two main ways: the availability of di?erentiated local service input suppliers and the scale of other headquarter activity nearby. A wide diversity of local service options allows the headquarters to better match their various needs with specific experts producing service inputs from whom they learn, which improves their productivity. Headquarters also benefit from other headquarter neighbors, although such marginal scale benefits seem to diminish as local scale rises.
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  • Working Paper

    An Equilibrium Model of Sorting in an Urban Housing Market: A Study of the Causes and Consequences of Residential Segregation

    January 2003

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-03-01

    This paper presents a new equilibrium framework for analyzing economic and policy questions related to the sorting of households within a large metropolitan area. At its heart is a model describing the residential location choices of households that makes explicit the way that individual decisions aggregate to form a housing market equilibrium. The model incorporates choice-specific unobservables, and in the presence of these, a general strategy is provided for identifying household preferences over choice characteristics, including those that depend on household sorting such as neighborhood racial composition. We estimate the model using restricted access Census data that characterize the precise residential and employment locations of a quarter of a million households in the San Francisco Bay Area, yielding accurate measures of references for a wide variety of housing and neighborhood attributes across different types of household. The main economic analysis of the paper uses these estimates in combination with the equilibrium model to explore the causes and consequences of racial segregation in the housing market. Our results indicate that, given the preference structure of households in the Bay Area, the elimination of racial differences in income and wealth would significantly increase the residential segregation of each major racial group. Given the relatively small fractions of Asian, Black, and Hispanic households in the Bay Area (each ~10%), the elimination of racial differences in income/wealth (or, education or employment geography) spreads households in these racial groups much more evenly across the income distribution, allowing more racial sorting to occur at all points in the distribution ' e.g., leading to the formation of wealthy, segregated Black and Hispanic neighborhoods. The partial equilibrium predictions of the model, which do not account for the fact that neighborhood sociodemographic compositions and prices adjust as part of moving to a new equilibrium, lead to the opposite conclusion, emphasizing the value of the general equilibrium approach developed in the paper. Our analysis also provides evidence sorting on the basis of race itself (whether driven by preferences directly or discrimination) leads to large reductions in the consumption of public safety and school quality by all Black and Hispanic households, and large reductions in the housing consumption of upper-income Black and Hispanic households.
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  • Working Paper

    Marshall's Scale Economies

    December 2001

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-01-17

    In this paper, using panel data, I estimate plant level production functions that include variables that allow for two types of scale externalities which plants experie nce in their local industrial environments. First are externalities from other plants in the same industry locally, usually called localization economies or, in a dynamic context, Marshall, Arrow, Romer [MAR] economies. Second are externalities from the scale or diversity of local economic activity outside the own industry involving some type of cross- fertilization, usually called urbanization economies or, in a dynamic context, Jacobs economies. Estimating production functions for plants in high tech industries and in capital goods, or machinery industries, I find that local own industry scale externalities, as measured specifically by the count of other own industry plants locally, have strong productivity effects in high tech but not machinery industries. I find evidence that single plant firms both benefit more from and generate greater external benefits than corporate plants. On timing, I find evidence that high tech single plant firms benefit from the scale of past own industry activity, as well as current activity. I find no evidence of urbanization economies from the diversity of local economic activity outside the own industry and limited evidence of urbanization economies from the overall scale of local economic activity.
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  • Working Paper

    Plant Vintage, Technology, and Environmental Regulation

    September 2001

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-01-08

    Does the impact of environmental regulation differ by plant vintage and technology? We answer this question using annual Census Bureau information on 116 pulp and paper mills' vintage, technology, productivity, and pollution abatement operating costs for 1979-1990. We find a significant negative relationship between pollution abatement costs and productivity levels. This is due almost entirely to integrated mills (those incorporating a pulping process), where a one standard deviation increase in abatement costs is predicted to reduce productivity by 5.4 percent. Older plants appear to have lower productivity but are less sensitive to abatement costs, perhaps due to 'grandfathering' of regulations. Mills which undergo renovations are also less sensitive to abatement costs, although these vintage and renovation results are not generally significant. We find similar results using a log-linear version of a three input Cobb-Douglas production function in which we include our technology, vintage, and renovation variables. Sample calculations of the impact of pollution abatement on productivity show the importance of allowing for differences based on plant technology. In a model incorporating technology interactions we estimate that total pollution abatement costs reduce productivity levels by an average of 4.7 percent across all the plants. The comparable estimate without technology interactions is 3.3 percent, approximately 30% lower.
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  • Working Paper

    Technology and Jobs: Secular Changes and Cyclical Dynamics

    September 1996

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-96-07

    In this paper, we exploit plant-level data for U.S. manufacturing for the 1970s and 1980s to explore the connections between changes in technology and the structure of employment and wages. We focus on the nonproduction labor share (measured alternatively by employment and wages) as the variable of interest. Our main findings are summarized as follows: (i) aggregate changes in the nonproduction labor share at annual and longer frequencies are dominated by within plant changes; (ii) the distribution of annual within plant changes exhibits a spike at zero, tremendous heterogeneity and fat left and right tails; (iii) within plant secular changes are concentrated in recessions; and (iv) while observable indicators of changes in technology account for a significant fraction of the secular increase in the average nonproduction labor share, unobservable factors account for most of the secular increase, most of the cyclical variation and most of the cross sectional heterogeneity.
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