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Papers Containing Tag(s): 'Journal of Economic Literature'

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Center for Economic Studies - 20

Ordinary Least Squares - 19

National Science Foundation - 18

North American Industry Classification System - 15

Internal Revenue Service - 14

Current Population Survey - 14

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 13

Annual Survey of Manufactures - 13

Longitudinal Business Database - 12

National Bureau of Economic Research - 11

Standard Industrial Classification - 10

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 10

Quarterly Journal of Economics - 9

Census of Manufactures - 9

University of Chicago - 8

American Economic Review - 7

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 7

Social Security Number - 7

Economic Census - 7

Census of Manufacturing Firms - 7

American Economic Association - 7

Metropolitan Statistical Area - 7

Total Factor Productivity - 7

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 7

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 6

Protected Identification Key - 6

County Business Patterns - 6

Federal Reserve Bank - 6

National Ambient Air Quality Standards - 6

World Bank - 6

Journal of Political Economy - 5

Survey of Income and Program Participation - 5

PSID - 5

Person Validation System - 5

Federal Reserve System - 5

Journal of Economic Perspectives - 5

Business Register - 5

Environmental Protection Agency - 5

Research Data Center - 5

Longitudinal Research Database - 5

Review of Economic Studies - 4

Social Security Administration - 4

American Community Survey - 4

Person Identification Validation System - 4

Journal of Econometrics - 4

Princeton University Press - 4

Management and Organizational Practices Survey - 4

Cornell University - 4

Postal Service - 4

National Center for Health Statistics - 4

Employer Identification Numbers - 4

Geographic Information Systems - 4

Special Sworn Status - 4

National Income and Product Accounts - 3

Social Security - 3

Small Business Administration - 3

Census Bureau Longitudinal Business Database - 3

Sloan Foundation - 3

Kauffman Foundation - 3

Michigan Institute for Teaching and Research in Economics - 3

Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages - 3

Administrative Records - 3

Center for Administrative Records Research and Applications - 3

Department of Labor - 3

Review of Economics and Statistics - 3

MIT Press - 3

European Union - 3

National Longitudinal Survey of Youth - 3

Economic Research Service - 3

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 3

Establishment Micro Properties - 3

Harmonized System - 3

Longitudinal Firm Trade Transactions Database - 3

Pollution Abatement Costs and Expenditures - 3

Financial, Insurance and Real Estate Industries - 3

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 3

Viewing papers 41 through 50 of 51


  • Working Paper

    Where Do Manufacturing Firms Locate Their Headquarters?

    October 2005

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-05-17

    Firms' headquarters [HQ] support their production activity, by gathering information and outsourcing business services, as well as, managing, evaluating, and coordinating internal firm activities. In search of locations for these functions, firms often separate the HQ function physically from their production facilities and construct stand-alone HQs. By locating its HQ in a large, service oriented metro area away from its production facilities, a firm may be better able to out-source service functions in that local metro market and also to gather information about market conditions for their products. However if the firm locates the HQ away from its production activity, that increases the coordination costs in managing plant activities. In this paper we empirically analyze the trade-off of these two considerations.
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  • Working Paper

    The Dynamics of Worker Reallocation Within and Across Industries

    June 2005

    Working Paper Number:

    tp-2005-02

    This paper uses an integrated employer-employee data set to answer two key questions: 1. What is the "equilibrium" amount of worker reallocation in the economy - both within and across industries? 2. How much does firm-level job reallocation affect the separation probabilities of workers? Consistent with other work, we find that there is a great deal of reallocation in the economy, although this varies substantially across demographic group. Much worker reallocation is within the economy, roughly evenly split between within and across broadly defined industries. An important new finding is that much of this reallocation is confined to a relatively small subset of workers that is shuffled across jobs - both within and across industries - in the economy. However, we also find that even for the most stable group of workers, firm level job reallocation substantially increases the probability of transition for even the most stable group of workers. Finally, workers who are employed in industries that provide low returns to tenure are much more likely to reallocate both within and across industries.
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  • Working Paper

    Immigration, Skill Mix, and the Choice of Technique

    May 2005

    Authors: Ethan Lewis

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-05-04

    Using detailed plant- level data from the 1988 and 1993 Surveys of Manufacturing Technology, this paper examines the impact of skill mix in U.S. local labor markets on the use and adoption of automation technologies in manufacturing. The level of automation differs widely across U.S. metropolitan areas. In both 1988 and 1993, in markets with a higher relative availability of lessskilled labor, comparable plants ' even plants in the same narrow (4-digit SIC) industries ' used systematically less automation. Moreover, between 1988 and 1993 plants in areas experiencing faster less-skilled relative labor supply growth adopted automation technology more slowly, both overall and relative to expectations, and even de-adoption was not uncommon. This relationship is stronger when examining an arguably exogenous component of local less-skilled labor supply derived from historical regional settlement patterns of immigrants from different parts of the world. These results have implications for two long-standing puzzles in economics. First, they potentially explain why research has repeatedly found that immigration has little impact on the wages of competing native-born workers at the local level. It might be that the technologies of local firms'rather than the wages that they offer'respond to changes in local skill mix associated with immigration. A modified two-sector model demonstrates this theoretical possibility. Second, the results raise doubts about the extent to which the spread of new technologies have raised demand for skills, one frequently forwarded hypothesis for the cause of rising wage inequality in the United States. Causality appears to at least partly run in the opposite direction, where skill supply drive s the spread of skill-complementary technology.
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  • Working Paper

    A Change of PACE: Comparing the 1994 and 1999 Pollution Abatement Costs and Expenditures Surveys

    July 2004

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-04-09

    Since 1973, the Pollution Abatement Costs and Expenditures (PACE) survey has been the principle source of information on U.S. industries' capital expenditure and operating costs associated with pollution abatement efforts. The PACE survey was discontinued after 1994 and then revived in 1999 for one year ' in a substantially different form than the preceding surveys however, making longitudinal analysis quite difficult. Conceptual differences include matters as fundamental as the scope and meaning of pollution abatement as well as the definition of operating costs. A number of other critical changes also exist, including ones of industrial coverage and sample selection. This paper is the first comprehensive effort to document the many changes in the PACE survey across these years and to provide a detailed guide for researchers and policymakers who wish to compare the 1994 and 1999 data. Overall, we find a 27% decline in environmental spending by the manufacturing sector between these two years, though there appears to be significant heterogeneity across industries. We discuss potential reasons for this dramatic decline, focusing mainly on issues of survey methodology and design. This paper should help inform current efforts to redevelop the PACE survey and re-establish it as a regular, annual survey.
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  • Working Paper

    Pollution Abatement Expenditure by U.S. Manufacturing Plants: Do Community Characteristics Matter?

    November 2003

    Authors: Randy Becker

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-03-18

    A number of previous studies have demonstrated the impact of community characteristics on environmental outcomes such as local pollution levels and the siting of noxious facilities. If certain groups are indeed exposed to higher levels of air pollution, it may be due to a greater concentration of air polluters in those communities and/or facilities in those areas investing less in air pollution abatement. This paper examines the latter, using establishment-level data on manufacturing plants from the U.S. Census Bureau'''s Pollution Abatement Costs and Expenditures (PACE) survey. The empirical formulation herein allows plant-level air pollution abatement operating costs to depend on an array of community characteristics common to this literature. After controlling for establishment characteristics and federal, state, and local regulation, some of these local factors are found to have had an additional effect on air pollution abatement expenditures. In particular, populations with higher homeownership rates and higher per capita income enjoyed greater pollution abatement activity from their nearby plants. Meanwhile, establishments in communities where manufacturing accounted for a greater share of local employment had less pollution abatement spending, suggesting a local constituency that is more resistant to additional regulation. Political ideology is also found to play a role, with plants in areas with larger concentrations of Democrats having more expenditure on air pollution abatement, all else being equal. There is little evidence that race and ethnicity matter when it comes to the pollution abatement behavior of the most pollution-intensive facilities. The findings of this paper support those of a number of recent studies.
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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

    Abandoning the Sinking Ship: The Composition of Worker Flows Prior to Displacement

    August 2002

    Working Paper Number:

    tp-2002-11

    declines experienced by workers several years before displacement occurs. Little attention, however, has been paid to other changes in compensation and employment in firms prior to the actual displacement event. This paper examines changes in the composition of job and worker flows before displacement, and compares the "quality" distribution of workers leaving distressed firms to that of all movers in general. More specifically, we exploit a unique dataset that contains observations on all workers over an extended period of time in a number of US states, combined with survey data, to decompose different jobflow statistics according to skill group and number of periods before displacement. Furthermore, we use quantile regression techniques to analyze changes in the skill profile of workers leaving distressed firms. Throughout the paper, our measure for worker skill is derived from person fixed effects estimated using the wage regression techniques pioneered by Abowd, Kramarz, and Margolis (1999) in conjunction with the standard specification for displaced worker studies (Jacobson, LaLonde, and Sullivan 1993). We find that there are significant changes to all measures of job and worker flows prior to displacement. In particular, churning rates increase for all skill groups, but retention rates drop for high-skilled workers. The quantile regressions reveal a right-shift in the distribution of worker quality at the time of displacement as compared to average firm exit flows. In the periods prior to displacement, the patterns are consistent with both discouraged high-skilled workers leaving the firm, and management actions to layoff low-skilled workers.
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  • Working Paper

    An Economist's Primer on Survey Samples

    September 2000

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-00-15

    Survey data underlie most empirical work in economics, yet economists typically have little familiarity with survey sample design and its effects on inference. This paper describes how sample designs depart from the simple random sampling model implicit in most econometrics textbooks, points out where the effects of this departure are likely to be greatest, and describes the relationship between design-based estimators developed by survey statisticians and related econometric methods for regression. Its intent is to provide empirical economists with enough background in survey methods to make informed use of design-based estimators. It emphasizes surveys of households (the source of most public-use files), but also considers how surveys of businesses differ. Examples from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth of 1979 and the Current Population Survey illustrate practical aspects of design-based estimation.
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  • Working Paper

    Technological Change and Economies of Scale in U.S. Poultry Slaughter

    April 2000

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-00-05

    This paper uses a unique data set provided by the Census Bureau to empirically examine technological change and economies of scale in the chicken and turkey slaughter industries. Results reveal substantial scale economies that show no evidence of diminishing with plant size and that are much greater than those realized in cattle and hog slaughter. Additionally, it is shown that controlling for plant product mix is critical to cost estimation and animal inputs are much more elastic to prices than in either cattle or hogs. Results suggest that consolidation is likely to continue, particularly if demand growth diminishes.
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  • Working Paper

    NEW DATA FOR DYNAMIC ANALYSIS: THE LONGITUDINAL ESTABLISHMENT AND ENTERPRISE MICRODATA (LEEM) FILE

    December 1999

    Authors: Alicia Robb

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-99-18

    Until now, research on U.S. business activities over time has been hindered by the lack of accurate and comprehensive longitudinal data. The new Longitudinal Establishment and Enterprise Microdata (LEEM) are tremendously rich data that open up numerous possibilities for dynamic analyses of businesses in the U.S. economy. It is the first nationwide high-quality longitudinal database that covers the majority of employer businesses from all sectors of the economy. Due to the confidential nature of these data, the file is located at the Center for Economic Studies in the U.S. Bureau of the Census. To access the data, researchers must submit an acceptable proposal to CES and become sworn Census researchers. This paper describes the LEEM file, the variables contained on the file, and current uses of the data.
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