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Papers Containing Tag(s): 'Federal Statistical Research Data Center'

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Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 118

North American Industry Classification System - 88

Longitudinal Business Database - 85

Disclosure Review Board - 74

Center for Economic Studies - 54

National Science Foundation - 53

American Community Survey - 50

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 47

National Bureau of Economic Research - 41

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 41

Annual Survey of Manufactures - 35

Economic Census - 34

Federal Reserve Bank - 32

Current Population Survey - 32

Internal Revenue Service - 32

Decennial Census - 31

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 30

Ordinary Least Squares - 30

Standard Industrial Classification - 30

Business Dynamics Statistics - 29

Employer Identification Numbers - 29

Census of Manufactures - 28

Census of Manufacturing Firms - 27

Social Security Administration - 27

Total Factor Productivity - 24

Business Register - 22

Research Data Center - 22

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 21

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development - 20

Protected Identification Key - 20

County Business Patterns - 20

Metropolitan Statistical Area - 19

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 17

Census Bureau Business Register - 16

Special Sworn Status - 16

Department of Homeland Security - 15

Social Security Number - 15

Cobb-Douglas - 14

Longitudinal Firm Trade Transactions Database - 13

National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics - 13

Quarterly Workforce Indicators - 13

Service Annual Survey - 13

Patent and Trademark Office - 12

International Trade Research Report - 12

Energy Information Administration - 12

Social Security - 11

Survey of Business Owners - 11

Individual Characteristics File - 11

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 11

Herfindahl Hirschman Index - 11

Federal Reserve System - 10

COVID-19 - 10

University of Michigan - 10

Person Validation System - 10

University of Chicago - 10

Department of Economics - 10

2010 Census - 10

Business Research and Development and Innovation Survey - 10

Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages - 10

Census Bureau Longitudinal Business Database - 10

Business R&D and Innovation Survey - 9

Small Business Administration - 9

Annual Business Survey - 9

Employment History File - 9

Retail Trade - 9

Environmental Protection Agency - 9

Survey of Income and Program Participation - 9

Generalized Method of Moments - 8

Housing and Urban Development - 8

Manufacturing Energy Consumption Survey - 8

Financial, Insurance and Real Estate Industries - 8

Postal Service - 8

Information and Communication Technology Survey - 8

Annual Survey of Entrepreneurs - 8

European Union - 7

United States Census Bureau - 7

Department of Agriculture - 7

National Longitudinal Survey of Youth - 7

World Trade Organization - 7

Wholesale Trade - 7

Unemployment Insurance - 7

PSID - 7

State Energy Data System - 7

Statistics Canada - 7

Cornell University - 7

Sloan Foundation - 7

Accommodation and Food Services - 7

Company Organization Survey - 7

Kauffman Foundation - 7

Management and Organizational Practices Survey - 7

Board of Governors - 6

Harmonized System - 6

Survey of Industrial Research and Development - 6

National Academy of Sciences - 6

Technical Services - 6

Professional Services - 6

University of Toronto - 6

Integrated Public Use Microdata Series - 6

Securities and Exchange Commission - 6

National Establishment Time Series - 6

Duke University - 6

University of Maryland - 6

Boston College - 6

Core Based Statistical Area - 6

Herfindahl-Hirschman - 6

National Institute on Aging - 6

Master Address File - 6

Department of Labor - 6

Supreme Court - 6

American Economic Association - 6

Review of Economics and Statistics - 6

IQR - 6

Federal Register - 5

Princeton University - 5

National Center for Health Statistics - 5

Longitudinal Research Database - 5

Department of Energy - 5

IBM - 5

Office of Management and Budget - 5

Russell Sage Foundation - 5

NBER Summer Institute - 5

Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation - 5

Employer Characteristics File - 5

Geographic Information Systems - 5

Department of Housing and Urban Development - 5

American Housing Survey - 5

Cornell Institute for Social and Economic Research - 5

UC Berkeley - 5

General Accounting Office - 5

World Bank - 5

Characteristics of Business Owners - 5

Commodity Flow Survey - 4

AKM - 4

Initial Public Offering - 4

Michigan Institute for Teaching and Research in Economics - 4

National Income and Product Accounts - 4

Paycheck Protection Program - 4

IZA - 4

Business Employment Dynamics - 4

Social Science Research Institute - 4

Columbia University - 4

Indian Health Service - 4

Journal of Political Economy - 4

American Economic Review - 4

Council of Economic Advisers - 4

Bureau of Labor - 4

TFPR - 4

TFPQ - 4

European Commission - 4

Personally Identifiable Information - 4

W-2 - 4

Census Numident - 4

Data Management System - 4

National Institutes of Health - 4

Economic Research Service - 4

North American Industry Classi - 4

Department of Commerce - 4

Kauffman Firm Survey - 4

United Nations - 3

Customs and Border Protection - 3

Department of Education - 3

Yale University - 3

Public Administration - 3

Standard Occupational Classification - 3

Penn State University - 3

New York University - 3

Harvard Business School - 3

Federal Reserve Board of Governors - 3

Quarterly Journal of Economics - 3

Center for Research in Security Prices - 3

Business Register Bridge - 3

Retirement History Survey - 3

Person Identification Validation System - 3

MAF-ARF - 3

Occupational Employment Statistics - 3

1940 Census - 3

Census Edited File - 3

Federal Trade Commission - 3

Department of Justice - 3

Census Bureau Business Dynamics Statistics - 3

National Research Council - 3

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention - 3

Public Use Micro Sample - 3

Disability Insurance - 3

Employer-Household Dynamics - 3

Composite Person Record - 3

Local Employment Dynamics - 3

Office of Personnel Management - 3

Federal Tax Information - 3

Department of Health and Human Services - 3

Educational Services - 3

Health Care and Social Assistance - 3

Current Employment Statistics - 3

Health and Retirement Study - 3

Brookings Institution - 3

Integrated Longitudinal Business Database - 3

Nonemployer Statistics - 3

Arts, Entertainment - 3

HHS - 3

Pew Research Center - 3

Federal Insurance Contribution Act - 3

MIT Press - 3

Journal of International Economics - 3

employ - 35

market - 31

recession - 29

manufacturing - 28

innovation - 27

labor - 26

employed - 25

sector - 25

workforce - 25

survey - 23

growth - 23

econometric - 23

company - 22

industrial - 22

investment - 21

patent - 21

earnings - 20

employee - 20

macroeconomic - 20

production - 20

gdp - 20

neighborhood - 19

enterprise - 19

export - 18

resident - 18

revenue - 18

sale - 18

estimating - 18

economically - 17

financial - 16

economist - 16

expenditure - 16

payroll - 16

entrepreneurship - 15

demand - 15

report - 14

disclosure - 14

population - 14

housing - 14

finance - 14

agency - 14

respondent - 14

import - 13

exporter - 13

rural - 13

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incentive - 13

quarterly - 13

microdata - 13

hiring - 13

technological - 12

patenting - 12

metropolitan - 12

immigrant - 12

immigration - 12

data census - 12

importer - 11

disadvantaged - 11

debt - 11

produce - 11

inventory - 11

innovative - 11

hire - 11

socioeconomic - 11

minority - 11

statistical - 11

census data - 11

spillover - 10

venture - 10

investor - 10

rent - 10

innovate - 10

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efficiency - 10

census bureau - 10

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invention - 9

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endogeneity - 9

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racial - 9

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incorporated - 8

loan - 8

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manufacturer - 8

monopolistic - 8

corporation - 8

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developed - 8

profit - 8

employment growth - 8

research - 8

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city - 8

ethnic - 8

segregation - 8

unemployed - 8

aggregate - 8

emission - 8

salary - 8

earner - 8

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establishment - 8

wholesale - 8

data - 8

datasets - 8

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impact - 7

community - 7

earn - 7

relocation - 7

firms patents - 7

researcher - 7

borrowing - 7

job - 7

urban - 7

worker - 7

trend - 7

consumption - 7

energy - 7

discrimination - 7

home - 7

saving - 7

use census - 7

bankruptcy - 7

record - 7

firms export - 6

trading - 6

investing - 6

equity - 6

invest - 6

intergenerational - 6

estimation - 6

patents firms - 6

productive - 6

depreciation - 6

innovator - 6

patenting firms - 6

shift - 6

credit - 6

exogeneity - 6

agriculture - 6

warehousing - 6

black - 6

heterogeneity - 6

electricity - 6

epa - 6

state - 6

geographically - 6

bias - 6

migrant - 6

research census - 6

renewable - 6

econometrically - 6

accounting - 6

price - 5

importing - 5

exported - 5

trader - 5

sociology - 5

welfare - 5

crime - 5

founder - 5

enrollment - 5

filing - 5

subsidy - 5

firm innovation - 5

firm patenting - 5

technology - 5

productivity estimates - 5

productivity shocks - 5

innovating - 5

patented - 5

stock - 5

tax - 5

banking - 5

labor markets - 5

development - 5

outsourced - 5

monopolistically - 5

regional - 5

segregated - 5

supplier - 5

fuel - 5

competitor - 5

wealth - 5

homeowner - 5

suburb - 5

mortgage - 5

growth productivity - 5

analysis - 5

productivity dispersion - 5

externality - 5

aggregate productivity - 5

economic census - 5

energy efficiency - 5

regulation - 5

federal - 5

confidentiality - 5

tenure - 5

creditor - 5

energy prices - 5

employment statistics - 5

census research - 5

white - 5

retailer - 5

agricultural - 5

business data - 5

sourcing - 4

town - 4

parent - 4

family - 4

parental - 4

prevalence - 4

factor productivity - 4

innovation productivity - 4

specialization - 4

occupation - 4

shareholder - 4

lending - 4

bank - 4

lender - 4

employment dynamics - 4

growth employment - 4

product - 4

custom - 4

exporting firms - 4

sectoral - 4

tariff - 4

country - 4

region - 4

labor productivity - 4

ownership - 4

neighbor - 4

policymakers - 4

house - 4

suburbanization - 4

recessionary - 4

cost - 4

average - 4

productivity measures - 4

percentile - 4

efficient - 4

regulatory - 4

enforcement - 4

statistician - 4

privacy - 4

statistical disclosure - 4

study - 4

irs - 4

regression - 4

mexican - 4

work census - 4

information - 4

2010 census - 4

merchandise - 4

census business - 4

censuses surveys - 4

census survey - 4

borrow - 4

collateral - 4

database - 4

reporting - 4

manager - 4

commodity - 3

imported - 3

export market - 3

citizen - 3

effects employment - 3

wage earnings - 3

employment earnings - 3

earnings employees - 3

financing - 3

funding - 3

fund - 3

asset - 3

prospect - 3

profitability - 3

benefit - 3

compensation - 3

wage growth - 3

layoff - 3

shock - 3

geographic - 3

pandemic - 3

foreign - 3

globalization - 3

firms import - 3

multinational firms - 3

job growth - 3

employment trends - 3

subsidiary - 3

location - 3

outsourcing - 3

gain - 3

productivity size - 3

practices productivity - 3

opportunity - 3

eligibility - 3

aggregation - 3

graduate - 3

imputation - 3

woman - 3

institutional - 3

corporate - 3

earnings age - 3

relocate - 3

employment effects - 3

employing - 3

workers earnings - 3

impact employment - 3

taxation - 3

income households - 3

transition - 3

immigrant workers - 3

marketing - 3

recession exposure - 3

good - 3

pricing - 3

firms census - 3

labor statistics - 3

estimator - 3

census responses - 3

industry concentration - 3

area - 3

customer - 3

policy - 3

utility - 3

plant productivity - 3

merger - 3

public - 3

publicly - 3

startup - 3

debtor - 3

worker demographics - 3

union - 3

electricity prices - 3

latino - 3

pollution - 3

pollutant - 3

amenity - 3

longitudinal employer - 3

employee data - 3

census employment - 3

corp - 3

subsidized - 3

geography - 3

trademark - 3

productivity firms - 3

firms grow - 3

retirement - 3

commerce - 3

retail - 3

business startups - 3

proprietor - 3

buyer - 3

linked census - 3

proprietorship - 3

decade - 3

farm - 3

industry productivity - 3

dispersion productivity - 3

ancestry - 3

immigrant entrepreneurs - 3

information census - 3

businesses census - 3

divorced - 3

surveys censuses - 3

bankrupt - 3

Viewing papers 51 through 60 of 177


  • Working Paper

    Outsourcing Dynamism

    December 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-64

    This paper investigates the increasing importance of domestic outsourcing in U.S. manufacturing. Under domestic outsourcing, the agency is the employer of record for temporary workers, though they perform their tasks at the client business' premises. On a yearly basis, one in two manufacturing plants hires at least some of its workers through a temporary help agency. Furthermore, domestic outsourcing is becoming increasingly more important: the average share of revenue spent on such arrangements has gone up by 85 percent since 2006. We develop a methodology to transform reported expenses on temporary and leased workers into plant-level outsourced employment counts, using administrative data on the U.S. manufacturing sector. We find that domestic outsourcing is an important margin of adjustment that plants use to modify their workforce in response to productivity shocks. Plant-level outsourced employment adjusts more quickly and is twice as responsive as payroll employment. These micro implications have significant aggregate consequences. Without taking reallocations in outsourced employment into account, the measured pace at which jobs reallocate across workplaces is underestimated. On average, we omit the equivalent of 15 percent of payroll employment reallocations in each year. However, outsourced employment churns at a much higher rate compared to its payroll counterpart. Therefore, the omission of outsourced reallocations can rationalize 37 percent of the secular decline in the aggregate job reallocation rate. Lastly, the extent of mismeasurement varies with the business cycle; falling in downturns and increasing in upturns implying that the speed of economic recovery is underestimated.
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  • Working Paper

    The 2010 Census Confidentiality Protections Failed, Here's How and Why

    December 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-63

    Using only 34 published tables, we reconstruct five variables (census block, sex, age, race, and ethnicity) in the confidential 2010 Census person records. Using the 38-bin age variable tabulated at the census block level, at most 20.1% of reconstructed records can differ from their confidential source on even a single value for these five variables. Using only published data, an attacker can verify that all records in 70% of all census blocks (97 million people) are perfectly reconstructed. The tabular publications in Summary File 1 thus have prohibited disclosure risk similar to the unreleased confidential microdata. Reidentification studies confirm that an attacker can, within blocks with perfect reconstruction accuracy, correctly infer the actual census response on race and ethnicity for 3.4 million vulnerable population uniques (persons with nonmodal characteristics) with 95% accuracy, the same precision as the confidential data achieve and far greater than statistical baselines. The flaw in the 2010 Census framework was the assumption that aggregation prevented accurate microdata reconstruction, justifying weaker disclosure limitation methods than were applied to 2010 Census public microdata. The framework used for 2020 Census publications defends against attacks that are based on reconstruction, as we also demonstrate here. Finally, we show that alternatives to the 2020 Census Disclosure Avoidance System with similar accuracy (enhanced swapping) also fail to protect confidentiality, and those that partially defend against reconstruction attacks (incomplete suppression implementations) destroy the primary statutory use case: data for redistricting all legislatures in the country in compliance with the 1965 Voting Rights Act.
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  • Working Paper

    Local and National Concentration Trends in Jobs and Sales: The Role of Structural Transformation

    November 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-59

    National U.S. industrial concentration rose between 1992-2017. Simultaneously, the Herfindhahl Index of local (six-digit-NAICS by county) employment concentration fell. This divergence between national and local employment concentration is due to structural transformation. Both sales and employment concentration rose within industry-by-county cells. But activity shifted from concentrated Manufacturing towards relatively un-concentrated Services. A stronger between-sector shift in employment relative to sales explains the fall in local employment concentration. Had sectoral employment shares remained at their 1992 levels, average local employment concentration would have risen by 9% by 2017 rather than falling by 7%.
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  • Working Paper

    Output Market Power and Spatial Misallocation

    November 2023

    Authors: Santiago Franco

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-57

    Most product industries are local. In the U.S., firms selling goods and services to local consumers account for half of total sales and generate more than sixty percent of the nation's jobs. Competition in these industries occurs in local product markets: cities. I propose a theory of such competition in which firms have output market power. Spatial differences in local competition arise endogenously due to the spatial sorting of heterogeneous firms. The ability to charge higher markups induces more productive firms to overvalue locating in larger cities, leading to a misallocation of firms across space. The optimal policy incen tivizes productive firms to relocate to smaller cities, providing a rationale for commonly used place-based policies. I use U.S. Census establishment-level data to estimate markups and to structurally estimate the model. I document a significant heterogeneity in markups for local industries across U.S. cities. Cities in the top decile of the city-size distribution have a fifty percent lower markup than cities in the bottom decile. I use the estimated model to quantify the general equilibrium effects of place-based policies. Policies that remove markups and relocate firms to smaller cities yield sizable aggregate welfare gains.
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  • Working Paper

    The Impact of Industrial Opt-Out from Utility Sponsored Energy Efficiency Programs

    October 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-52

    Industry accounts for one-third of energy consumption in the US. Studies suggest that energy efficiency opportunities represent a potential energy resource for regulated utilities and have resulted in rate of return regulated demand-side management (DSM) and energy efficiency (EE) programs. However, many large customers are allowed to self-direct or opt-out. In the Carolinas (NC and SC), over half of industrial and large commercial customers have selected to opt out. Although these customers claim they invest in EE improvements when it is economic and cost-effective to do so, there is no mechanism to validate whether they actually achieved energy savings. This project examines the industrial energy efficiency between the program participants and non participants in the Carolinas by utilizing the non-public Census of Manufacturing data and the public list of firms that have chosen to opt out. We compare the relative energy efficiency between the stay-in and opt-out plants. The t-test results suggest opt-out plants are less efficient. However, the opt-out decisions are not random; large plants or plants belonging to large firms are more likely to opt out, possibly because they have more information and resources. We conduct a propensity score matching method to account for factors that could affect the opt-out decisions. We find that the opt-out plants perform at least as well or slightly better than the stay-in plants. The relative performance of the opt-out firms suggest that they may not need utility program resources to obtain similar levels of efficiency from the stay-in group.
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  • Working Paper

    Temperature and Local Industry Concentration

    October 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-51

    We use plant-level data from the US Census of Manufacturers to study the short and long run effects of temperature on manufacturing activity. We document that temperature shocks significantly increase energy costs and lower the productivity of small manufacturing plants, while large plants are mostly unaffected. In US counties that experienced higher increases in average temperatures between the 1980s and the 2010s, these heterogeneous effects have led to higher concentration of manufacturing activity within large plants, and a reallocation of labor from small to large manufacturing establishments. We offer a preliminary discussion of potential mechanisms explaining why large manufacturing firms might be better equipped for long-run adaptation to climate change, including their ability to hedge across locations, easier access to finance, and higher managerial skills.
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  • Working Paper

    Antitrust Enforcement Increases Economic Activity

    October 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-50

    We hand-collect and standardize information describing all 3,055 antitrust law suits brought by the Department of Justice (DOJ) between 1971 and 2018. Using restricted establishment-level microdata from the U.S. Census, we compare the economic outcomes of a non-tradable industry in states targeted by DOJ antitrust lawsuits to outcomes of the same industry in other states that were not targeted. We document that DOJ antitrust enforcement actions permanently increase employment by 5.4% and business formation by 4.1%. Using an event-study design, we find (1) a sharp increase in payroll that exceeds the increase in employment, meaning that DOJ antitrust enforcement increases average wages, (2) an economically smaller increase in sales that is statistically insignificant, and (3) a precise increase in the labor share. While we cannot separately measure the quantity and price of output, the increase in production inputs (employment), together with a proportionally smaller increase in sales, strongly suggests that these DOJ antitrust enforcement actions increase the quantity of output and simultaneously decrease the price of output. Our results show that government antitrust enforcement leads to persistently higher levels of economic activity in targeted industries.
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  • Working Paper

    An In-Depth Examination of Requirements for Disclosure Risk Assessment

    October 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-49

    The use of formal privacy to protect the confidentiality of responses in the 2020 Decennial Census of Population and Housing has triggered renewed interest and debate over how to measure the disclosure risks and societal benefits of the published data products. Following long-established precedent in economics and statistics, we argue that any proposal for quantifying disclosure risk should be based on pre-specified, objective criteria. Such criteria should be used to compare methodologies to identify those with the most desirable properties. We illustrate this approach, using simple desiderata, to evaluate the absolute disclosure risk framework, the counterfactual framework underlying differential privacy, and prior-to-posterior comparisons. We conclude that satisfying all the desiderata is impossible, but counterfactual comparisons satisfy the most while absolute disclosure risk satisfies the fewest. Furthermore, we explain that many of the criticisms levied against differential privacy would be levied against any technology that is not equivalent to direct, unrestricted access to confidential data. Thus, more research is needed, but in the near-term, the counterfactual approach appears best-suited for privacy-utility analysis.
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  • Working Paper

    AI Adoption in America: Who, What, and Where

    September 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-48R

    We study the early adoption and diffusion of five AI-related technologies (automated-guided vehicles, machine learning, machine vision, natural language processing, and voice recognition) as documented in the 2018 Annual Business Survey of 850,000 firms across the United States. We find that fewer than 6% of firms used any of the AI-related technologies we measure, though most very large firms reported at least some AI use. Weighted by employment, average adoption was just over 18%. AI use in production, while varying considerably by industry, nevertheless was found in every sector of the economy and clustered with emerging technologies such as cloud computing and robotics. Among dynamic young firms, AI use was highest alongside more educated, more-experienced, and younger owners, including owners motivated by bringing new ideas to market or helping the community. AI adoption was also more common alongside indicators of high-growth entrepreneurship, including venture capital funding, recent product and process innovation, and growth-oriented business strategies. Early adoption was far from evenly distributed: a handful of 'superstar' cities and emerging hubs led startups' adoption of AI. These patterns of early AI use foreshadow economic and social impacts far beyond this limited initial diffusion, with the possibility of a growing 'AI divide' if early patterns persist.
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  • Working Paper

    Patents, Innovation, and Market Entry

    September 2023

    Authors: Dominik Jurek

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-45

    Do patents facilitate market entry and job creation? Using a 2014 Supreme Court decision that limited patent eligibility and natural language processing methods to identify invalid patents, I find that large treated firms reduce job creation and create fewer new establishments in response, with no effect on new firm entry. Moreover, companies shift toward innovation aimed at improving existing products consistent with the view that patents incentivize creative destruction.
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