CREAT: Census Research Exploration and Analysis Tool

Papers Containing Tag(s): 'Annual Survey of Manufactures'

The following papers contain search terms that you selected. From the papers listed below, you can navigate to the PDF, the profile page for that working paper, or see all the working papers written by an author. You can also explore tags, keywords, and authors that occur frequently within these papers.
Click here to search again

Frequently Occurring Concepts within this Search

Center for Economic Studies - 122

Census of Manufactures - 118

Total Factor Productivity - 103

Longitudinal Business Database - 94

North American Industry Classification System - 93

Longitudinal Research Database - 91

Standard Industrial Classification - 89

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 79

National Bureau of Economic Research - 77

Ordinary Least Squares - 74

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 73

National Science Foundation - 65

Census of Manufacturing Firms - 61

Cobb-Douglas - 49

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 45

Internal Revenue Service - 43

Economic Census - 41

Federal Reserve Bank - 37

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 37

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 36

Metropolitan Statistical Area - 29

Business Register - 29

Employer Identification Numbers - 28

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 28

Environmental Protection Agency - 28

Special Sworn Status - 28

Current Population Survey - 23

Research Data Center - 22

Permanent Plant Number - 22

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development - 20

County Business Patterns - 18

University of Chicago - 18

Census Bureau Center for Economic Studies - 17

Generalized Method of Moments - 17

Disclosure Review Board - 17

University of Maryland - 16

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 16

Census Bureau Longitudinal Business Database - 16

Pollution Abatement Costs and Expenditures - 16

Federal Reserve System - 15

Manufacturing Energy Consumption Survey - 15

Management and Organizational Practices Survey - 15

Computer Network Use Supplement - 15

Census Bureau Business Register - 14

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 14

American Economic Review - 14

Social Security Administration - 14

Service Annual Survey - 14

Michigan Institute for Teaching and Research in Economics - 14

Department of Commerce - 14

Energy Information Administration - 13

New York University - 13

Kauffman Foundation - 13

Journal of Economic Literature - 13

World Bank - 13

Department of Economics - 12

TFPQ - 12

Securities and Exchange Commission - 12

Survey of Manufacturing Technology - 12

Statistics Canada - 12

Electronic Data Interchange - 12

IQR - 11

Longitudinal Firm Trade Transactions Database - 11

Herfindahl Hirschman Index - 11

Business Dynamics Statistics - 11

Information and Communication Technology Survey - 11

National Ambient Air Quality Standards - 10

Labor Productivity - 10

Company Organization Survey - 10

Center for Research in Security Prices - 10

University of Michigan - 9

State Energy Data System - 9

Establishment Micro Properties - 9

Postal Service - 9

Securities Data Company - 9

National Establishment Time Series - 8

University of Toronto - 8

TFPR - 8

Department of Homeland Security - 8

Patent and Trademark Office - 8

Quarterly Journal of Economics - 8

Board of Governors - 8

COMPUSTAT - 8

Small Business Administration - 8

American Economic Association - 8

Cornell University - 8

North American Free Trade Agreement - 8

Review of Economics and Statistics - 8

New England County Metropolitan - 8

Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages - 7

Cell Mean Public Use - 7

National Income and Product Accounts - 7

Department of Energy - 7

Business Employment Dynamics - 7

Boston College - 7

Herfindahl-Hirschman - 7

American Community Survey - 7

Fabricated Metal Products - 7

International Trade Research Report - 7

New York Times - 7

PAOC - 7

Auxiliary Establishment Survey - 7

Department of Labor - 6

National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics - 6

Office of Management and Budget - 6

Value Added - 6

E32 - 6

Code of Federal Regulations - 6

Journal of Econometrics - 6

Journal of Economic Perspectives - 6

Sloan Foundation - 6

Quarterly Workforce Indicators - 6

Foreign Direct Investment - 6

Decennial Census - 6

Cambridge University Press - 6

Boston Research Data Center - 6

United States Census Bureau - 6

Cornell Institute for Social and Economic Research - 6

Occupational Employment Statistics - 5

Business R&D and Innovation Survey - 5

General Accounting Office - 5

European Union - 5

World Trade Organization - 5

Customs and Border Protection - 5

Columbia University - 5

Princeton University Press - 5

Retirement History Survey - 5

Financial, Insurance and Real Estate Industries - 5

Characteristics of Business Owners - 5

Council of Economic Advisers - 5

CAAA - 5

Individual Characteristics File - 5

North American Industry Classi - 5

Journal of Political Economy - 5

Bureau of Labor - 5

Toxics Release Inventory - 5

Journal of International Economics - 5

Medical Expenditure Panel Survey - 5

Schools Under Registration Review - 5

Insurance Information Institute - 5

Net Present Value - 5

2010 Census - 5

Annual Business Survey - 4

Survey of Industrial Research and Development - 4

Business Research and Development and Innovation Survey - 4

VAR - 4

COVID-19 - 4

Harvard University - 4

Penn State University - 4

Harmonized System - 4

International Trade Commission - 4

Core Based Statistical Area - 4

Stanford University - 4

Carnegie Mellon University - 4

Review of Economic Studies - 4

Geographic Information Systems - 4

Federal Reserve Board of Governors - 4

European Commission - 4

National Academy of Sciences - 4

Survey of Business Owners - 4

Initial Public Offering - 4

Probability Density Function - 4

Wal-Mart - 4

Duke University - 4

Computer Aided Design - 4

National Research Council - 4

Survey of Income and Program Participation - 4

Princeton University - 4

Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation - 4

Yale University - 4

Administrative Records - 4

MIT Press - 4

UC Berkeley - 3

Retail Trade - 3

Employment History File - 3

Current Employment Statistics - 3

Department of Justice - 3

NBER Summer Institute - 3

Public Administration - 3

Business Master File - 3

Federal Tax Information - 3

Chicago RDC - 3

National Employer Survey - 3

National Institute on Aging - 3

International Standard Industrial Classification - 3

Supreme Court - 3

Master Address File - 3

Business Register Bridge - 3

Business Services - 3

Social Security - 3

Consolidated Metropolitan Statistical Areas - 3

National Longitudinal Survey of Youth - 3

WECD - 3

American Statistical Association - 3

production - 107

manufacturing - 102

econometric - 75

expenditure - 69

industrial - 65

growth - 59

macroeconomic - 58

investment - 51

labor - 50

estimating - 49

market - 49

produce - 49

revenue - 46

sector - 45

sale - 45

efficiency - 42

demand - 41

economist - 40

recession - 38

enterprise - 37

manufacturer - 36

economically - 35

employ - 33

gdp - 33

company - 32

estimation - 31

payroll - 29

workforce - 28

productive - 28

depreciation - 27

quarterly - 26

export - 26

productivity growth - 25

technological - 25

aggregate - 25

technology - 24

organizational - 24

innovation - 23

endogeneity - 23

industry productivity - 23

survey - 22

employed - 21

emission - 21

earnings - 20

employee - 20

plant productivity - 20

profit - 20

cost - 20

profitability - 19

consumption - 19

regulation - 19

stock - 18

labor productivity - 18

productivity measures - 18

epa - 18

regression - 18

spillover - 17

finance - 17

acquisition - 17

leverage - 17

pollution - 17

environmental - 17

report - 16

accounting - 16

factory - 15

financial - 15

productivity dispersion - 15

incentive - 15

establishment - 15

merger - 15

pollutant - 15

statistical - 14

factor productivity - 14

productivity dynamics - 14

invest - 14

employment growth - 14

multinational - 14

exporter - 14

polluting - 14

data census - 13

investing - 13

corporate - 13

plants industry - 13

measures productivity - 12

productivity estimates - 12

regional - 12

conglomerate - 12

incorporated - 12

aggregate productivity - 12

expense - 12

econometrician - 12

respondent - 11

patent - 11

growth productivity - 11

agency - 11

manager - 11

inventory - 11

economic census - 11

regulatory - 11

firms productivity - 11

estimator - 11

productivity plants - 11

efficient - 11

aggregation - 11

labor statistics - 10

census bureau - 10

investor - 10

employment dynamics - 10

specialization - 10

corporation - 10

firms plants - 10

worker - 10

competitor - 10

productivity differences - 10

trend - 10

metropolitan - 10

data - 10

management - 10

longitudinal - 10

takeover - 10

equity - 10

debt - 10

analysis productivity - 10

productivity shocks - 9

manufacturing productivity - 9

wages productivity - 9

job - 9

subsidiary - 9

monopolistic - 9

region - 9

pricing - 9

product - 9

estimates productivity - 9

import - 9

exported - 9

capital - 9

layoff - 9

pollution abatement - 9

population - 8

impact - 8

rates productivity - 8

innovate - 8

exogeneity - 8

shock - 8

tariff - 8

outsourcing - 8

outsourced - 8

plants firms - 8

salary - 8

electricity - 8

rate - 8

geographically - 8

technology adoption - 8

dispersion productivity - 8

sectoral - 8

census data - 8

computer - 8

price - 8

estimates employment - 8

exporting - 8

spending - 8

heterogeneity - 8

financing - 8

environmental regulation - 8

shareholder - 8

productivity analysis - 7

investment productivity - 7

entrepreneurship - 7

employment production - 7

country - 7

relocation - 7

plant investment - 7

microdata - 7

industry concentration - 7

plant employment - 7

energy - 7

electricity prices - 7

consumer - 7

area - 7

econometrically - 7

estimates production - 7

observed productivity - 7

regional economic - 7

tech - 7

industrialized - 7

borrowing - 7

managerial - 7

employment data - 7

turnover - 7

gain - 7

yield - 7

utilization - 7

bankruptcy - 7

quantity - 7

commodity - 7

abatement expenditures - 7

environmental expenditures - 7

polluting industries - 7

diversification - 7

occupation - 6

productivity impacts - 6

labor markets - 6

manufacturing plants - 6

union - 6

energy prices - 6

utility - 6

regulation productivity - 6

reallocation productivity - 6

technical - 6

subsidy - 6

reporting - 6

census years - 6

state - 6

security - 6

productivity size - 6

wages production - 6

productivity increases - 6

lender - 6

development - 6

commerce - 6

endogenous - 6

shift - 6

empirical - 6

employing - 6

textile - 6

regress - 5

productivity variation - 5

innovating - 5

autoregressive - 5

regressors - 5

location - 5

externality - 5

research census - 5

hire - 5

fuel - 5

elasticity - 5

record - 5

information census - 5

use census - 5

entrepreneurial - 5

acquirer - 5

share - 5

average - 5

supplier - 5

firms census - 5

rates employment - 5

practices productivity - 5

loan - 5

liquidation - 5

strategic - 5

innovator - 5

productivity firms - 5

wholesale - 5

firms export - 5

fluctuation - 5

hiring - 5

census survey - 5

performance - 5

estimates pollution - 5

restructuring - 5

producing - 5

refinery - 5

costs pollution - 5

competitiveness - 5

industries estimate - 5

plant - 5

plants industries - 5

analysis - 5

employment changes - 5

industry growth - 5

disclosure - 4

prospect - 4

innovation productivity - 4

patenting - 4

monopolistically - 4

multinational firms - 4

level productivity - 4

sourcing - 4

bias - 4

energy efficiency - 4

renewable - 4

wage growth - 4

tax - 4

yearly - 4

warehousing - 4

businesses census - 4

census use - 4

forecast - 4

venture - 4

wage regressions - 4

regressing - 4

statistician - 4

surveys censuses - 4

bankrupt - 4

lending - 4

bank - 4

collateral - 4

creditor - 4

innovative - 4

retailer - 4

productivity wage - 4

volatility - 4

proprietorship - 4

censuses surveys - 4

good - 4

equilibrium - 4

shipment - 4

partnership - 4

workplace - 4

regional industry - 4

regional industries - 4

recessionary - 4

regulated - 4

compliance - 4

employment estimates - 4

city - 4

agricultural - 4

export growth - 4

census employment - 3

risk - 3

invention - 3

industry heterogeneity - 3

trademark - 3

marketing - 3

tenure - 3

industry wages - 3

wage changes - 3

wage industries - 3

compensation - 3

industry variation - 3

indicator - 3

geography - 3

network - 3

agriculture - 3

rural - 3

irs - 3

executive - 3

entrepreneur - 3

firms grow - 3

trends labor - 3

researcher - 3

industry employment - 3

debtor - 3

credit - 3

banking - 3

declining - 3

substitute - 3

foreign - 3

downturn - 3

fund - 3

generation - 3

census business - 3

trade models - 3

trading - 3

datasets - 3

rent - 3

valuation - 3

contract - 3

asset - 3

increase employment - 3

relocating - 3

classification - 3

ownership - 3

chemical - 3

concentration - 3

housing - 3

residential - 3

resident - 3

consolidated - 3

midwest - 3

locality - 3

study - 3

research - 3

classified - 3

firms employment - 3

industry output - 3

diversified - 3

employment count - 3

inflation - 3

Viewing papers 61 through 70 of 240


  • Working Paper

    Industrial Investments in Energy Efficiency: A Good Idea?

    January 2017

    Authors: Mary Jialin Li

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-05

    Yes, from an energy-saving perspective. No, once we factor in the negative output and productivity adoption effects. These are the main conclusions we reach by conducting the first large-scale study on cogeneration technology adoption ' a prominent form of energy-saving investments ' in the U.S. manufacturing sector, using a sample that runs from 1982 to 2010 and drawing on multiple data sources from the U.S. Census Bureau and the U.S. Energy Information Administration. We first show through a series of event studies that no differential trends exist in energy consumption nor production activities between adopters and never-adopters prior to the adoption event. We then compute a distribution of realized returns to energy savings, using accounting methods and regression methods, based on our difference-in-difference estimator. We find that (1) significant heterogeneity exists in returns; (2) unlike previous studies in the residential sector, the realized and projected returns to energy savings are roughly consistent in the industrial sector, for both private and social returns; (3) however, cogeneration adoption decreases manufacturing output and productivity persistently for at least the next 7-10 years, relative to the control group. Our IV strategies also show sizable decline in TFP post adoption.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    State Taxation and the Reallocation of Business Activity: Evidence from Establishment-Level Data

    January 2017

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-02

    Using Census microdata on multi-state firms, we estimate the impact of state taxes on business activity. For C corporations, employment and the number of establishments have corporate tax elasticities of -0.4, and do not vary with changes in personal tax rates. Pass-through entity activities show tax elasticities of -0.2 to -0.3 with respect to personal tax rates, and are invariant with respect to corporate tax rates. Reallocation of productive resources to other states drives around half the effect. Capital shows similar patterns but is 36% less elastic than labor. The responses are strongest for firms in tradable and footloose industries.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Documenting the Business Register and Related Economic Business Data

    March 2016

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-16-17

    The Business Register (BR) is a comprehensive database of business establishments in the United States and provides resources for the U.S. Census Bureau's economic programs for sample selection, research, and survey operations. It is maintained using information from several federal agencies including the Census Bureau, Internal Revenue Service, Bureau of Labor Statistics, and the Social Security Administration. This paper provides a detailed description of the sources and functions of the BR. An overview of the BR as a linking tool and bridge to other Census Bureau data for additional business characteristics is also given.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Accounting for the New Gains from Trade Liberalization

    March 2016

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-16-14

    We measure the "new" gains from trade reaped by Canada as a result of the Canada-US Free Trade Agreement (CUSFTA). We think of the "new" gains from trade of a country as all welfare effects pertaining to changes in the set of firms serving that country as emphasized in the so-called "new" trade literature. To this end, we first develop an exact decomposition of the gains from trade which separates "traditional" and "new" gains. We then apply this decomposition using Canadian and US micro data and find that the "new" welfare effects of CUSFTA on Canada were negative.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    The Management and Organizational Practices Survey (MOPS): Cognitive Testing*

    January 2016

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-16-53

    All Census Bureau surveys must meet quality standards before they can be sent to the public for data collection. This paper outlines the pretesting process that was used to ensure that the Management and Organizational Practices Survey (MOPS) met those standards. The MOPS is the first large survey of management practices at U.S. manufacturing establishments. The first wave of the MOPS, issued for reference year 2010, was subject to internal expert review and two rounds of cognitive interviews. The results of this pretesting were used to make significant changes to the MOPS instrument and ensure that quality data was collected. The second wave of the MOPS, featuring new questions on data in decision making (DDD) and uncertainty and issued for reference year 2015, was subject to two rounds of cognitive interviews and a round of usability testing. This paper illustrates the effort undertaken by the Census Bureau to ensure that all surveys released into the field are of high quality and provides insight into how respondents interpret the MOPS questionnaire for those looking to utilize the MOPS data.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Measuring Plant Level Energy Efficiency and Technical Change in the U.S. Metal-Based Durable Manufacturing Sector Using Stochastic Frontier Analysis

    January 2016

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-16-52

    This study analyzes the electric and thermal energy efficiency for five different metal-based durable manufacturing industries in the United States from 1987-2012 at the 3 digit North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) level. Using confidential plant-level data on energy use and production from the quinquennial U.S. Economic Census, a stochastic frontier regression analysis (SFA) is applied in six repeated cross sections for each five year census. The SFA controls for energy prices and climate-driven energy demand (heating degree days - HDD - and cooling degree days - CDD) due to differences in plant level locations, as well as 6-digit NAICS industry effects. A Malmquist index is used to decompose aggregate plant technical change in energy use into indices of efficiency and frontier (best practice) change. Own energy price elasticities range from -.7 to -1.0, with electricity tending to have slightly higher elasticity than fuel. Mean efficiency estimates (100 percent equals best practice level) range from a low of 32 percent (thermal 334 - Computer and Electronic Products) to a high of 86 percent (electricity 332 - Fabricated Metal Products). Electric efficiency is consistently better than thermal efficiency for all NAICS. There is no clear pattern to the decomposition of aggregate technical Thermal change. In some years efficiency improvement dominates; in other years aggregate technical change is driven by improvement in best practice.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Measuring Cross-Country Differences in Misallocation

    January 2016

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-16-50R

    We describe differences between the commonly used version of the U.S. Census of Manufactures available at the RDCs and what establishments themselves report. The originally reported data has substantially more dispersion in measured establishment productivity. Measured allocative efficiency is substantially higher in the cleaned data than the raw data: 4x higher in 2002, 20x in 2007, and 80x in 2012. Many of the important editing strategies at the Census, including industry analysts' manual edits and edits using tax records, are infeasible in non-U.S. datasets. We describe a new Bayesian approach for editing and imputation that can be used across contexts.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Are firm-level idiosyncratic shocks important for U.S. aggregate volatility?

    January 2016

    Authors: Chen Yeh

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-16-47

    This paper assesses the quantitative impact of firm-level idiosyncratic shocks on aggregate volatility in the U.S. economy and provides a microfoundation for the negative relationship between firm-level volatility and size. I argue that the role of firm-specific shocks through the granular channel plays a fairly limited role in the U.S. economy. Using a novel, comprehensive data set compiled from several sources of the U.S. Census Bureau, I find that the granular com-ponent accounts at most for 15.5% of the variation in aggregate sales growth which is about half found by previous studies. To bridge the gap between previous findings and mine, I show that my quantitative results require deviations from Gibrat's law in which firm-level volatility and size are negatively related. I find that firm-level volatility declines at a substantially higher rate in size than previously found. Hence, the largest firms in the economy cannot be driving a sub-stantial fraction of macroeconomic volatility. I show that the explanatory power of granularity gets cut by at least half whenever the size-variance relationship, as estimated in the micro-level data, is taken into account. To uncover the economic mechanism behind this phenomenon, I construct an analytically tractable framework featuring random growth and a Kimball aggrega-tor. Under this setup, larger firms respond less to productivity shocks as the elasticity of demand is decreasing in size. Additionally, the model predicts a positive (negative) relationship between firm-level mark-ups (growth) and size. I confirm the predictions of the model by estimating size-varying price elasticities on unique product-level data from the Census of Manufactures (CM) and structurally estimating mark-ups using plant-level information from the Annual Survey of Manufactures (ASM).
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Cogeneration Technology Adoption in the U.S.

    January 2016

    Authors: Mary Jialin Li

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-16-30

    Well over half of all electricity generated in recent years in Denmark is through cogeneration. In U.S., however, this number is only roughly eight percent. While both the federal and state governments provided regulatory incentives for more cogeneration adoption, the capacity added in the past five years have been the lowest since late 1970s. My goal is to first understand what are and their relative importance of the factors that drive cogeneration technology adoption, with an emphasis on estimating the elasticity of adoption with respect to relative energy input prices and regulatory factors. Very preliminary results show that with a 1 cent increase in purchased electricity price from 6 cents (roughly current average) to 7 cents per kwh, the likelihood of cogeneration technology adoption goes up by about 0.7-1 percent. Then I will try to address the general equilibrium effect of cogeneration adoption in the electricity generation sector as a whole and potentially estimate some key parameters that the social planner would need to determine the optimal cogeneration investment amount. Partial equilibrium setting does not consider the decrease in investment in the utilities sector when facing competition from the distributed electricity generators, and therefore ignore the effects from the change in equilibrium price of electricity. The competitive market equilibrium setting does not consider the externality in the reduction of CO2 emissions, and leads to socially sub-optimal investment in cogeneration. If we were to achieve the national goal to increase cogeneration capacity half of the current capacity by 2020, the US Department of Energy (DOE) estimated an annual reduction of 150 million metric tons of CO2 annually ' equivalent to the emissions from over 25 million cars. This is about five times the annual carbon reduction from deregulation and consolidation in the US nuclear power industry (Davis, Wolfram 2012). Although the DOE estimates could be an overly optimistic estimate, it nonetheless suggests the large potential in the adoption of cogeneration technology.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    The Management and Organizational Practices Survey (MOPS): An Overview*

    January 2016

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-16-28

    Understanding productivity and business dynamics requires measuring production outputs and inputs. Through its surveys and use of administrative data, the Census Bureau collects information on production outputs and inputs including labor, capital, energy, and materials. With the introduction of the Management and Organizational Practices Survey (MOPS), the Census Bureau added information on another component of production: management. It has long been hypothesized that management is an important component of firm success, but until recently the study of management was confined to hypotheses, anecdotes, and case studies. Building upon the work of Bloom and Van Reenen (2007), the first-ever large scale survey of management practices in the United States, the MOPS, was conducted by the Census Bureau for 2010. A second, enhanced version of the MOPS is being conducted for 2015. The enhancement includes two new topics related to management: data and decision making (DDD) and uncertainty. As information technology has expanded plants are increasingly able to utilize data in their decision making. Structured management practices have been found to be complementary to DDD in earlier studies. Uncertainty has policy implications because uncertainty is found to be associated with reduced investment and employment. Uncertainty also plays a role in the targeting component of management.
    View Full Paper PDF