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Papers Containing Tag(s): 'Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board'

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American Community Survey - 133

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 127

Disclosure Review Board - 125

North American Industry Classification System - 119

Longitudinal Business Database - 110

Internal Revenue Service - 110

Protected Identification Key - 88

Current Population Survey - 78

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 78

Social Security Administration - 77

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 67

Center for Economic Studies - 66

Social Security Number - 62

National Science Foundation - 62

Ordinary Least Squares - 59

Decennial Census - 58

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National Center for Health Statistics - 16

Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program - 16

National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics - 16

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Cobb-Douglas - 16

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1940 Census - 14

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National Institute on Aging - 13

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Service Annual Survey - 12

General Accounting Office - 12

ASEC - 12

National Institutes of Health - 12

Small Business Administration - 12

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American Economic Association - 11

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Annual Survey of Entrepreneurs - 9

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IQR - 8

Social and Economic Supplement - 8

Russell Sage Foundation - 8

Customs and Border Protection - 8

European Union - 8

Department of Agriculture - 8

Characteristics of Business Owners - 8

Health Care and Social Assistance - 8

Energy Information Administration - 8

Sloan Foundation - 8

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 8

Master Beneficiary Record - 8

Computer Assisted Personal Interview - 8

Social Science Research Institute - 8

Indian Housing Information Center - 8

Pew Research Center - 8

Standard Occupational Classification - 7

Occupational Employment Statistics - 7

Integrated Longitudinal Business Database - 7

Nonemployer Statistics - 7

Health and Retirement Study - 7

NUMIDENT - 7

Stanford University - 7

Federal Register - 7

Business R&D and Innovation Survey - 7

Educational Services - 7

Professional Services - 7

Medicaid Services - 7

Paycheck Protection Program - 7

Employment History File - 7

UC Berkeley - 7

Census Bureau Master Address File - 7

Business Formation Statistics - 7

Statistics Canada - 7

Department of Justice - 7

Legal Form of Organization - 6

Yale University - 6

CPS ASEC - 6

IBM - 6

Initial Public Offering - 6

Consumer Expenditure Survey - 6

Financial, Insurance and Real Estate Industries - 6

Business Research and Development and Innovation Survey - 6

Urban Institute - 6

Centers for Medicare - 6

Department of Energy - 6

Employer Characteristics File - 6

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention - 6

Current Population Survey Annual Social and Economic Supplement - 6

Duke University - 6

Journal of Economic Literature - 6

Council of Economic Advisers - 6

Company Organization Survey - 6

Information and Communication Technology Survey - 6

Cell Mean Public Use - 5

Ohio State University - 5

Geographic Information Systems - 5

Census Bureau Business Dynamics Statistics - 5

MTO - 5

Opportunity Atlas - 5

Survey of Consumer Finances - 5

Survey of Industrial Research and Development - 5

Management and Organizational Practices Survey - 5

National Establishment Time Series - 5

Agriculture, Forestry - 5

Public Administration - 5

Michigan Institute for Teaching and Research in Economics - 5

National Income and Product Accounts - 5

Federal Poverty Level - 5

Census Bureau Center for Economic Studies - 5

Center for Administrative Records Research - 5

Economic Research Service - 5

Federal Insurance Contribution Act - 5

National Academy of Sciences - 5

Harvard University - 5

Boston College - 5

Administrative Records - 5

National Ambient Air Quality Standards - 5

PIKed - 5

Federal Reserve Board of Governors - 5

Michigan Institute for Data Science - 5

George Mason University - 5

Herfindahl-Hirschman - 5

Retirement History Survey - 5

Public Use Micro Sample - 5

LEHD Program - 5

North American Industry Classi - 5

Census of Retail Trade - 4

Code of Federal Regulations - 4

Office of Personnel Management - 4

Department of Health and Human Services - 4

Minnesota Population Center - 4

North American Free Trade Agreement - 4

Columbia University - 4

University of Toronto - 4

American Immigration Council - 4

IZA - 4

Center for Administrative Records Research and Applications - 4

Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation - 4

Department of Defense - 4

Net Present Value - 4

International Trade Commission - 4

Limited Liability Company - 4

Regression Discontinuity Design - 4

Manufacturing Energy Consumption Survey - 4

Society of Labor Economists - 4

Princeton University - 4

2SLS - 4

State Energy Data System - 4

TFPR - 4

European Commission - 4

National Opinion Research Center - 4

World Bank - 4

Kauffman Foundation - 4

Survey of Manufacturing Technology - 3

Commodity Flow Survey - 3

United Nations - 3

Longitudinal Research Database - 3

Brookings Institution - 3

Toxics Release Inventory - 3

Penn State University - 3

Harvard Business School - 3

CDF - 3

Cumulative Density Function - 3

Quarterly Journal of Economics - 3

American Economic Review - 3

Composite Person Record - 3

Business Services - 3

Bureau of Labor - 3

Department of Commerce - 3

Master Earnings File - 3

TFPQ - 3

Linear Probability Models - 3

Current Employment Statistics - 3

Federal Trade Commission - 3

Medical Expenditure Panel Survey - 3

Journal of Econometrics - 3

Local Employment Dynamics - 3

Foreign Direct Investment - 3

COMPUSTAT - 3

University of Minnesota - 3

Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality - 3

University of California Los Angeles - 3

National Research Council - 3

John Voorheis - 21

Lucia Foster - 20

John Haltiwanger - 16

John M. Abowd - 14

Nathan Goldschlag - 12

J. David Brown - 11

Emin Dinlersoz - 10

Sonya R. Porter - 10

Fariha Kamal - 9

Catherine Buffington - 9

Moises Yi - 9

Jonathan Eggleston - 9

Lars Vilhuber - 8

Maggie R. Jones - 8

Kevin Rinz - 8

Zachary Kroff - 7

Cheryl Grim - 6

Zoltan Wolf - 6

Jay Stewart - 6

Martha Stinson - 6

Cristina Tello-Trillo - 6

Randall Akee - 6

Jonathan Colmer - 6

Lawrence Warren - 6

Kevin L. McKinney - 6

Misty L. Heggeness - 6

Ariel J. Binder - 5

Nikolas Zolas - 5

Thomas B. Foster - 5

Renuka Bhaskar - 5

Leah R. Clark - 5

Kendall Houghton - 5

Marta Murray-Close - 5

G. Jacob Blackwood - 4

Cindy Cunningham - 4

Sabrina Wulff Pabilonia - 4

Ryan Monarch - 4

Nicholas Bloom - 4

Kristina McElheran - 4

Erik Brynjolfsson - 4

Teresa C. Fort - 4

Sabrina T. Howell - 4

Charles Hokayem - 4

Eva Lyubich - 4

Amanda Eng - 4

Reed Walker - 4

Gloria G. Aldana - 4

Nikolas Pharris-Ciurej - 4

Leticia Fernandez - 4

Joseph Staudt - 4

Danielle H. Sandler - 4

Dominic A. Smith - 3

Cody Tuttle - 3

Rachel Nesbit - 3

Kristin Sandusky - 3

Ethan Lewis - 3

Robert Ashmead - 3

Daniel Kifer - 3

Philip Leclerc - 3

Rolando A. Rodríguez - 3

Tamara Adams - 3

David Darais - 3

Sourya Dey - 3

Simson L. Garfinkel - 3

Scott Moore - 3

Ramy N. Tadros - 3

Yoshiki Ando - 3

Steven J. Davis - 3

Emilia Simeonova - 3

David Card - 3

Jesse Rothstein - 3

Peter Schott - 3

Sean Wang - 3

Seula Kim - 3

Richard Mansfield - 3

Ethan Krohn - 3

Mary Munro - 3

Jennifer Withrow - 3

Emek Basker - 3

Suvy Qin - 3

Kyle Handley - 3

Timothy R. Wojan - 3

Adela Luque - 3

Carl Lieberman - 3

Garrett Anstreicher - 3

Gale Boyd - 3

Matthew Doolin - 3

James M. Noon - 3

James P. Ziliak - 3

Parag Mahajan - 3

Sharon R. Ennis - 3

Matthew Staiger - 3

J. Daniel Kim - 3

Sarah Miller - 3

Laura Wherry - 3

Javier Miranda - 3

Shawn Klimek - 3

Victoria Udalova - 3

earnings - 59

employed - 59

labor - 58

employ - 57

workforce - 54

population - 52

survey - 51

recession - 49

respondent - 42

ethnicity - 40

market - 33

hispanic - 33

minority - 32

disparity - 32

manufacturing - 32

employee - 32

immigrant - 32

disadvantaged - 31

innovation - 31

payroll - 30

sector - 29

economist - 29

revenue - 28

growth - 26

census bureau - 26

entrepreneur - 26

earner - 26

poverty - 26

resident - 26

investment - 26

estimating - 25

racial - 25

economically - 25

disclosure - 25

industrial - 25

entrepreneurship - 24

ethnic - 24

company - 24

socioeconomic - 23

race - 23

export - 23

salary - 23

irs - 23

immigration - 23

statistical - 22

expenditure - 22

enterprise - 22

tax - 22

census data - 21

neighborhood - 21

macroeconomic - 21

patent - 21

gdp - 21

production - 21

econometric - 21

residence - 20

agency - 20

sale - 19

housing - 19

spillover - 19

welfare - 19

hiring - 19

trend - 18

venture - 18

finance - 18

heterogeneity - 18

worker - 18

unemployed - 18

data - 18

data census - 17

demand - 17

import - 17

financial - 17

migrant - 17

percentile - 16

enrollment - 16

report - 16

segregation - 16

rent - 16

incentive - 16

endogeneity - 16

1040 - 16

family - 15

entrepreneurial - 15

intergenerational - 15

citizen - 15

occupation - 14

residential - 14

technological - 14

loan - 14

relocation - 14

corporation - 14

quarterly - 14

eligibility - 13

investor - 13

exporter - 13

impact - 13

patenting - 13

discrimination - 13

microdata - 13

taxpayer - 13

inventory - 12

use census - 12

state - 12

rural - 12

funding - 12

job - 12

hire - 12

establishment - 12

datasets - 12

federal - 12

record - 12

graduate - 11

census responses - 11

wealth - 11

importer - 11

earn - 11

estimation - 11

manufacturer - 11

black - 11

researcher - 11

medicaid - 11

bias - 11

census employment - 10

parent - 10

proprietor - 10

innovate - 10

employment growth - 10

white - 10

migration - 10

imputation - 10

aggregate - 10

parental - 9

child - 9

coverage - 9

proprietorship - 9

assessed - 9

retirement - 9

home - 9

renter - 9

community - 9

pandemic - 9

metropolitan - 9

trading - 9

lender - 9

employment earnings - 9

financing - 9

household surveys - 9

monopolistic - 9

native - 9

urban - 9

migrate - 9

profit - 9

filing - 9

environmental - 9

emission - 9

census household - 9

mexican - 9

efficiency - 8

eligible - 8

enrolled - 8

incorporated - 8

census disclosure - 8

mortgage - 8

ssa - 8

labor markets - 8

prevalence - 8

acquisition - 8

poorer - 8

shipment - 8

multinational - 8

supplier - 8

imported - 8

borrower - 8

lending - 8

debt - 8

produce - 8

invention - 8

innovative - 8

productive - 8

productivity growth - 8

innovating - 8

organizational - 8

city - 8

migrating - 8

geographically - 8

dependent - 8

income data - 8

pollution - 8

commerce - 7

retailer - 7

wholesale - 7

productivity dispersion - 7

generation - 7

homeowner - 7

insurance - 7

latino - 7

segregated - 7

price - 7

consumption - 7

tariff - 7

exporting - 7

investing - 7

invest - 7

census survey - 7

subsidy - 7

startup - 7

relocate - 7

employment statistics - 7

mobility - 7

reside - 7

citizenship - 7

stock - 7

bank - 7

exogeneity - 7

confidentiality - 7

woman - 7

saving - 7

regional - 7

adoption - 7

competitor - 7

workers earnings - 7

labor statistics - 6

regress - 6

maternal - 6

economic census - 6

mortality - 6

asian - 6

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founder - 6

credit - 6

importing - 6

earnings employees - 6

equity - 6

fund - 6

2010 census - 6

prospect - 6

security - 6

technology - 6

growth productivity - 6

innovator - 6

employment estimates - 6

employment data - 6

workplace - 6

employment trends - 6

borrowing - 6

banking - 6

leverage - 6

provided census - 6

epa - 6

pollution exposure - 6

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research - 6

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firms grow - 3

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locality - 3

wage data - 3

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earnings inequality - 3

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tech - 3

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employment count - 3

measures employment - 3

workforce indicators - 3

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Viewing papers 71 through 80 of 292


  • Working Paper

    Separate but Not Equal: The Uneven Cost of Residential Segregation for Network-Based Hiring

    October 2024

    Authors: Tam Mai

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-56

    This paper studies how residential segregation by race and by education affects job search via neighbor networks. Using confidential microdata from the US Census Bureau, I measure segregation for each characteristic at both the individual level and the neighborhood level. My findings are manifold. At the individual level, future coworkership with new neighbors on the same block is less likely among segregated individuals than among integrated workers, irrespective of races and levels of schooling. The impacts are most adverse for the most socioeconomically disadvantaged demographics: Blacks and those without a high school education. At the block level, however, higher segregation along either dimension raises the likelihood of any future coworkership on the block for all racial or educational groups. My identification strategy, capitalizing on data granularity, allows a causal interpretation of these results. Together, they point to the coexistence of homophily and in-group competition for job opportunities in linking residential segregation to neighbor-based informal hiring. My subtle findings have important implications for policy-making.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Comparison of Child Reporting in the American Community Survey and Federal Income Tax Returns Based on California Birth Records

    September 2024

    Authors: Gloria G. Aldana

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-55

    This paper takes advantage of administrative records from California, a state with a large child population and a significant historical undercount of children in Census Bureau data, dependent information in the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Form 1040 records, and the American Community Survey to characterize undercounted children and compare child reporting. While IRS Form 1040 records offer potential utility for adjusting child undercounting in Census Bureau surveys, this analysis finds overlapping reporting issues among various demographic and economic groups. Specifically, older children, those of Non-Hispanic Black mothers and Hispanic mothers, children or parents with lower English proficiency, children whose mothers did not complete high school, and families with lower income-to-poverty ratio were less frequently reported in IRS 1040 records than other groups. Therefore, using IRS 1040 dependent records may have limitations for accurately representing populations with characteristics associated with the undercount of children in surveys.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    The Effect of Food Assistance Work Requirements on Labor Market Outcomes

    September 2024

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-54

    The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), formerly named the Food Stamp Program, has long been an integral part of the US social safety net. During US welfare reforms in the mid-1990s, SNAP eligibility became more restrictive with legislation citing a need to improve self-sufficiency of participating households. As a result, legislatures created two of these eligibility requirements: the General Work Requirement (GWR), which forces an adult to work to receive benefits, and the Able-Bodied Adult Without Dependents (ABAWD) work requirement, which requires certain adults to work a certain number of hours to receive benefits. Using restricted-access SNAP microdata from nine states, we exploit age cutoffs of the ABAWD work requirement and General Work Requirement (GWR) to estimate the effect of these policies on labor outcomes. We find that at the ABAWD age cutoff, there is no statistically significant evidence of a discontinuity across static and dynamic employment outcomes. At the GWR age cutoff, unemployed SNAP users and SNAP-eligible adults are on average more likely to leave the labor force than to continue to search for work.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Transitional Costs and the Decline of Coal: Worker-Level Evidence

    September 2024

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-53

    We examine the labor market impacts of the U.S. coal industry's decline using comprehensive administrative data on workers from 2005-2021. Coal workers most exposed to the industry's contraction experienced substantial earnings losses, equivalent to 1.6 years of predecline wages. These losses stem from both reduced employment duration (0.37 fewer years employed) and lower annual earnings (17 percent decline) between 2012-2019, relative to similar workers less exposed to coal's decline. Earnings reductions primarly occur when workers remain in local labor markets but are not employed in mining. While coal workers do not exhibit lower geographic mobility, relocation does not significantly mitigate their earnings losses.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Earnings Through the Stages: Using Tax Data to Test for Sources of Error in CPS ASEC Earnings and Inequality Measures

    September 2024

    Authors: Ethan Krohn

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-52

    In this paper, I explore the impact of generalized coverage error, item non-response bias, and measurement error on measures of earnings and earnings inequality in the CPS ASEC. I match addresses selected for the CPS ASEC to administrative data from 1040 tax returns. I then compare earnings statistics in the tax data for wage and salary earnings in samples corresponding to seven stages of the CPS ASEC survey production process. I also compare the statistics using the actual survey responses. The statistics I examine include mean earnings, the Gini coefficient, percentile earnings shares, and shares of the survey weight for a range of percentiles. I examine how the accuracy of the statistics calculated using the survey data is affected by including imputed responses for both those who did not respond to the full CPS ASEC and those who did not respond to the earnings question. I find that generalized coverage error and item nonresponse bias are dominated by measurement error, and that an important aspect of measurement error is households reporting no wage and salary earnings in the CPS ASEC when there are such earnings in the tax data. I find that the CPS ASEC sample misses earnings at the high end of the distribution from the initial selection stage and that the final survey weights exacerbate this.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Revisions to the LEHD Establishment Imputation Procedure and Applications to Administrative Job Frame

    September 2024

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-51

    The Census Bureau is developing a 'job frame' to provide detailed job-level employment data across the U.S. through linked administrative records such as unemployment insurance and IRS W-2 filings. This working paper summarizes the research conducted by the job frame development team on modifying and extending the LEHD Unit-to-Worker (U2W) imputation procedure for the job frame prototype. It provides a conceptual overview of the U2W imputation method, highlighting key challenges and tradeoffs in its current application. The paper then presents four imputation methodologies and evaluates their performance in areas such as establishment assignment accuracy, establishment size matching, and job separation rates. The results show that all methodologies perform similarly in assigning workers to the correct establishment. Non-spell-based methodologies excel in matching establishment sizes, while spell-based methodologies perform better in accurately tracking separation rates.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Internal Migration in the U.S. During the COVID-19 Pandemic

    September 2024

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-50

    Survey and administrative internal migration data disagree on whether the COVID-19 pandemic increased or decreased mobility in the U.S. Moreover, though scholars have theorized and documented migration in response to environmental hazards and economic shocks, the novel conditions posed by a global pandemic make it difficult to hypothesize whether and how American migration might change as a result. We link individual-level data from the United States Postal Service's National Change of Address (NCOA) registry to American Community Survey (ACS) and Current Population Survey (CPS-ASEC) responses and other administrative records to document changes in the level, geography, and composition of migrant flows between 2019 and 2021. We find a 2% increase in address changes between 2019 and 2020, representing an additional 603,000 moves, driven primarily by young adults, earners at the extremes of the income distribution, and individuals (as opposed to families) moving over longer distances. Though the number of address changes returned to pre-pandemic levels in 2021, the pandemic-era geographic and compositional shifts in favor of longer distance moves away from the Pacific and Mid-Atlantic regions toward the South and in favor of younger, individual movers persisted. We also show that at least part of the disconnect between survey, media, and administrative/third-party migration data sources stems from the apparent misreporting of address changes on Census Bureau surveys. Among ACS and CPS-ASEC householders linked to NCOA data and filing a permanent change of address in their 1-year survey response reference period, only around 68% of ACS and 49% of CPS-ASEC householders also reported living in a different residence one year ago in their survey response.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Aggregation Bias in the Measurement of U.S. Global Value Chains

    September 2024

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-49

    This paper measures global value chain (GVC) activity, defined as imported content of exports, of U.S. manufacturing plants between 2002 and 2012. We assesses the extent of aggregation bias that arises from relying on industry-level exports, imports, and output to establish three results. First, GVC activity based on industry-level data underestimate the actual degree of GVC engagement by ignoring potential correlations between import and export activities across plants within industries. Second, the bias grew over the sample period. Finally, unlike with industry-level measures, we find little slowdown in GVC integration by U.S. manufacturers.
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  • Working Paper

    Estimating the Potential Impact of Combined Race and Ethnicity Reporting on Long-Term Earnings Statistics

    September 2024

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-48

    We use place of birth information from the Social Security Administration linked to earnings data from the Longitudinal Employer-Household Dynamics Program and detailed race and ethnicity data from the 2010 Census to study how long-term earnings differentials vary by place of birth for different self-identified race and ethnicity categories. We focus on foreign-born persons from countries that are heavily Hispanic and from countries in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA). We find substantial heterogeneity of long-term earnings differentials within country of birth, some of which will be difficult to detect when the reporting format changes from the current two-question version to the new single-question version because they depend on self-identifications that place the individual in two distinct categories within the single-question format, specifically, Hispanic and White or Black, and MENA and White or Black. We also study the USA-born children of these same immigrants. Long-term earnings differences for the 2nd generation also vary as a function of self-identified ethnicity and race in ways that changing to the single-question format could affect.
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  • Working Paper

    Who Scars the Easiest? College Quality and the Effects of Graduating into a Recession

    September 2024

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-47

    Graduating from college into a recession is associated with earnings losses, but less is known about how these effects vary across colleges. Using restricted-use data from the National Survey of College Graduates, we study how the effects of graduating into worse economic conditions vary over college quality in the context of the Great Recession. We find that earnings losses are concentrated among graduates from relatively high-quality colleges. Key mechanisms include substitution out of the labor force and into graduate school, decreased graduate degree completion, and differences in the economic stability of fields of study between graduates of high- and low-quality colleges.
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