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Papers Containing Tag(s): 'Bureau of Economic Analysis'

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Center for Economic Studies - 106

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 100

Longitudinal Business Database - 94

North American Industry Classification System - 90

Annual Survey of Manufactures - 73

National Science Foundation - 72

National Bureau of Economic Research - 66

Total Factor Productivity - 66

Standard Industrial Classification - 63

Ordinary Least Squares - 58

Census of Manufactures - 57

Internal Revenue Service - 47

Longitudinal Research Database - 45

Economic Census - 40

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Chicago Census Research Data Center - 34

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 33

Federal Reserve Bank - 33

Census of Manufacturing Firms - 33

Business Register - 33

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 31

Current Population Survey - 28

Employer Identification Numbers - 28

Longitudinal Firm Trade Transactions Database - 27

Special Sworn Status - 27

Cobb-Douglas - 25

County Business Patterns - 24

American Community Survey - 24

Census Bureau Business Register - 23

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 23

Census Bureau Longitudinal Business Database - 23

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 22

Research Data Center - 22

National Income and Product Accounts - 20

University of Chicago - 19

Disclosure Review Board - 17

Department of Commerce - 17

Federal Reserve System - 16

Harmonized System - 16

Wholesale Trade - 15

Business Dynamics Statistics - 15

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 14

Generalized Method of Moments - 14

Decennial Census - 14

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Michigan Institute for Teaching and Research in Economics - 14

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Information and Communication Technology Survey - 11

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Department of Economics - 10

Herfindahl Hirschman Index - 10

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2010 Census - 10

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Journal of Economic Literature - 10

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American Statistical Association - 9

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Department of Homeland Security - 8

Business R&D and Innovation Survey - 8

Boston College - 8

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IQR - 8

National Center for Health Statistics - 8

Quarterly Journal of Economics - 8

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Board of Governors - 7

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European Union - 7

Business Research and Development and Innovation Survey - 7

Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages - 7

Company Organization Survey - 7

Securities and Exchange Commission - 7

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Energy Information Administration - 7

Survey of Income and Program Participation - 7

American Economic Association - 7

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Statistics Canada - 7

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Review of Economics and Statistics - 6

Journal of Political Economy - 6

Public Use Micro Sample - 6

State Energy Data System - 6

Federal Trade Commission - 6

University of California Los Angeles - 6

Establishment Micro Properties - 6

Electronic Data Interchange - 6

Center for Research in Security Prices - 6

Securities Data Company - 6

COMPUSTAT - 6

Census of Retail Trade - 5

Arts, Entertainment - 5

Consumer Expenditure Survey - 5

National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics - 5

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Harvard University - 5

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University of Toronto - 5

Paycheck Protection Program - 5

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Annual Business Survey - 5

Characteristics of Business Owners - 5

UC Berkeley - 5

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IBM - 3

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VAR - 3

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Data Management System - 3

Individual Characteristics File - 3

Quarterly Workforce Indicators - 3

PSID - 3

Wal-Mart - 3

National Employer Survey - 3

Review of Economic Studies - 3

Cambridge University Press - 3

Journal of Economic Perspectives - 3

Federal Reserve Board of Governors - 3

Unemployment Insurance - 3

Columbia University - 3

1940 Census - 3

Integrated Public Use Microdata Series - 3

Agriculture, Forestry - 3

BLS Handbook of Methods - 3

Employer-Household Dynamics - 3

New York Times - 3

National Longitudinal Survey of Youth - 3

MIT Press - 3

Journal of International Economics - 3

Earned Income Tax Credit - 3

Computer Aided Design - 3

Computer Network Use Supplement - 3

National Institute on Aging - 3

Medical Expenditure Panel Survey - 3

Value Added - 3

Administrative Records - 3

production - 77

manufacturing - 67

econometric - 61

market - 58

macroeconomic - 52

expenditure - 51

industrial - 51

growth - 46

sale - 45

gdp - 44

economically - 44

economist - 43

recession - 40

export - 38

investment - 38

sector - 37

revenue - 36

estimating - 36

demand - 33

produce - 33

enterprise - 30

labor - 30

employ - 28

efficiency - 26

multinational - 25

spillover - 24

company - 24

aggregate - 24

endogeneity - 24

exporter - 23

depreciation - 23

productivity growth - 22

import - 21

regional - 21

estimation - 20

entrepreneurship - 18

productive - 18

innovation - 18

monopolistic - 18

quarterly - 18

price - 17

workforce - 17

survey - 17

earnings - 17

employed - 17

consumption - 16

employee - 16

industry productivity - 16

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acquisition - 16

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profit - 15

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employment growth - 14

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factory - 13

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report - 13

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foreign - 12

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venture - 12

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region - 12

inventory - 12

growth productivity - 12

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geographically - 12

finance - 12

agency - 12

econometrician - 12

supplier - 11

financial - 11

pollution - 11

outsourced - 11

outsourcing - 11

diversification - 11

productivity dynamics - 11

leverage - 11

data - 11

pricing - 11

imported - 10

exporting - 10

exported - 10

sourcing - 10

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poverty - 10

salary - 10

establishment - 10

heterogeneity - 10

impact - 10

firms productivity - 10

merger - 10

warehousing - 9

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debt - 9

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epa - 9

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rent - 9

competitor - 9

rural - 9

regional economic - 9

regression - 9

area - 9

plants industry - 9

commerce - 8

economic census - 8

spending - 8

gain - 8

inflation - 8

welfare - 8

multinational firms - 8

importing - 8

investing - 8

investor - 8

productivity shocks - 8

monopolistically - 8

relocation - 8

estimates employment - 8

microdata - 8

corporate - 8

productivity measures - 8

aggregate productivity - 8

immigrant - 8

geography - 8

housing - 8

respondent - 8

productivity dispersion - 8

custom - 8

externality - 8

exogeneity - 8

incentive - 8

wages productivity - 8

aggregation - 8

regulation - 8

accounting - 8

shock - 8

exporters multinationals - 7

equity - 7

invest - 7

factor productivity - 7

productivity estimates - 7

patent - 7

prospect - 7

sector productivity - 7

labor productivity - 7

endogenous - 7

state - 7

ethnicity - 7

industry variation - 7

socioeconomic - 7

geographic - 7

analysis - 7

forecast - 7

industries estimate - 7

worker - 7

plant productivity - 7

census bureau - 7

regulatory - 7

statistician - 7

retail - 7

dispersion productivity - 7

capital - 7

producing - 7

pollutant - 7

good - 6

consumer - 6

downstream - 6

incorporated - 6

technology - 6

disadvantaged - 6

labor markets - 6

regress - 6

ethnic - 6

industry concentration - 6

globalization - 6

disparity - 6

migrant - 6

measures productivity - 6

agriculture - 6

tax - 6

immigration - 6

warehouse - 6

productivity plants - 6

declining - 6

bankruptcy - 6

shareholder - 6

census data - 6

empirical - 6

rate - 6

restructuring - 6

takeover - 6

polluting - 6

competitiveness - 6

agglomeration economies - 6

agglomeration - 6

urbanization - 6

information census - 5

trade costs - 5

trader - 5

innovate - 5

productivity size - 5

practices productivity - 5

policymakers - 5

federal - 5

larger firms - 5

capital productivity - 5

city - 5

economic growth - 5

residence - 5

diversified - 5

labor statistics - 5

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autoregressive - 5

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minority - 5

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resident - 5

migration - 5

industry output - 5

employment dynamics - 5

unemployed - 5

average - 5

retailer - 5

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surveys censuses - 5

transition - 5

estimates productivity - 5

analysis productivity - 5

quantity - 5

tenure - 5

liquidation - 5

expense - 5

data census - 5

hiring - 5

decline - 5

recessionary - 5

rates productivity - 5

strategic - 5

firms plants - 5

environmental regulation - 5

plant investment - 5

plant - 5

manufacturing plants - 5

efficient - 5

poorer - 4

purchase - 4

export market - 4

loan - 4

asset - 4

investment productivity - 4

manufacturing productivity - 4

midwest - 4

job - 4

occupation - 4

estimates production - 4

competitive - 4

diversify - 4

research census - 4

level productivity - 4

neighborhood - 4

employment statistics - 4

corporation - 4

firms trade - 4

econometrically - 4

borrowing - 4

residential - 4

business data - 4

classified - 4

shift - 4

businesses census - 4

utilization - 4

economic statistics - 4

productivity increases - 4

oligopolistic - 4

industrial classification - 4

sectoral - 4

rates employment - 4

researcher - 4

bank - 4

bankrupt - 4

fluctuation - 4

innovator - 4

contract - 4

wage variation - 4

volatility - 4

regressors - 4

opportunity - 4

agricultural - 4

heterogeneous - 4

unobserved - 4

manufacturing industries - 4

pollution abatement - 4

conglomerate - 4

polluting industries - 4

plants industries - 4

profitable - 4

plants firms - 4

customer - 3

financing - 3

founder - 3

innovation productivity - 3

chemical - 3

concentration - 3

location - 3

exogenous - 3

employment estimates - 3

industry wages - 3

wage growth - 3

urban - 3

growth employment - 3

retirement - 3

percentile - 3

startup - 3

analyst - 3

migrating - 3

relocate - 3

imputation - 3

turnover - 3

downturn - 3

pandemic - 3

recession exposure - 3

regulation productivity - 3

corp - 3

disclosure - 3

observed productivity - 3

local economic - 3

earner - 3

firms grow - 3

industry employment - 3

subsidy - 3

taxation - 3

merchandise - 3

census years - 3

enrollment - 3

public - 3

managerial - 3

management - 3

exporting firms - 3

electricity prices - 3

employing - 3

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wages production - 3

medicaid - 3

prevalence - 3

database - 3

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privacy - 3

decade - 3

classification - 3

productivity variation - 3

lending - 3

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credit - 3

banking - 3

substitute - 3

study - 3

research - 3

educated - 3

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workplace - 3

hire - 3

yield - 3

productivity firms - 3

census research - 3

latino - 3

family - 3

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layoff - 3

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unemployment rates - 3

partnership - 3

equilibrium - 3

foreign trade - 3

abatement expenditures - 3

costs pollution - 3

environmental expenditures - 3

product - 3

technical - 3

performance - 3

valuation - 3

regional industries - 3

firms census - 3

locality - 3

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Viewing papers 71 through 80 of 223


  • Working Paper

    Ready-to-Mix: Horizontal Mergers, Prices, and Productivity

    January 2017

    Authors: Robert Kulick

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-38

    I estimate the price and productivity effects of horizontal mergers in the ready-mix concrete industry using plant and firm-level data from the US Census Bureau. Horizontal mergers involving plants in close proximity are associated with price increases and decreases in output, but also raise productivity at acquired plants. While there is a significant negative relationship between productivity and prices, the rate at which productivity reduces price is modest and the effects of increased market power are not offset. I then present several additional new results of policy interest. For example, mergers are only observed leading to price increases after the relaxation of antitrust standards in the mid-1980s; price increases following mergers are persistent but tend to become smaller over time; and, there is evidence That firms target plants charging below average prices for acquisition. Finally, I use a simple multinomial logit demand model to assess the effects of merger activity on total welfare. At acquired plants, the consumer and producer surplus effects approximately cancel out, but effects at acquiring plants and non-merging plants, where prices also rise, cause a substantial decrease in consumer surplus.
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  • Working Paper

    Creditor Rights, Technology Adoption, and Productivity: Plant-Level Evidence

    January 2017

    Authors: Nuri Ersahin

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-36

    I analyze the impact of strengthening of creditor rights on productivity using plant-level data from the U.S. Census Bureau. Following the adoption of anti-recharacterization laws that improve the ability of lenders to access the collateral of the firm, total factor productivity of treated plants increases by 2.6 percent. This effect is mainly observed among plants belonging to financially constrained firms. Furthermore, treated plants invest in capital of younger vintage and newer technology, and become more capital-intensive. My results suggest that strengthening of creditor rights leads to a relaxation in borrowing constraints, and helps firms adopt a more efficient production technology.
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  • Working Paper

    Firm-to-Firm Relationships and Price Rigidity Theory and Evidence

    January 2017

    Authors: Sebastian Heise

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-33

    Economists have long suspected that firm-to-firm relationships might increase price rigidity due to the use of explicit or implicit fixed-price contracts. Using transaction-level import data from the U.S. Census, I study the responsiveness of prices to exchange rate changes and show that prices are in fact substantially more responsive to these cost shocks in older versus newly formed relationships. Based on additional stylized facts about a relationship's life cycle and interviews I conducted with purchasing managers, I develop a model in which a buyer-seller pair subject to persistent, stochastic shocks to production costs shares profit risk under limited commitment. Once structurally estimated, the model replicates the empirical correlation between relationship age and the responsiveness of prices to shocks. My results suggest that changes to the average length of relationships in the economy - e.g., in a recession, when the share of young relationships declines - can influence price flexibility and hence the effectiveness of monetary policy.
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  • Working Paper

    The Impact of College Education on Old-Age Mortality: A Study of Marginal Treatment Effects

    January 2017

    Authors: Evan Taylor

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-30

    Using a newly constructed dataset that links 2000 U.S. Census long-form records to Social Security Administration data files, I evaluate the effect of college education on mortality. In an OLS regression, women and men who have at least some college education have 20% lower mortality rates than those with a high school degree or less. I proceed with an empirical design intended to illuminate the extent to which this relationship is causal, estimating marginal treatment effects (MTEs) using the proximity of the nearest college to individuals' birthplace as an instrument. Results indicate positive selection into college education (in terms of longevity) for both women and men. Selection drives almost all of the mortality gap for women. For men, longevity gains from college attendance are concentrated among individuals with unobserved variables that make them unlikely attend college. This suggests that men who would benefit most from receiving college education in terms of mortality reductions are those who are not attending.
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  • Working Paper

    Firm Dynamics, Persistent Effects of Entry Conditions, and Business Cycles

    January 2017

    Authors: Sara Moreira

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-29

    This paper examines how the state of the economy when businesses begin operations affects their size and performance over the lifecycle. Using micro-level data that covers the entire universe of businesses operating in the U.S. since the late 1970s, I provide new evidence that businesses born in downturns start on a smaller scale and remain smaller over their entire lifecycle. In fact, I find no evidence that these differences attenuate even long after entry. Using new data on the productivity and composition of startup businesses, I show that this persistence is related to selection at entry and demand-side channels.
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  • Working Paper

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

    January 2017

    Authors: Chen Yeh

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-23

    This paper quantitatively assesses whether firm-specific shocks can drive the U.S. business cycle. Firm-specific shocks to the largest firms can directly contribute to aggregate fluctuations whenever the firm size distribution is fat-tailed giving rise to the granular hypothesis. I use a novel, comprehensive data set compiled from administrative sources that contains the universe of firms and trade transactions, and find that the granular hypothesis accounts at most for 16 percent of the variation in aggregate sales growth. This is about half of that found by previous studies that imposed Gibrat's law where all firms are equally volatile regardless of their size. Using the full distribution of growth rates among U.S. firms, I find robust evidence of a negative relationship between firm-level volatility and size, i.e. the size-variance relationship. The largest firms (whose shocks drive granularity) are the least volatile under the size-variance relationship, thus their influence on aggregates is mitigated. I show that by taking this relationship into account the effect of firm-specific shocks on observed macroeconomic volatility is substantially reduced. I then investigate several plausible mechanisms that could explain the negative sizevariance relationship. After empirically ruling out some of them, I suggest a 'market power' channel in which large firms face smaller price elasticities and therefore respond less to a givensized productivity shock than small firms do. I provide direct evidence for this mechanism by estimating demand elasticities among U.S. manufactures. Lastly, I construct an analytically tractable framework that is consistent with several empirical regularities related to firm size.
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  • Working Paper

    Multinationals Offshoring, and the Decline of U.S. Manufacturing

    January 2017

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-22

    We provide three new stylized facts that characterize the role of multinationals in the U.S. manufacturing employment decline, using a novel microdata panel from 1993-2011 that augments U.S. Census data with firm ownership information and transaction-level trade. First, over this period, U.S. multinationals accounted for 41% of the aggregate manufacturing decline, disproportionate to their employment share in the sector. Second, U.S. multinational-owned establishments had lower employment growth rates than a narrowly-defined control group. Third, establishments that became part of a multinational experienced job losses, accompanied by increased foreign sourcing of intermediates by the parent firm. To establish whether imported intermediates are substitutes or complements for U.S. employment, we develop a model of input sourcing and show that the employment impact of foreign sourcing depends on a key elasticity of firm size to production efficiency. Structural estimation of this elasticity finds that imported intermediates substitute for U.S. employment. In general equilibrium, our estimates imply a sizable manufacturing employment decline of 13%.
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  • Working Paper

    Declining Dynamism, Allocative Efficiency, and the Productivity Slowdown

    January 2017

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-17

    A large literature documents declining measures of business dynamism including high-growth young firm activity and job reallocation. A distinct literature describes a slowdown in the pace of aggregate labor productivity growth. We relate these patterns by studying changes in productivity growth from the late 1990s to the mid 2000s using firm-level data. We find that diminished allocative efficiency gains can account for the productivity slowdown in a manner that interacts with the within firm productivity growth distribution. The evidence suggests that the decline in dynamism is reason for concern and sheds light on debates about the causes of slowing productivity growth.
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  • Working Paper

    Slow to Hire, Quick to Fire: Employment Dynamics with Asymmetric Responses to News

    January 2017

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-15

    Concave hiring rules imply that firms respond more to bad shocks than to good shocks. They provide a united explanation for several seemingly unrelated facts about employment growth in macro and micro data. In particular, they generate countercyclical movement in both aggregate conditional 'macro' volatility and cross-sectional 'micro' volatility as well as negative skewness in the cross section and in the time series at different level of aggregation. Concave establishment level responses of employment growth to TFP shocks estimated from Census data induce significant skewness, movements in volatility and amplification of bad aggregate shocks.
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  • Working Paper

    R&D, Attrition and Multiple Imputation in BRDIS

    January 2017

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-13

    Multiple imputation in business establishment surveys like BRDIS, an annual business survey in which some companies are sampled every year or multiple years, may enhance the estimates of total R&D in addition to helping researchers estimate models with subpopulations of small sample size. Considering a panel of BRDIS companies throughout the years 2008 to 2013 linked to LBD data, this paper uses the conclusions obtained with missing data visualization and other explorations to come up with a strategy to conduct multiple imputation appropriate to address the item nonresponse in R&D expenditures. Because survey design characteristics are behind much of the item and unit nonresponse, multiple imputation of missing data in BRDIS changes the estimates of total R&D significantly and alters the conclusions reached by models of the determinants of R&D investment obtained with complete case analysis.
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