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Papers Containing Tag(s): 'National Science Foundation'

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Center for Economic Studies - 110

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Ordinary Least Squares - 80

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Chicago Census Research Data Center - 69

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Annual Survey of Manufactures - 65

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 65

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American Community Survey - 60

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Department of Labor - 18

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Journal of Economic Literature - 18

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Securities and Exchange Commission - 9

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Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation - 9

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Department of Justice - 7

Review of Economic Studies - 7

Journal of Economic Perspectives - 7

Composite Person Record - 7

Survey of Manufacturing Technology - 7

BLS Handbook of Methods - 7

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Census 2000 - 7

Business Register Bridge - 7

Center for Research in Security Prices - 7

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Georgetown University - 7

MIT Press - 7

New York Times - 7

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NBER Summer Institute - 6

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1940 Census - 6

Occupational Employment Statistics - 6

Journal of Econometrics - 6

Princeton University Press - 6

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European Commission - 6

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Journal of International Economics - 6

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Survey of Consumer Finances - 5

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Indian Health Service - 5

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George Mason University - 5

Department of Housing and Urban Development - 5

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Economic Research Service - 5

CDF - 5

Cumulative Density Function - 5

Computer Network Use Supplement - 5

Department of Defense - 5

Kauffman Firm Survey - 5

Housing and Urban Development - 5

Probability Density Function - 5

Business Master File - 5

CAAA - 5

IQR - 5

Securities Data Company - 5

International Standard Industrial Classification - 5

Census of Retail Trade - 5

IZA - 5

National Employer Survey - 5

Energy Information Administration - 5

Social Security Disability Insurance - 5

Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality - 5

PAOC - 5

Financial, Insurance and Real Estate Industries - 5

Earned Income Tax Credit - 4

Adjusted Gross Income - 4

Robert Wood Johnson Foundation - 4

Value Added - 4

Public Administration - 4

Toxics Release Inventory - 4

National Ambient Air Quality Standards - 4

Princeton University - 4

Society of Labor Economists - 4

Census Numident - 4

American Immigration Council - 4

Regression Discontinuity Design - 4

Federal Tax Information - 4

Successor Predecessor File - 4

Boston College - 4

Disability Insurance - 4

Federal Government - 4

Brookings Institution - 4

Agriculture, Forestry - 4

Census Bureau Business Dynamics Statistics - 4

Federal Register - 4

Pew Research Center - 4

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Customs and Border Protection - 4

Manufacturing Energy Consumption Survey - 4

American Housing Survey - 4

Business Employment Dynamics - 4

Standard Occupational Classification - 4

Ohio State University - 4

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Establishment Micro Properties - 4

WECD - 4

Supreme Court - 3

ASEC - 3

General Accounting Office - 3

Consumer Expenditure Survey - 3

Opportunity Atlas - 3

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National Opinion Research Center - 3

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SSA Numident - 3

Harvard Business School - 3

Department of Health and Human Services - 3

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Federal Reserve Board of Governors - 3

National Establishment Time Series - 3

Linear Probability Models - 3

Master Earnings File - 3

General Education Development - 3

TFPR - 3

Health and Retirement Study - 3

Center for Administrative Records Research - 3

National Health Interview Survey - 3

Arts, Entertainment - 3

Sample Edited Detail File - 3

Medical Expenditure Panel Survey - 3

Insurance Information Institute - 3

Electronic Data Interchange - 3

New England County Metropolitan - 3

Urban Institute - 3

Schools Under Registration Review - 3

John M. Abowd - 30

Lars Vilhuber - 19

Peter Schott - 17

Kevin L. McKinney - 17

Lucia Foster - 14

Andrew Bernard - 14

Stephen Redding - 13

John Haltiwanger - 13

William Kerr - 11

Julia I. Lane - 9

Richard Burkhauser - 9

J. Bradford Jensen - 9

Catherine Buffington - 8

Nicholas Bloom - 8

Ron Jarmin - 8

Jeff Larrimore - 8

Nathan Goldschlag - 7

Ian M. Schmutte - 7

Javier Miranda - 6

Steven J. Davis - 6

Scott Ohlmacher - 6

Cheryl Grim - 6

Thomas Kemeny - 6

Abigail Cooke - 6

Shuaizhang Feng - 6

Wayne B Gray - 6

Paul A. Lengermann - 6

Erik Brynjolfsson - 5

Nikolas Zolas - 5

Jerome P. Reiter - 5

Joshua Drucker - 5

Ronald J Shadbegian - 5

Joseph Staudt - 4

Kristina McElheran - 4

Timothy R. Wojan - 4

Reed Walker - 4

Garrett Anstreicher - 4

J. David Brown - 4

John S. Earle - 4

Mee Jung Kim - 4

Kyung Min Lee - 4

Itay Saporta-Eksten - 4

Tania Babina - 4

Daniel Weinberg - 4

Rebecca Zarutskie - 4

Gordon M Phillips - 4

Edward Glaeser - 4

Simon Woodcock - 4

Chad Syverson - 4

Justin Pierce - 4

Stephen Jenkins - 4

James D Adams - 4

Nathaniel Hendren - 3

Zachary Kroff - 3

Richard Mansfield - 3

Sonya R. Porter - 3

Emin Dinlersoz - 3

James Tybout - 3

Mark J. Kutzbach - 3

James Davis - 3

Andrew S. Green - 3

Paige Ouimet - 3

John Van Reenen - 3

Kristin McCue - 3

Bruce Weinberg - 3

Francis Kramarz - 3

David L. Rigby - 3

Carolyn A. Liebler - 3

Fredrik Andersson - 3

Bryce Stephens - 3

Vojislav Maksimovic - 3

Charles Tolbert - 3

Troy Blanchard - 3

Thomas J Holmes - 3

Ali Hortacsu - 3

Yoonsoo Lee - 3

Edward Feser - 3

Timothy Dunne - 3

Timothy Bates - 3

Donald Siegel - 3

Frank R Lichtenberg - 3

econometric - 73

employ - 66

workforce - 66

production - 63

manufacturing - 62

industrial - 58

employed - 58

labor - 58

growth - 54

earnings - 54

innovation - 50

economist - 49

macroeconomic - 49

estimating - 49

employee - 49

investment - 47

survey - 47

market - 45

company - 45

expenditure - 44

recession - 44

sale - 39

statistical - 39

payroll - 39

entrepreneurship - 37

enterprise - 37

data - 36

export - 36

sector - 34

produce - 31

gdp - 30

revenue - 30

patent - 29

entrepreneur - 29

population - 29

technological - 29

agency - 29

endogeneity - 29

quarterly - 28

economically - 28

census bureau - 26

research - 26

report - 26

respondent - 25

worker - 25

demand - 24

salary - 24

researcher - 24

heterogeneity - 24

acquisition - 23

patenting - 23

metropolitan - 23

estimation - 22

finance - 22

ethnicity - 22

innovative - 22

organizational - 22

import - 22

entrepreneurial - 21

establishment - 21

immigrant - 21

merger - 20

minority - 20

microdata - 20

data census - 20

efficiency - 20

census research - 20

hiring - 19

earner - 19

venture - 19

manufacturer - 19

innovate - 19

exporter - 19

hispanic - 18

aggregate - 18

multinational - 18

employment growth - 18

analysis - 18

study - 18

invention - 17

technology - 17

factory - 17

economic census - 17

research census - 17

financial - 16

housing - 16

spillover - 16

disclosure - 16

ethnic - 16

geographically - 16

profit - 16

occupation - 16

employer household - 16

longitudinal - 16

regional - 16

statistician - 16

regulation - 16

inventory - 15

product - 15

unemployed - 15

incentive - 15

trend - 15

census data - 15

accounting - 14

neighborhood - 14

poverty - 14

residence - 14

rent - 14

datasets - 14

employing - 14

immigration - 14

econometrician - 14

tariff - 14

segregation - 13

disparity - 13

corporation - 13

productivity growth - 13

depreciation - 13

trading - 13

record - 13

emission - 13

pollution - 13

resident - 13

cost - 13

employment statistics - 13

employee data - 13

workplace - 13

innovating - 12

earn - 12

disadvantaged - 12

race - 12

investor - 12

profitability - 12

innovator - 12

confidentiality - 12

leverage - 12

socioeconomic - 12

migrant - 12

longitudinal employer - 12

employment dynamics - 12

monopolistic - 12

industry productivity - 12

corporate - 12

specialization - 11

estimator - 11

average - 11

racial - 11

productive - 11

international trade - 11

job - 11

custom - 11

privacy - 11

environmental - 11

endogenous - 11

price - 11

census employment - 11

subsidiary - 11

percentile - 11

database - 11

epa - 11

regulatory - 11

region - 11

debt - 10

invest - 10

development - 10

exporting - 10

importer - 10

pollutant - 10

tax - 10

residential - 10

state - 10

pricing - 10

competitor - 10

native - 10

financing - 10

bankruptcy - 10

incorporated - 10

shipment - 10

employment estimates - 10

imputation - 10

labor statistics - 10

tenure - 10

proprietorship - 10

aging - 10

developed - 9

exogeneity - 9

employment earnings - 9

discrimination - 9

wholesale - 9

migration - 9

black - 9

regional economic - 9

polluting - 9

capital - 9

area - 9

regression - 9

loan - 8

midwest - 8

relocation - 8

firm innovation - 8

innovation productivity - 8

stock - 8

strategic - 8

foreign - 8

firms export - 8

hire - 8

firms trade - 8

geographic - 8

producing - 8

founder - 8

workers earnings - 8

layoff - 8

rural - 8

diversification - 8

welfare - 8

compensation - 8

consumer - 8

exported - 8

mexican - 8

management - 8

estimates employment - 8

information - 8

takeover - 8

statistical agencies - 8

patented - 7

innovation patenting - 7

institutional - 7

segregated - 7

survey data - 7

ssa - 7

renter - 7

investing - 7

prospect - 7

firm patenting - 7

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public - 7

publicly - 7

ownership - 7

acquirer - 7

enrollment - 7

city - 7

bias - 7

refugee - 7

commodity - 7

good - 7

funding - 7

latino - 7

employment count - 7

migrating - 7

labor markets - 7

earnings age - 7

impact - 7

censuses surveys - 7

importing - 7

managerial - 7

yearly - 7

mobility - 7

turnover - 7

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manager - 7

externality - 7

environmental regulation - 7

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estimates productivity - 7

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bank - 6

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firms patents - 6

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globalization - 6

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work census - 6

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retirement - 6

disability - 6

trade models - 6

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census survey - 6

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reporting - 6

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sample - 5

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analysis productivity - 3

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Viewing papers 81 through 90 of 334


  • Working Paper

    Occupational Classifications: A Machine Learning Approach

    August 2018

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-18-37

    Characterizing the work that people do on their jobs is a longstanding and core issue in labor economics. Traditionally, classification has been done manually. If it were possible to combine new computational tools and administrative wage records to generate an automated crosswalk between job titles and occupations, millions of dollars could be saved in labor costs, data processing could be sped up, data could become more consistent, and it might be possible to generate, without a lag, current information about the changing occupational composition of the labor market. This paper examines the potential to assign occupations to job titles contained in administrative data using automated, machine-learning approaches. We use a new extraordinarily rich and detailed set of data on transactional HR records of large firms (universities) in a relatively narrowly defined industry (public institutions of higher education) to identify the potential for machine-learning approaches to classify occupations.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Firm Leverage, Labor Market Size, and Employee Pay

    August 2018

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-18-36

    We provide new estimates of the wage costs of firms' debt using an empirical approach that exploits within-firm geographical variation in workers' expected unemployment costs due to variation in local labor market in a large sample of public firms. We find that, following an increase in firm leverage, workers with higher unemployment costs experience higher wage growth relative to workers at the same firm with lower unemployment costs. Overall, our estimates suggest wage costs are an important component in the overall cost of debt, but are not as large as implied by estimates based on ex post employee wage losses due to bankruptcy; we estimate that a 10 percentage point increase in firm leverage increases wage compensation for the median worker by 1.9% and total firm wage costs by 17 basis points of firm value.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    An Economic Analysis of Privacy Protection and Statistical Accuracy as Social Choices

    August 2018

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-18-35

    Statistical agencies face a dual mandate to publish accurate statistics while protecting respondent privacy. Increasing privacy protection requires decreased accuracy. Recognizing this as a resource allocation problem, we propose an economic solution: operate where the marginal cost of increasing privacy equals the marginal benefit. Our model of production, from computer science, assumes data are published using an efficient differentially private algorithm. Optimal choice weighs the demand for accurate statistics against the demand for privacy. Examples from U.S. statistical programs show how our framework can guide decision-making. Further progress requires a better understanding of willingness-to-pay for privacy and statistical accuracy.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Punctuated Entrepreneurship (Among Women)

    May 2018

    Authors: Matt Marx

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-18-26

    The gender gap in entrepreneurship may be explained in part by employee non-compete agreements. Exploiting exogenous state-level variation in non-compete policy, I find that women more strictly subject to non-competes are 11-17% more likely to start companies after their employers dissolve. This result is not explained by the incidence of non-competes or lawsuits; however, women face higher relative costs in defending against potential litigation and in returning to paid employment after abandoning their ventures. Thus entrepreneurship among women may be 'punctuated' in that would-be female founders are throttled by non-competes, their potential unleashed only by the failure of their employers.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Who are the people in my neighborhood? The 'contextual fallacy' of measuring individual context with census geographies

    February 2018

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-18-11

    Scholars deploy census-based measures of neighborhood context throughout the social sciences and epidemiology. Decades of research confirm that variation in how individuals are aggregated into geographic units to create variables that control for social, economic or political contexts can dramatically alter analyses. While most researchers are aware of the problem, they have lacked the tools to determine its magnitude in the literature and in their own projects. By using confidential access to the complete 2010 U.S. Decennial Census, we are able to construct'for all persons in the US'individual-specific contexts, which we group according to the Census-assigned block, block group, and tract. We compare these individual-specific measures to the published statistics at each scale, and we then determine the magnitude of variation in context for an individual with respect to the published measures using a simple statistic, the standard deviation of individual context (SDIC). For three key measures (percent Black, percent Hispanic, and Entropy'a measure of ethno-racial diversity), we find that block-level Census statistics frequently do not capture the actual context of individuals within them. More problematic, we uncover systematic spatial patterns in the contextual variables at all three scales. Finally, we show that within-unit variation is greater in some parts of the country than in others. We publish county-level estimates of the SDIC statistics that enable scholars to assess whether mis-specification in context variables is likely to alter analytic findings when measured at any of the three common Census units.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Aggregating From Micro to Macro Patterns of Trade

    February 2018

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-18-10

    We develop a new framework for aggregating from micro to macro patterns of trade. We derive price indexes that determine comparative advantage across countries and sectors and the aggregate cost of living. If firms and products are imperfect substitutes, we show that these price indexes depend on variety, average demand/quality and the dispersion of demand/quality-adjusted prices, and are only weakly related to standard empirical measures of average prices, thereby providing insight for elasticity puzzles. Of the cross-section (time-series) variation in comparative advantage, 50 (90) percent is accounted for by variety and average demand/quality, with average prices contributing less than 10 percent.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Innovation, Productivity Dispersion, and Productivity Growth

    February 2018

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-18-08

    We examine whether underlying industry innovation dynamics are an important driver of the large dispersion in productivity across firms within narrowly defined sectors. Our hypothesis is that periods of rapid innovation are accompanied by high rates of entry, significant experimentation and, in turn, a high degree of productivity dispersion. Following this experimentation phase, successful innovators and adopters grow while unsuccessful innovators contract and exit yielding productivity growth. We examine the dynamic relationship between entry, productivity dispersion, and productivity growth using a new comprehensive firm-level dataset for the U.S. We find a surge of entry within an industry yields an immediate increase in productivity dispersion and a lagged increase in productivity growth. These patterns are more pronounced for the High Tech sector where we expect there to be more innovative activities. These patterns change over time suggesting other forces are at work during the post-2000 slowdown in aggregate productivity.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Disclosure Limitation and Confidentiality Protection in Linked Data

    January 2018

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-18-07

    Confidentiality protection for linked administrative data is a combination of access modalities and statistical disclosure limitation. We review traditional statistical disclosure limitation methods and newer methods based on synthetic data, input noise infusion and formal privacy. We discuss how these methods are integrated with access modalities by providing three detailed examples. The first example is the linkages in the Health and Retirement Study to Social Security Administration data. The second example is the linkage of the Survey of Income and Program Participation to administrative data from the Internal Revenue Service and the Social Security Administration. The third example is the Longitudinal Employer-Household Dynamics data, which links state unemployment insurance records for workers and firms to a wide variety of censuses and surveys at the U.S. Census Bureau. For examples, we discuss access modalities, disclosure limitation methods, the effectiveness of those methods, and the resulting analytical validity. The final sections discuss recent advances in access modalities for linked administrative data.
    View Full Paper PDF
  • Working Paper

    Business Dynamic Statistics of Innovative Firms

    January 2017

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-72

    A key driver of economic growth is the reallocation of resources from low to high productivity activities. Innovation plays an important role in this regard by introducing new products, services, and business methods that ultimately lead to increased productivity and rising living standards. Traditional measures of innovation, particularly those based on aggregate inputs, are increasingly unable to capture the breadth and depth of innovation in modern economies. In this paper, we describe an effort at the US Census Bureau, the Business Dynamics Statistics of Innovative Firms (BDS-IF) project, which aims to address these challenges by extending the Business Dynamics Statistics data to include new measures of innovative activity. The BDS-IF project will produce measures of firm, establishment, and employment flows by firm age, firm size, and industry for the subset of firms engaged in activities related to innovation. These activities include patenting and trademarking, the employment of STEM workers, and R&D expenditures. The exibility of the underlying data infrastructure allows this measurement agenda to be extended to include copyright activity, management practices, and high growth firms.
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  • Working Paper

    Total Error and Variability Measures with Integrated Disclosure Limitation for Quarterly Workforce Indicators and LEHD Origin Destination Employment Statistics in On The Map

    January 2017

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-17-71

    We report results from the rst comprehensive total quality evaluation of five major indicators in the U.S. Census Bureau's Longitudinal Employer-Household Dynamics (LEHD) Program Quarterly Workforce Indicators (QWI): total employment, beginning-of-quarter employment, full-quarter employment, total payroll, and average monthly earnings of full-quarter employees. Beginning-of-quarter employment is also the main tabulation variable in the LEHD Origin-Destination Employment Statistics (LODES) workplace reports as displayed in OnTheMap (OTM). The evaluation is conducted by generating multiple threads of the edit and imputation models used in the LEHD Infrastructure File System. These threads conform to the Rubin (1987) multiple imputation model, with each thread or implicate being the output of formal probability models that address coverage, edit, and imputation errors. Design-based sampling variability and nite population corrections are also included in the evaluation. We derive special formulas for the Rubin total variability and its components that are consistent with the disclosure avoidance system used for QWI and LODES/OTM workplace reports. These formulas allow us to publish the complete set of detailed total quality measures for QWI and LODES. The analysis reveals that the five publication variables under study are estimated very accurately for tabulations involving at least 10 jobs. Tabulations involving three to nine jobs have quality in the range generally deemed acceptable. Tabulations involving zero, one or two jobs, which are generally suppressed in the QWI and synthesized in LODES, have substantial total variability but their publication in LODES allows the formation of larger custom aggregations, which will in general have the accuracy estimated for tabulations in the QWI based on a similar number of workers.
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