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Papers Containing Tag(s): 'Federal Reserve System'

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Federal Reserve Bank - 49

North American Industry Classification System - 25

Longitudinal Business Database - 24

Center for Economic Studies - 23

Board of Governors - 22

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 22

Ordinary Least Squares - 21

National Bureau of Economic Research - 19

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 18

National Science Foundation - 17

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 16

Internal Revenue Service - 16

Annual Survey of Manufactures - 15

Total Factor Productivity - 14

County Business Patterns - 13

Current Population Survey - 13

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 12

Census of Manufactures - 12

Standard Industrial Classification - 11

Disclosure Review Board - 10

Business Dynamics Statistics - 9

Census Bureau Longitudinal Business Database - 9

Longitudinal Research Database - 9

Census of Manufacturing Firms - 8

Longitudinal Firm Trade Transactions Database - 8

Social Security Administration - 8

Economic Census - 8

Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago - 8

Kauffman Foundation - 8

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 7

Decennial Census - 7

Employer Identification Number - 7

Characteristics of Business Owners - 7

Special Sworn Status - 7

Department of Homeland Security - 6

Retail Trade - 6

Social Security Number - 6

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 6

Census Bureau Business Register - 6

Business Register - 6

National Income and Product Accounts - 6

Russell Sage Foundation - 6

Generalized Method of Moments - 5

Federal Reserve Board of Governors - 5

American Community Survey - 5

Protected Identification Key - 5

Yale University - 5

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 5

Harmonized System - 5

Customs and Border Protection - 5

Michigan Institute for Data Science - 5

Journal of Economic Literature - 5

Quarterly Workforce Indicators - 5

Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages - 5

Survey of Income and Program Participation - 5

Department of Agriculture - 5

PSID - 5

Cobb-Douglas - 5

Department of Housing and Urban Development - 4

Wholesale Trade - 4

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development - 4

University of Chicago - 4

Department of Economics - 4

Technical Services - 4

Arts, Entertainment - 4

American Economic Association - 4

Educational Services - 4

Public Administration - 4

University of Michigan - 4

Metropolitan Statistical Area - 4

Financial, Insurance and Real Estate Industries - 4

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 4

Service Annual Survey - 4

University of Minnesota - 4

World Bank - 4

UC Berkeley - 4

NBER Summer Institute - 3

Adjusted Gross Income - 3

Boston College - 3

Quarterly Journal of Economics - 3

Postal Service - 3

2020 Census - 3

Journal of Econometrics - 3

Census Bureau Center for Economic Studies - 3

Sloan Foundation - 3

Accommodation and Food Services - 3

Herfindahl Hirschman Index - 3

National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics - 3

New York University - 3

Survey of Business Owners - 3

International Trade Commission - 3

Retirement History Survey - 3

Business Employment Dynamics - 3

Health Care and Social Assistance - 3

National Center for Health Statistics - 3

Social Security - 3

Information and Communication Technology Survey - 3

Permanent Plant Number - 3

University of Maryland - 3

Auxiliary Establishment Survey - 3

Fabricated Metal Products - 3

recession - 22

macroeconomic - 19

employed - 18

market - 16

growth - 15

econometric - 15

manufacturing - 15

production - 14

labor - 14

export - 14

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sector - 13

entrepreneurship - 13

sale - 12

entrepreneur - 12

economist - 11

estimating - 11

demand - 10

expenditure - 10

exporter - 10

investment - 10

revenue - 9

earnings - 9

federal - 9

financial - 9

enterprise - 9

proprietorship - 9

produce - 9

economically - 8

workforce - 8

household - 8

finance - 8

entrepreneurial - 8

gdp - 7

import - 7

exporting - 7

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quarterly - 7

establishment - 7

industrial - 7

employment growth - 6

shipment - 6

trading - 6

importer - 6

profit - 6

estimation - 6

declining - 6

venture - 6

aggregate - 5

supplier - 5

imported - 5

agency - 5

job - 5

disparity - 5

relocation - 5

commodity - 5

stock - 5

endogeneity - 5

employment dynamics - 5

custom - 5

ownership - 5

owned businesses - 5

characteristics businesses - 5

importing - 4

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export market - 4

payroll - 4

worker - 4

minority - 4

population - 4

disadvantaged - 4

disclosure - 4

heterogeneity - 4

bank - 4

invest - 4

monopolistic - 4

trends employment - 4

data census - 4

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wholesale - 4

decline - 4

company - 4

startup - 4

corporate - 4

geographically - 4

plant employment - 4

layoff - 4

capital - 4

monopolistically - 3

endogenous - 3

spillover - 3

aggregation - 3

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outsourcing - 3

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discrimination - 3

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consumption - 3

regional - 3

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report - 3

census employment - 3

foreign - 3

black - 3

hiring - 3

shift - 3

microdata - 3

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census bureau - 3

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rural - 3

economic census - 3

indian - 3

leverage - 3

firms grow - 3

recessionary - 3

firm dynamics - 3

geography - 3

international trade - 3

acquisition - 3

wealth - 3

plants industries - 3

migrant - 3

industries estimate - 3

organizational - 3

plant industry - 3

depreciation - 3

location - 3

corporation - 3

owner - 3

business owners - 3

technology - 3

Viewing papers 1 through 10 of 72


  • Working Paper

    Entry Costs Rise with Growth

    October 2024

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-63

    Over time and across states in the U.S., the number of firms is more closely tied to overall employment than to output per worker. In many models of firm dynamics, trade, and growth with a free entry condition, these facts imply that the costs of creating a new firm increase sharply with productivity growth. This increase in entry costs can stem from the rising cost of labor used in entry and weak or negative knowledge spillovers from prior entry. Our findings suggest that productivity-enhancing policies will not induce firm entry, thereby limiting the total impact of such policies on welfare.
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  • 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

    Outsourcing Dynamism

    December 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-64

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

    Granular Income Inequality and Mobility using IDDA: Exploring Patterns across Race and Ethnicity

    November 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-55

    Shifting earnings inequality among U.S. workers over the last five decades has been widely stud ied, but understanding how these shifts evolve across smaller groups has been difficult. Publicly available data sources typically only ensure representative data at high levels of aggregation, so they obscure many details of earnings distributions for smaller populations. We define and construct a set of granular statistics describing income distributions, income mobility and con ditional income growth for a large number of subnational groups in the U.S. for a two-decade period (1998-2019). In this paper, we use the resulting data to explore the evolution of income inequality and mobility for detailed groups defined by race and ethnicity. We find that patterns identified from the universe of tax filers and W-2 recipients that we observe differ in important ways from those that one might identify in public sources. The full set of statistics that we construct is available publicly as the Income Distributions and Dynamics in America, or IDDA, data set.
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  • Working Paper

    Antitrust Enforcement Increases Economic Activity

    October 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-50

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

    Eviction and Poverty in American Cities

    July 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-37

    More than two million U.S. households have an eviction case filed against them each year. Policymakers at the federal, state, and local levels are increasingly pursuing policies to reduce the number of evictions, citing harm to tenants and high public expenditures related to homelessness. We study the consequences of eviction for tenants using newly linked administrative data from two major urban areas: Cook County (which includes Chicago) and New York City. We document that prior to housing court, tenants experience declines in earnings and employment and increases in financial distress and hospital visits. These pre-trends pose a challenge for disentangling correlation and causation. To address this problem, we use an instrumental variables approach based on cases randomly assigned to judges of varying leniency. We find that an eviction order increases homelessness and hospital visits and reduces earnings, durable goods consumption, and access to credit in the first two years. Effects on housing and labor market outcomes are driven by impacts for female and Black tenants. In the longer-run, eviction increases indebtedness and reduces credit scores.
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  • Working Paper

    Who's Most Exposed to International Shocks? Estimating Differences in Import Price Sensitivity across U.S. Demographic Groups

    March 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-13R

    Differences in consumption patterns across demographic groups mean that international price shocks differentially affect such groups. We construct import price indexes for U.S. households that vary by age, race, marital status, education, and urban status. Black households and urban households experienced significantly higher import price inflation from 1996-2018 compared to other groups, such as white households and rural households. Sensitivity to international price shocks varies widely, implying movements in exchange rates and foreign prices, both during our sample and during the Covid-19 pandemic, drove sizable differences in import price inflation ' and total inflation ' across households.
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  • Working Paper

    Re-examining Regional Income Convergence: A Distributional Approach

    February 2023

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-05

    We re-examine recent trends in regional income convergence, considering the full distribution of income rather than focusing on the mean. Measuring similarity by comparing each percentile of state distributions to the corresponding percentile of the national distribution, we find that state incomes have become less similar (i.e. they have diverged) within the top 20 percent of the income distribution since 1969. The top percentile alone accounts for more than half of aggregate divergence across states over this period by our measure, and the top five percentiles combine to account for 93 percent. Divergence in top incomes across states appears to be driven largely by changes in top incomes among White people, while top incomes among Black people have experienced relatively little divergence.
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  • Working Paper

    The Long-run Effects of the 1930s Redlining Maps on Children

    December 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-56

    We estimate the long-run effects of the 1930s Home Owners Loan Corporation (HOLC) redlining maps by linking children in the full count 1940 Census to 1) the universe of IRS tax data in 1974 and 1979 and 2) the long form 2000 Census. We use two identification strategies to estimate the potential long-run effects of differential access to credit along HOLC boundaries. The first strategy compares cross-boundary differences along HOLC boundaries to a comparison group of boundaries that had statistically similar pre-existing differences as the actual boundaries. A second approach only uses boundaries that were least likely to have been chosen by the HOLC based on our statistical model. We find that children living on the lower-graded side of HOLC boundaries had significantly lower levels of educational attainment, reduced income in adulthood, and lived in neighborhoods during adulthood characterized by lower educational attainment, higher poverty rates, and higher rates of single-headed households.
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  • Working Paper

    Investment and Subjective Uncertainty

    November 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-52

    A longstanding challenge in evaluating the impact of uncertainty on investment is obtaining measures of managers' subjective uncertainty. We address this challenge by using a detailed new survey measure of subjective uncertainty collected by the U.S. Census Bureau for approximately 25,000 manufacturing plants. We find three key results. First, investment is strongly and robustly negatively associated with higher uncertainty, with a two standard deviation increase in uncertainty associated with about a 6% reduction in investment. Second, uncertainty is also negatively related to employment growth and overall shipments (sales) growth, which highlights the damaging impact of uncertainty on firm growth. Third, flexible inputs like rental capital and temporary workers show a positive relationship to uncertainty, demonstrating that businesses switch from less flexible to more flexible factor inputs at higher levels of uncertainty.
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