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Papers Containing Tag(s): 'Standard Statistical Establishment List'

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Frequently Occurring Concepts within this Search

Center for Economic Studies - 58

Longitudinal Business Database - 55

Standard Industrial Classification - 50

Internal Revenue Service - 42

North American Industry Classification System - 41

Annual Survey of Manufactures - 37

Business Register - 35

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 34

Employer Identification Numbers - 32

Longitudinal Research Database - 31

Metropolitan Statistical Area - 30

Census of Manufactures - 30

Ordinary Least Squares - 28

Economic Census - 24

National Science Foundation - 24

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 23

Service Annual Survey - 23

Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics - 23

National Bureau of Economic Research - 21

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 21

County Business Patterns - 19

Research Data Center - 19

Total Factor Productivity - 18

Current Population Survey - 17

Social Security Administration - 16

Census of Manufacturing Firms - 16

Decennial Census - 15

Permanent Plant Number - 15

Census Bureau Business Register - 13

Alfred P Sloan Foundation - 13

Disclosure Review Board - 12

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 11

Company Organization Survey - 11

Postal Service - 11

Cobb-Douglas - 11

Census Bureau Longitudinal Business Database - 11

Medical Expenditure Panel Survey - 11

Small Business Administration - 10

Social Security - 9

University of Maryland - 9

Special Sworn Status - 9

WECD - 9

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 8

Financial, Insurance and Real Estate Industries - 8

American Economic Association - 8

Cornell University - 8

Business Master File - 8

American Community Survey - 7

International Trade Research Report - 7

Center for Research in Security Prices - 7

Business Dynamics Statistics - 6

Protected Identification Key - 6

General Accounting Office - 6

Employment History File - 6

Employer Characteristics File - 6

New York University - 6

National Research Council - 6

Quarterly Workforce Indicators - 6

Federal Reserve Bank - 6

North American Industry Classi - 6

Initial Public Offering - 6

University of Chicago - 6

Business Register Bridge - 6

Environmental Protection Agency - 6

Survey of Income and Program Participation - 6

Consolidated Metropolitan Statistical Areas - 6

Office of Management and Budget - 5

Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages - 5

Master Address File - 5

Individual Characteristics File - 5

Business Employment Dynamics - 5

Public Administration - 5

Securities and Exchange Commission - 5

Review of Economics and Statistics - 5

American Economic Review - 5

Social Security Number - 5

American Housing Survey - 5

Core Based Statistical Area - 5

Geographic Information Systems - 5

Establishment Micro Properties - 5

Characteristics of Business Owners - 5

Department of Commerce - 5

Unemployment Insurance - 5

Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality - 5

Census Bureau Center for Economic Studies - 5

Department of Labor - 5

National Establishment Time Series - 4

Harmonized System - 4

Housing and Urban Development - 4

Department of Housing and Urban Development - 4

Survey of Industrial Research and Development - 4

Federal Reserve System - 4

Retail Trade - 4

Generalized Method of Moments - 4

Longitudinal Firm Trade Transactions Database - 4

University of Toronto - 4

New York Times - 4

National Institute on Aging - 4

Duke University - 4

Labor Productivity - 4

Sample Edited Detail File - 4

Census of Services - 4

National Income and Product Accounts - 4

Auxiliary Establishment Survey - 4

American Statistical Association - 4

National Employer Survey - 4

Patent and Trademark Office - 3

Yale University - 3

Business R&D and Innovation Survey - 3

CAAA - 3

Department of Agriculture - 3

Integrated Longitudinal Business Database - 3

Securities Data Company - 3

Herfindahl Hirschman Index - 3

Limited Liability Company - 3

University of Michigan - 3

Department of Defense - 3

Journal of Labor Economics - 3

Sloan Foundation - 3

Composite Person Record - 3

Local Employment Dynamics - 3

Office of Personnel Management - 3

Probability Density Function - 3

Wholesale Trade - 3

Statistics Canada - 3

State Energy Data System - 3

Michigan Institute for Teaching and Research in Economics - 3

Business Services - 3

Department of Energy - 3

National Ambient Air Quality Standards - 3

CDF - 3

National Longitudinal Survey of Youth - 3

University of California Los Angeles - 3

World Bank - 3

Journal of Economic Literature - 3

Computer Assisted Telephone Interviews and Computer Assisted Personal Interviews - 3

Survey of Manufacturing Technology - 3

manufacturing - 24

workforce - 24

econometric - 24

company - 23

employed - 23

establishment - 23

employ - 22

enterprise - 22

payroll - 21

employee - 19

economist - 18

production - 18

labor - 17

expenditure - 17

recession - 16

sector - 16

gdp - 16

industrial - 15

economic census - 15

agency - 14

market - 14

census data - 13

survey - 13

manufacturer - 13

macroeconomic - 13

sale - 13

growth - 12

incorporated - 12

worker - 12

data census - 11

earnings - 11

acquisition - 11

revenue - 11

organizational - 11

population - 10

census bureau - 10

venture - 10

endogeneity - 10

economically - 10

spillover - 10

workplace - 10

respondent - 9

innovation - 9

estimating - 9

metropolitan - 9

investment - 9

data - 9

quarterly - 9

corporate - 9

information census - 8

inventory - 8

report - 8

employment data - 8

merger - 8

finance - 8

residential - 8

export - 7

statistical - 7

patent - 7

accounting - 7

hiring - 7

estimation - 7

entrepreneurship - 7

establishments data - 7

econometrician - 7

corporation - 7

incentive - 7

job - 6

study - 6

patenting - 6

rent - 6

regulation - 6

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profit - 6

produce - 6

geographically - 6

longitudinal - 6

census years - 6

competitiveness - 6

opportunity - 6

entrepreneurial - 6

entrepreneur - 6

diversification - 6

proprietorship - 6

microdata - 6

department - 6

aggregate - 6

housing - 6

neighborhood - 6

occupation - 5

technology - 5

research - 5

discrimination - 5

plants industry - 5

rural - 5

innovative - 5

work census - 5

database - 5

business data - 5

census use - 5

investor - 5

bankruptcy - 5

layoff - 5

research census - 5

proprietor - 5

census business - 5

efficiency - 5

pollution - 5

epa - 5

salary - 5

conglomerate - 5

impact - 5

resident - 5

productivity growth - 5

productivity measures - 5

use census - 4

census employment - 4

disclosure - 4

innovator - 4

firms patents - 4

patented - 4

manager - 4

exporter - 4

bias - 4

cost - 4

firms plants - 4

regional - 4

area - 4

agriculture - 4

businesses census - 4

record - 4

acquirer - 4

stock - 4

ownership - 4

investing - 4

leverage - 4

invest - 4

corp - 4

matching - 4

census research - 4

census file - 4

censuses surveys - 4

employee data - 4

volatility - 4

restructuring - 4

census survey - 4

capital - 4

diversified - 4

prospect - 4

diversify - 4

emission - 4

environmental - 4

pollutant - 4

polluting - 4

partnership - 4

profitability - 4

insurance - 4

compensation - 4

financing - 4

productive - 4

firms census - 4

urban - 4

warehouse - 4

researcher - 4

union - 4

wages productivity - 4

locality - 4

import - 3

warehousing - 3

outsourced - 3

invention - 3

innovate - 3

patents firms - 3

employment estimates - 3

pension - 3

factory - 3

depreciation - 3

share - 3

location - 3

externality - 3

econometrically - 3

country - 3

observed productivity - 3

local economic - 3

trend - 3

firm innovation - 3

indian - 3

takeover - 3

equity - 3

shareholder - 3

state - 3

matched - 3

identifier - 3

turnover - 3

fluctuation - 3

datasets - 3

linked census - 3

employment dynamics - 3

employer household - 3

longitudinal employer - 3

shock - 3

irs - 3

exported - 3

coverage - 3

premium - 3

insurance coverage - 3

financial - 3

exporting - 3

plants firms - 3

residence - 3

expense - 3

analysis - 3

labor productivity - 3

employing - 3

city - 3

manufacturing plants - 3

efficient - 3

worker wages - 3

wage effects - 3

wage regressions - 3

relocation - 3

estimates productivity - 3

citizen - 3

agricultural - 3

performance - 3

Viewing papers 1 through 10 of 104


  • Working Paper

    The China Shock Revisited: Job Reallocation and Industry Switching in U.S. Labor Markets

    October 2024

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-65

    Using confidential administrative data from the U.S. Census Bureau we revisit how the rise in Chinese import penetration has reshaped U.S. local labor markets. Local labor markets more exposed to the China shock experienced larger reallocation from manufacturing to services jobs. Most of this reallocation occurred within firms that simultaneously contracted manufacturing operations while expanding employment in services. Notably, about 40% of the manufacturing job loss effect is due to continuing establishments switching their primary activity from manufacturing to trade-related services such as research, management, and wholesale. The effects of Chinese import penetration vary by local labor market characteristics. In areas with high human capital, including much of the West Coast and large cities, job reallocation from manufacturing to services has been substantial. In areas with low human capital and a high initial manufacturing share, including much of the Midwest and the South, we find limited job reallocation. We estimate this differential response to the China shock accounts for half of the 1997-2007 job growth gap between these regions.
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  • Working Paper

    Incorporating Administrative Data in Survey Weights for the Basic Monthly Current Population Survey

    January 2024

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-24-02

    Response rates to the Current Population Survey (CPS) have declined over time, raising the potential for nonresponse bias in key population statistics. A potential solution is to leverage administrative data from government agencies and third-party data providers when constructing survey weights. In this paper, we take two approaches. First, we use administrative data to build a non-parametric nonresponse adjustment step while leaving the calibration to population estimates unchanged. Second, we use administratively linked data in the calibration process, matching income data from the Internal Return Service and state agencies, demographic data from the Social Security Administration and the decennial census, and industry data from the Census Bureau's Business Register to both responding and nonresponding households. We use the matched data in the household nonresponse adjustment of the CPS weighting algorithm, which changes the weights of respondents to account for differential nonresponse rates among subpopulations. After running the experimental weighting algorithm, we compare estimates of the unemployment rate and labor force participation rate between the experimental weights and the production weights. Before March 2020, estimates of the labor force participation rates using the experimental weights are 0.2 percentage points higher than the original estimates, with minimal effect on unemployment rate. After March 2020, the new labor force participation rates are similar, but the unemployment rate is about 0.2 percentage points higher in some months during the height of COVID-related interviewing restrictions. These results are suggestive that if there is any nonresponse bias present in the CPS, the magnitude is comparable to the typical margin of error of the unemployment rate estimate. Additionally, the results are overall similar across demographic groups and states, as well as using alternative weighting methodology. Finally, we discuss how our estimates compare to those from earlier papers that calculate estimates of bias in key CPS labor force statistics. This paper is for research purposes only. No changes to production are being implemented at this time.
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  • Working Paper

    Patents, Innovation, and Market Entry

    September 2023

    Authors: Dominik Jurek

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-23-45

    Do patents facilitate market entry and job creation? Using a 2014 Supreme Court decision that limited patent eligibility and natural language processing methods to identify invalid patents, I find that large treated firms reduce job creation and create fewer new establishments in response, with no effect on new firm entry. Moreover, companies shift toward innovation aimed at improving existing products consistent with the view that patents incentivize creative destruction.
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  • Working Paper

    Eclipse of Rent-Sharing: The Effects of Managers' Business Education on Wages and the Labor Share in the US and Denmark

    December 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-58

    This paper provides evidence from the US and Denmark that managers with a business degree ('business managers") reduce their employees' wages. Within five years of the appointment of a business manager, wages decline by 6% and the labor share by 5 percentage points in the US, and by 3% and 3 percentage points in Denmark. Firms appointing business managers are not on differential trends and do not enjoy higher output, investment, or employment growth thereafter. Using manager retirements and deaths and an IV strategy based on the diffusion of the practice of appointing business managers within industry, region and size quartile cells, we provide additional evidence that these are causal effects. We establish that the proximate cause of these (relative) wage effects are changes in rent-sharing practices following the appointment of business managers. Exploiting exogenous export demand shocks, we show that non-business managers share profits with their workers, whereas business managers do not. But consistent with our first set of results, these business managers show no greater ability to increase sales or profits in response to exporting opportunities. Finally, we use the influence of role models on college major choice to instrument for the decision to enroll in a business degree in Denmark and show that our estimates correspond to causal effects of practices and values acquired in business education--rather than the differential selection into business education of individuals unlikely to share rents with workers.
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  • Working Paper

    Is Affirmative Action in Employment Still Effective in the 21st Century?

    November 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-54

    We study Executive Order 11246, an employment-based affirmative action policy tar geted at firms holding contracts with the federal government. We find this policy to be in effective in the 21st century, contrary to the positive effects found in the late 1900s (Miller, 2017). Our novel dataset combines data on federal contract acquisition and enforcement with US linked employer-employee Census data 2000'2014. We employ an event study around firms' acquiring a contract, based on Miller (2017), and find the policy had no ef fect on employment shares or on hiring, for any minority group. Next, we isolate the impact of the affirmative action plan, which is EO 11246's preeminent requirement that applies to firms with contracts over $50,000. Leveraging variation from this threshold in an event study and regression discontinuity design, we find similarly null effects. Last, we show that even randomized audits are not effective, suggesting weak enforcement. Our results highlight the importance of the recent budget increase for the enforcement agency, as well as recent policies enacted to improve compliance
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  • Working Paper

    Grouped Variation in Factor Shares: An Application to Misallocation

    August 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-33

    A striking feature of micro-level plant data is the presence of significant variation in factor cost shares across plants within an industry. We develop a methodology to decompose cost shares into idiosyncratic and group-specific components. In particular, we carry out a cluster analysis to recover the number and membership of groups using breaks in the dispersion of factor cost shares across plants. We apply our methodology to Chilean plant-level data and find that group-specific variation accounts for approximately one-third of the variation in factor shares across firms. We also study the implications ofthese groups in cost shares on the gains from eliminating misallocation. We place bounds on their importance and find that ignoring them can overstate the gains from eliminating misallocation by up to one-third.
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  • Working Paper

    Propagation and Amplification of Local Productivity Spillovers

    August 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-32

    This paper shows that local productivity spillovers can propagate throughout the economy through the plant-level networks of multi-region firms. Using confidential Census plant-level data, we find that large manufacturing plant openings not only raise the productivity of local plants but also of distant plants hundreds of miles away, which belong to multi-region firms that are exposed to the local productivity spillover through one of their plants. To quantify the significance of plant-level networks for the propagation and amplification of local productivity shocks, we develop and estimate a quantitative spatial model in which plants of multi-region firms are linked through shared knowledge. Counterfactual exercises show that while knowledge sharing through plant-level networks amplifies the aggregate effects of local productivity shocks, it can widen economic disparities between workers and regions in the economy.
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  • Working Paper

    Agglomeration Spillovers and Persistence: New Evidence from Large Plant Openings

    June 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-21

    We use confidential Census microdata to compare outcomes for plants in counties that 'win' a new plant to plants in similar counties that did not to receive the new plant, providing empirical evidence on the economic theories used to justify local industrial policies. We find little evidence that the average highly incentivized large plant generates significant productivity spillovers. Our semiparametric estimates of the overall local agglomeration function indicate that residual TFP is linear for the range of 'agglomeration' densities most frequently observed, suggesting local economic shocks do not push local economies to a new higher equilibrium. Examining changes twenty years after the new plant entrant, we find some evidence of persistent, positive increases in winning county-manufacturing shares that are not driven by establishment births.
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  • Working Paper

    Has toughness of local competition declined?

    May 2022

    Authors: Lan Dinh

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-13

    Recent evidence on rm-level markups and concentration raises a concern that market competition has declined in the U.S. over the last few decades. Since measuring competition is difficult, methodologies used to arrive at these findings have merits but also raise technical concerns which question the validity of these results. Given the significance of documenting how competition has changed, I contribute to this literature by studying a different measure of competition. Specifically, I estimate the toughness of local competition over time. To derive this estimate, I use a generalized monopolistic competition model with variable markups. This model generates insights that allows me to measure competition as the sensitivity of weighted-average markup to changes in the number of competitors using directly observable variables. Compared to firm-level markups estimation, this method relaxes the need to estimate production functions. I then use confidential Census data to estimate toughness of local competition from 1997 to 2016, which shows that local competition has decreased in non-tradable industries on average in the U.S. during this time period.
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  • Working Paper

    Innovation and Appropriability: Revisiting the Role of Intellectual Property

    March 2022

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-22-09

    It is more than 25 years since the authors of the Yale and Carnegie surveys studied how firms seek to protect the rents from innovation. In this paper, we revisit that question using a nationally representative sample of firms over the period 2008-2015, with the goal of updating and extending a set of stylized facts that has been influential for our understanding of the economics of innovation. There are five main findings. First, while patenting firms are relatively uncommon in the economy, they account for an overwhelming share of R&D spending. Second, utility patents are considered less important than other forms of IP protection, like trade secrets, trademarks, and copyrights. Third, industry differences explain a great deal of the level of firms' engagement with IP, with high-tech firms on average being more active on all forms of IP. Fourth, we do not find any significant difference in the use of IP strategies across firms at different points of their life cycle. Lastly, unlike age, firms of different size appear to manage IP significantly differently. On average, larger firms tend to engage much more extensively in the protection of IP, and this pattern cannot be easily explained by differences in the type of R&D or innovation produced by a firm. We also discuss the implications of these findings for innovation research and policy.
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