From U.S. Census Bureau <[email protected]>
Subject New Economic and Social Science Research Published in the CES Working Paper Series
Date July 16, 2024 8:46 PM
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In the second quarter of 2024, 17 working papers were published by the?Center for Economic Studies.





United States Census Bureau [ [link removed] ]





New Economic and Social Science Research Published in the CES Working Paper Series

Magnifying Glass - Research [ [link removed] ]

Seventeen working papers were published by the Center for Economic Studies (CES) [ [link removed] ] in the second quarter of 2024. The CES Working Paper Series [ [link removed] ] features research in economics and other social sciences by U.S. Census Bureau and?Federal Statistical Research Data Centers [ [link removed] ] researchers using restricted-use Census Bureau microdata:


* *The Impact of Immigration on Firms and Workers: Insights from the H-1B Lottery [ [link removed] ]*
Parag Mahajan, Nicolas Morales, Kevin Shih, Mingyu Chen, and Agostina Brinatti

* *After the Storm: How Emergency Liquidity Helps Small Businesses Following Natural Disasters [ [link removed] ]*
Benjamin Collier, Sabrina T. Howell, and Lea Rendell

* *Interpreting Cohort Profiles of Lifecycle Earnings Volatility [ [link removed] ]*
Richard Blundell, Christopher R. Bollinger, Charles Hokayem, and James P. Ziliak

* *Does Rapid Transit and Light Rail Infrastructure Improve Labor Market Outcomes? [ [link removed] ]*
Maysen Yen

* *Mobility, Opportunity, and Volatility Statistics (MOVS): Infrastructure Files and Public Use Data [ [link removed] ]*
Maggie R. Jones, Adam Bee, Amanda Eng, Kendall Houghton, Nikolas Pharris-Ciurej, Sonya R. Porter, Jonathan Rothbaum, and John Voorheis

* *U.S. Worker Mobility Across Establishments within Firms: Scope, Prevalence, and Effects on Worker Earnings [ [link removed] ]*
Jeronimo Carballo, Richard Mansfield, and Charles Adam Pfander

* *School Equalization in the Shadow of Jim Crow: Causes and Consequences of Resource Disparity in Mississippi circa 1940 [ [link removed] ]*
David Card, Leah Clark, Ciprian Domnisoru, and Lowell Taylor

* *Revisiting Methods to Assign Responses when Race and Hispanic Origin Reporting are Discrepant Across Administrative Records and Third Party Sources [ [link removed] ]*
James Noon

* *Gradient Boosting to Address Statistical Problems Arising from Non-Linkage of U.S. Census Bureau Datasets [ [link removed] ]*
Matthew Cefalu, John Sullivan, Narayan Sastry, Elizabeth Fussell, and Todd Gardner

* *How Big is Small? The Economic Effects of Access to Small Business Subsidies [ [link removed] ]*
J. David Brown, Matthew Denes, Ran Duchin, and John Hackney

* *Whose Neighborhood Now? Gentrification and Community Life in Low-Income Urban Neighborhoods [ [link removed] ]*
AJ Golio

* *Who Marries Whom? The Role of Segregation by Race and Class [ [link removed] ]*
Benjamin Goldman, Jamie Gracie, and Sonya R. Porter

* *Citizenship Question Effects on Household Survey Response [ [link removed] ]*
J. David Brown and Misty L. Heggeness

* *Measuring Income of the Aged in Household Surveys: Evidence from Linked Administrative Records [ [link removed] ]*
Adam Bee, Irena Dushi, Joshua Mitchell, and Brad Trenkamp

* *Urban-Biased Growth: A Macroeconomic Analysis [ [link removed] ]*
Fabian Eckert, Sharat Ganapati, and Conor Walsh

* *The Impact of Parental Resources on Human Capital Investment and Labor Market Outcomes: Evidence from the Great Recession [ [link removed] ]*
Jeremy Kirk

* *Payroll Tax Incidence: Evidence from Unemployment Insurance [ [link removed] ]*
Audrey Guo

Explore [ [link removed] ] the complete CES working paper series. Opinions and conclusions within these working papers are those of the authors and do not represent the views of the Census Bureau.

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