May 4, 2007 Report Briefing Panel on Measuring Business Formation, Business Dynamics, and Performance Sponsored by the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Entrepreneurship Indicators Project Developing International Data on Entrepreneurship, Entrepreneurs and Entrepreneurial Firms Tim Davis OECD Statistics.
Advertisements

Statistics NZs experience in using Administrative Data in an Integrated Programme of Economic Vince Galvin General Manager Strategy & Communications.
1 Business Dynamics Statistics JAVIER MIRANDA Center for Economic Studies US Census Bureau NJSDC June 2, 2009.
Input Data Warehousing Canada’s Experience with Establishment Level Information Presentation to the Third International Conference on Establishment Statistics.
Production of Statistics on Informal Sector Employment and Informal Employment in Namibia By Panduleni C Kali.
What are Wage Records? Wage records are an administrative database used to calculate Unemployment Insurance benefits for employees who have been laid-off.
New Zealand’s International Trade Towards an integrated approach February 2011.
© John M. Abowd 2005, all rights reserved Sampling Frame Maintenance John M. Abowd February 2005.
© John M. Abowd 2005, all rights reserved Statistical Programs of the Federal Government John M. Abowd February 2005.
Fully Leverage External Data Sources: A Census Bureau Change Principle Amy O’Hara, U.S. Census Bureau Washington Statistical Society Seminar on Administrative.
Enhancing U.S. Statistics on Trade in Services Maria Borga U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis September 14, 2010.
© John M. Abowd 2005, all rights reserved Economic Surveys John M. Abowd March 2005.
Profile of US Data Sources on Entrepreneurship Richard Clayton and Jim Spletzer US Bureau of Labor Statistics OECD Entrepreneurship Indicators Steering.
1 Potential New Content and Structures for the U.S. Census Bureau’s Business Register Shirin A. Ahmed and Eddie J. Salyers U.S. Census Bureau United States.
INFO 4470/ILRLE 4470 Register-based statistics by example: County Business Patterns John M. Abowd and Lars Vilhuber February 14, 2011.
State Data Center Annual Affiliate Meeting New York State Department of Labor Earlene Dowell LEHD Program Center for Economic Studies U.S. Census Bureau.
1 The Business Register: Introduction and Overview Ronald H. Lee
Use of administrative data in statistics - challenges and opportunities ICES III End Panel Discussion Montreal, June 2007 Heli Jeskanen-Sundström Statistics.
Improvements in the BLS Business Register Richard Clayton David Talan 12th Meeting of the Group of Experts on Business Registers Paris, France September.
New Census Bureau Data for Entrepreneurship Research Ron S Jarmin US Census Bureau OECD November 19, 2007 This report is released to inform interested.
1 Constructing and Maintaining a Business Register: Singapore’s Experience By Ong Lai Heng Singapore Department of Statistics International Workshop on.
Data Sharing to Reduce Respondent Burden for the U.S. Census Bureau’s Business Register Presented to 12 th Meeting of the Group of Experts on Business.
Labor Market Information in the Americas: the United States Workshop On Labor Migration and Labor Market Information Systems Inter-American Network for.
Bureau of Labor Statistics Timely Statistics on SMEs and Entrepreneurs in the U.S. Labor Market James R. Spletzer U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics October.
Place Slide Title Text Here ©2013 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved. 6-1 ©2013 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved. JOHN R. SCHERMERHORN,
Improving Economic Data through Data Synchronization Presentation for APDU September 25, 2009 Adrienne Pilot
Managing Your Grant Roberta Teliska Vice President for Sponsored Programs Operations The Research Foundation of SUNY October 6, 2008.
LOCATIONAL SPECIFIC ADVANTAGES OF ASIAN NEWLY INDUSTRIALIZED ECONOMIES FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT IN THAILAND Santhiti Treetipbut.
1 Business Register: Quality Practices Eddie Salyers
A Small Business Perspective on Joint Ventures: a flexible option for teaming Presented by: Harry L. Boston August 12, 2015.
BALANCING FLEXIBILITY AND ACCOUNTABILITY Jan Hendeliowitz, LEED Directing Committee Chief Policy Advisor, Ministry of Employment Danish National Labour.
Modernization and Reengineering of the Census of Governments A focus on the Quarterly Tax Survey June 4, 2010.
1 Supplementing ACS: The LEHD Program Jeremy S. Wu Marc Roemer U.S. Census Bureau May 12, 2005 Jeremy S. Wu Marc Roemer U.S. Census Bureau May 12, 2005.
Copyright 2010, The World Bank Group. All Rights Reserved. Tourism statistics, 1 Business Statistics and Registers 1.
Copyright 2010, The World Bank Group. All Rights Reserved. Planning and programming Planning and prioritizing Part 1 Strengthening Statistics Produced.
Connecting Workforce Development, Education and Economic Development Through Cluster- Based and Career Mapping Strategies The National Association of State.
Plans for the Research and Testing Phase of the 2020 Census Presentation to the State Data Centers October 15, 2010 Daniel H. Weinberg (Assistant Director.
Adjusted Estimates of Worker Flows and Job Openings in JOLTS May 2008 Steven Davis, University of Chicago and NBER Jason Faberman, Federal Reserve Bank.
Copyright 2010, The World Bank Group. All Rights Reserved. Sources of Agricultural Data Section A 1.
THE GOVERNMENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF SLOVENIA INSTITUTE OF MACROECONOMIC ANALYSIS AND DEVELOPMENT July 2007 Where is Lisbon? (and how far is it from Ljubljana)
Longitudinal Data Recent Experience and Future Direction August 2012.
Innovations in Data Dissemination Thomas L. Mesenbourg, Jr. Acting Director U.S. Census Bureau United Nations Seminar on Innovations in Official Statistics.
Measures of Employment. What agency measures the unemployment rate?
1 1 Workshop on Improving Statistics on SME's and Entrepreneurship, Paris, September 2003 Draft Conclusions and Recommendations.
Integrating Administrative Records into the Federal Statistical System 2.0 Shelly Wilkie Martinez Statistical and Science Policy U. S. Office of Management.
Use of Administrative Data Seminar on Developing a Programme on Integrated Statistics in support of the Implementation of the SNA for CARICOM countries.
1 Non-Response Non-response is the failure to obtain survey measures on a sample unit Non-response increases the potential for non-response bias. It occurs.
Instituto Nacional de Estadística, Geografía e Informática (INEGI), Mexico National Economic Surveys (NES) Jun 2007.
Editing of linked micro files for statistics and research.
Statistics Netherlands’ modernization programme: the use of administrative data, lessons learned and the way ahead. Geert Bruinooge Assistant Director.
Changing Perspectives on Workforce System Performance Workforce Innovations Conference July 2004 Employment and Training Administration Performance and.
FORUM GUIDE TO SUPPORTING DATA ACCESS FOR RESEARCHERS A STATE EDUCATION AGENCY PERSPECTIVE Kathy Gosa, Kansas State Department of Education.
Current Population Survey Joint BLS/Census Bureau Product Sampling design – About 60,000 occupied housing units monthly nationally – design National/Regional.
Developing the prototype Longitudinal Business Database: New Zealand’s Experience Julia Gretton IAOS Conference Shanghai, China, October 2008
Copyright 2010, The World Bank Group. All Rights Reserved. Business demography, part 1 Dynamics of the population of businesses 1 Business statistics and.
1 Statistical business registers as a prerequisite for integrated economic statistics. By Olav Ljones Deputy Director General Statistics Norway
1 Overview of Economic Statistics in Africa UNECA Andry Andriantseheno Regional Workshop on Basic Economic Statistics Addis-Ababa October 2007.
ORGANIZATION OF AMERICAN STATES XIV INTER-AMERICAN CONFERENCE OF MINISTERS OF LABOR Employment Services and Labor Market Observatories: Opportunities and.
© 2007 by the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation. All rights reserved. Data Initiatives at the Kauffman Foundation OECD Entrepreneurship Indicators Steering.
Future Funding Model Update Guy Delius, FDA Travis Goodman, FDA February 2, 2016.
LED Local Employment Dynamics Bradley Keen Pennsylvania Department of Labor & Industry Center for Workforce Information & Analysis (CWIA)
1 Overview of the U.S. Census Bureau’s Business Register Profiling Operations Presented to International Roundtable on Business Survey Frames– Wiesbaden.
Workshop on Research Methods to Study Productivity Determinants Within Firms and the Role of Policy November 1, 2012 P olicy setting and firm-level focus.
The LEHD Program and Employment Dynamics Estimates Ronald Prevost Director, LEHD Program US Bureau of the Census
Local Employment Dynamics: Partnership, Public-Use Data, and Innovative Web Tools Eric Coyle Data Dissemination Specialist U.S. Census Bureau 1.
Linked employer-employee data in Finland Katariina Nilsson Hakkala Helsinki School of Economics and Government Institute for Economic Research (VATT)
Section 1: Trends of Hispanic Employment in Construction.
Expanding the Role of Synthetic Data at the U.S. Census Bureau 59 th ISI World Statistics Congress August 28 th, 2013 By Ron S. Jarmin U.S. Census Bureau.
Martha Stinson. T. Kirk White. James Lawrence
Lucia Foster Chief Economist U.S. Census Bureau December 5-6, 2013
Presentation transcript:

May 4, 2007 Report Briefing Panel on Measuring Business Formation, Business Dynamics, and Performance Sponsored by the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation and conducted by the Committee on National Statistics

May 4, 2007 Co-Chairs of the Panel John Haltiwanger Lisa Lynch

May 4, 2007 Charge to Panel Catalog existing business data infrastructure Identify gaps in measurement of business dynamics Identify gaps in measures in research on topics including business entry and exit, business adaptation and growth and the dynamics of young and small businesses Develop recommendations for better use of existing data sources including better data integration and for new and improved collection of business data

May 4, 2007 Recent Remarks by Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke …One leading explanation for the strong U.S. productivity growth is that labor markets in the United States tend to be more flexible and competitive, market characteristics that have allowed the United States to realize greater economic benefits from new technologies. For example, taking full advantage of new information and communication technologies may require extensive reorganization of work practices, the reassignment and retraining of workers, and ultimately some reallocation of labor among firms and industries… —August 31, 2006

May 4, 2007 Excerpt from Economic Report of the President, 2007 …New businesses provide both a ready supply of new ideas and a source of competition that forces larger businesses to innovate. Both of these factors have likely given the United States an edge in taking advantage of new opportunities made possible by IT advances. As with flexible labor markets, the ease of starting a new business helps with the level and the growth rate of productivity. Over long periods of time, starting new businesses keeps the economic environment competitive, which spurs innovation and helps push inefficient firms out of the market place… —Chapter 2, Page 61

May 4, 2007 Recommendation 11 BLS and the Census Bureau should cooperate under the auspices of the current and an enhanced Confidential Information Protection and Statistical Efficiency Act to create a reconciled, consolidated integrated business establishment list Improve sampling efficiency Improve data quality

May 4, 2007 Recommendation 12 The quality of research based on business data produced by the statistical agencies would improve with greater interaction between outside researchers and businesses and the statistical agencies. Research that informs social and economic policy should be considered a valid reason for accessing confidential data. Significant recent advances made on this front by Census and IRS

May 4, 2007 Recommendation 13 It would be highly desirable if the business registers were available to federal agencies for the purpose of constructing sampling frames e.g. Allow the SBA or Federal Reserve to have samples drawn from business register for samples for surveys they conduct

May 4, 2007 Recommendation 15 Measures should be taken to facilitate the expansion of CIPSEA to increase the kinds of information that could be shared among the statistical agencies for the purpose of reconciling the business list and for the design of special surveys

May 4, 2007 Recommendation 16 Interagency sharing agreements should extend to data on nonemployers. Data on sole proprietors and partnerships must also be included, whether they have employers or not. Precautions taken to ensure that this increase in sharing does not get used as an argument for further restricting access

May 4, 2007 Recent Remarks by Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke …One leading explanation for the strong U.S. productivity growth is that labor markets in the United States tend to be more flexible and competitive, market characteristics that have allowed the United States to realize greater economic benefits from new technologies. For example, taking full advantage of new information and communication technologies may require extensive reorganization of work practices, the reassignment and retraining of workers, and ultimately some reallocation of labor among firms and industries… —August 31, 2006

May 4, 2007 Excerpt from Economic Report of the President, 2007 …New businesses provide both a ready supply of new ideas and a source of competition that forces larger businesses to innovate. Both of these factors have likely given the United States an edge in taking advantage of new opportunities made possible by IT advances. As with flexible labor markets, the ease of starting a new business helps with the level and the growth rate of productivity. Over long periods of time, starting new businesses keeps the economic environment competitive, which spurs innovation and helps push inefficient firms out of the market place… —Chapter 2, Page 61

May 4, 2007 Recommendation 1 Census and BLS should increase the sampling of younger business units in their business surveys. Use business age as a stratifying variable in sample design. Promptly capture new entrants in the business lists that serve as sample frames.

May 4, 2007 Recommendation 2 BLS and Census should expand their development of statistical programs that measure business formation and dissolution, business dynamics, and job creation and destruction Business Employment Dynamics (BED) Statistics of U.S. Businesses (SUSB)

May 4, 2007 Recommendation 3 Census and BLS should exploit their administrative-records data to produce public- release statistics with breakdowns of economic activity by business age. Readily available indicators of business age include: Application date for Employer ID No. (EIN) First period with positive revenues First period with positive payroll

May 4, 2007 Recommendation 8 Census and BLS should actively pursue opportunities to acquire micro data sets from commercial sources and from other government agencies. These data sets should be integrated into existing business-level data sets at Census and BLS. E.g., venture capital, small business lending, government contract awards Use integrated data to produce new public-release statistics by source and type of financing and new tools for statistical analysis.

May 4, 2007 Recommendation 14 BLS and Census should develop anonymized, public-use versions of their existing longitudinal business data sets. Use synthetic data or other techniques that protect confidentiality of individual businesses. Source material: –Longitudinal Database on Businesses (BLS) –Longitudinal Business Database (Census) –Integrated Longitudinal Business Database (Census)

May 4, 2007

Recommendation 4 The Census Bureau should periodically add a module to the American Community Survey (or possibly the Current Population Survey) to identify nascent entrepreneurs. A method should be developed for linking this survey information with subsequent business identifiers in a longitudinal household-business data infrastructure so that transitions from nascent to active status (and vice versa) and from nonemployer to employer status (and vice versa) can be measured and studied.

May 4, 2007 Recommendation 5 The Census Bureau’s SBO should be conducted on an annual basis. The survey should include both a longitudinal component and a flexible, modular design that allows survey content to change over time. In addition, the Census Bureau should explore the possibility of creating a public- use (anonymized) SBO or a restricted access version of the data file.

May 4, 2007 Recommendation 6 The Census Bureau should develop a fully integrated longitudinal household-business data infrastructure from administrative data to serve as a platform for tracking business formation, for integrating household and business survey data for measuring economic activity associated with the business formation process, and for developing samples for new surveys of business dynamics. The integration should include the master household address files, the job frame from linked employer-employee administrative records, and data for firms (including those with no paid employees, but with receipts) from the Census Bureau business register.

May 4, 2007 Recommendation 7 BLS and the Census Bureau should jointly develop intermittent topical modules for their business surveys. These topical modules should be designed to allow periodic measurement in the same survey and with the same business sample of variables usually collected in separate surveys and at different frequencies.

May 4, 2007 Recommendation 8 The Census Bureau and BLS should explore and actively pursue opportunities to acquire microdata sets—on venture capital investment, business financing, and small business lending—from commercial sources and from other government statistical agencies. Once acquired, these data sets should be integrated with existing business-level data sources at the Census Bureau and BLS to produce new public-release statistics on business activity by source and type of financing and to provide new tools for statistical analysis by qualified researchers.

May 4, 2007 Recommendation 9 The Office of Management and Budget should investigate the possibility of developing a common taxonomy, based on the extensible business reporting language (XBRL) to allow common definitions to be used in surveys and administrative sources that can be automatically extracted from accounting and other business management software. In so doing, they should work with the statistical agencies, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), accountancy organizations, and software providers. This will help meet the goals of paperwork reduction and may have applications for similar purposes beyond the statistical system.

May 4, 2007 Recommendation 10 BLS and the Census Bureau should explore the possibility of continuous, real-time integration of payroll and employment data that are maintained by third parties into their systems; this could streamline data collection and, ultimately, possibly reduce respondent burden.

May 4, 2007