AEASTAT: 2019 Annual Meeting

Sessions for AEA Committee on Economic Statistics

Session 1: The Future of Economic Research Under Rising Risks and Costs of Information Disclosure
Chair: Ben Casselman, New York Times

Panelist(s)
John Abowd, U.S. Census Bureau
- Why the Economics Profession Cannot Cede the Discussion of Privacy Protection to Computer Scientists
Steven Ruggles, University of Minnesota, IPUMS - Differential Privacy and Census Data: Implications for Social and Economic Research
Katharine Abraham, University of Maryland - Reconciling Access and Privacy: Building a Sustainable Model for the Future
Raj Chetty, Stanford University, John Friedman, Brown University, and Nathaniel Hendren, Harvard University - Privacy-Protection for Economics Research in Small Cells

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Session 2: New Data and New Facts for the Global Economy
Chair: Natalia Ramondo, University of California-San Diego

Churning and Reallocation in a Firm-to-Firm Production Network - Andrew B. Bernard, Dartmouth College, Glenn Magerman, Free University of Brussels, and Andreas Moxnes, University of Oslo

United States Exporters: New Evidence - Stefania Garetto, Boston University, Lindsay Oldenski, Georgetown University, Nitya Pandalai‐Nayar, University of Texas-Austin, and Natalia Ramondo, University of California-San Diego

Multinational Profit Shifting and Measures throughout Economic Accounts - Jennifer Bruner, U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, Dylan G. Rassier, U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, and Kim J. Ruhl, Pennsylvania State University

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Session 3: Studying Facets of the United States Labor Market with National Longitudinal Survey of Youth Data
Chair: Lowell Taylor, Carnegie Mellon University

Why Is the Rate of College Dropout So High? - Alison Aughinbaugh, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Maury Gittleman, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, and Charles R. Pierret, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics

Male Prime‐aged Nonworkers: Evidence from the NLSY97 - Donna S. Rothstein, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics

Regional Differences in the Intergenerational Transmission of Inequality: Evidence from the NLSY - Dan Black, University of Chicago and NORC, Seth Sanders, Duke University and NORC, Lynne Steuerle Schofield, Swarthmore College, and Lowell Taylor, Carnegie Mellon University and NORC