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Stata SAS

NBER-CES Manufacturing Industry Database (2009) [NAICS]

View Variables (24 variables)

Last update to metadata: 2015-11-26 10:30:53 (auto-generated)

Document Date: February 4, 2015

Codebook prepared by: Cornell NSF-Census Research Network

Data prepared by:

Principal Investigator(s): Randy A. Becker , Wayne B. Gray , and  Jordan Marvakov

Citation

Please cite this codebook as:

Cornell NSF-Census Research Network. Codebook for the NBER-CES Manufacturing Industry Database (2009) [Codebook file]. Cornell Institute for Social and Economic Research and Labor Dynamics Institute [distributor]. Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, 2013

Please cite this dataset as:
Becker, Randy A., Wayne B. Gray, Jordan Marvakov. NBER-CES Manufacturing Industry Database: June 2013 Revision [Computer file]. Boston, MA; National Bureau of Economic Research [distributor], Boston, MA, 2013

Abstract

This database is a joint effort between the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) and U.S. Census Bureau's Center for Economic Studies (CES), containing annual industry-level data from 1958-2009 on output, employment, payroll and other input costs, investment, capital stocks, TFP, and various industry-specific price indexes. Because of the change from SIC to NAICS industry definitions in ... more

Datasets

naics5809.dta   http://www.nber.org/data/nberces5809.html  ( Stata )

naics5809.sas7bdat   http://www.nber.org/data/nberces5809.html  ( SAS )

naics5809.xls   http://www.nber.org/data/nberces5809.html  ( Excel spreadsheet )

naics5809.csv   http://www.nber.org/data/nberces5809.html  ( CSV )

Terms of Use

Access Levels

released

No description given

restricted

No description given

Access Conditions

The data providers ask that you please not forward this data on to others. Instead, please refer interested parties to http://www.nber.org/data/nberces5809.html. This ensures that everyone receives the latest version of the data that's available.

Citation Requirements

When using the data, please cite it according to bibliographic citation provided.

Contact

For questions regarding this data collection, please contact: Please forward all inquiries to: Wayne Gray, Clark University and NBER, wgray@clarku.edu or Randy Becker, Center for Economic Studies, U.S. Census Bureau, randy.a.becker@census.gov

Additional Information

Methodology

The NBER-CES Manufacturing Industry Database contains annual data from the United States manufacturing sector for the period from 1958 to 2009. The data used for the development of the database come from various sources, but chiefly from four government agencies: the Bureau of the Census, the Bureau of Economic Analysis, the Bureau of Labor Statistics, and the Federal Reserve Board. The goal is to provide a long time-series of data for a large number of industries, adjusting for changes in industry definitions, and creating price deflators, capital stocks, and productivity estimates. This paper describes issues related to the most recent update of the database (1997 to 2009). For a more detailed discussion of an older version of the data see Bartelsman and Gray (1996). The key feature (and complication) of recent updates is the adjustment to the NAICS industry definitions. It is published in two versions: one based on the 1987 Standard Industrial Classification (SIC), containing 459 industries, and the other based on the 1997 North American Industrial Classification System (NAICS), containing 473 industries. The boundaries of the manufacturing sector shifted between SIC and NAICS, with some SIC industries leaving manufacturing and other NAICS industries entering manufacturing. The exiting SIC industries don't have data after 1996, and the entering NAICS industries don't have data before 1997. To enable the calculation of price deflators in each version, the benchmark year for deflators in the NAICS version is 1997, while the SIC version continues to use 1987 as a benchmark. This version of the database recalculates all the data post-1996, and earlier updates of the database (1958-2002 and 1958-2005) are superseded and should not be used. For more information, see methodology in http://www.nber.org/nberces/t0205.pdf, technical notes in http://www.nber.org/nberces/nberces5809/nberces_5809_technical_notes.pdf, information on Concordances (1987 SIC - 1997 NAICS in Stata, SAS, Excel, CSV, PDF, 1972 SIC - 1987 SIC in Stata, SAS, Excel, CSV, ).

Sources

  1. Annual Survey of Manufactures (ASM)
  2. Federal Reserve Board data (FRB)
  3. Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) GDP-by-Industry data
  4. 2002 Manufacturing Energy Consumption Survey (MECS)
  5. Bureau of Labor Statistics database

Related Publications

  1. Eric J. Bartelsman and Wayne Gray, 1996. "The NBER Manufacturing Productivity Database," NBER Technical Working Papers 0205, National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc. http://www.nber.org/papers/t0205.pdf