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  7. Two Perspectives on Commuting: A Comparison of Home to Work Flows Across Job-Linked Survey and Administrative Files

Two Perspectives on Commuting: A Comparison of Home to Work Flows Across Job-Linked Survey and Administrative Files

File(s)
Two Perspectives on Commuting- A Comparison of Home to Work Flows.pdf (1.85 MB)
Main Article
Permanent Link(s)
https://hdl.handle.net/1813/52611
Collections
Cornell University NCRN node
Author
Green, Andrew
Kutzbach, Mark J.
Vilhuber, Lars
Abstract

Commuting flows and workplace employment data have a wide constituency of users including urban and regional planners, social science and transportation researchers, and businesses. The U.S. Census Bureau releases two, national data products that give the magnitude and characteristics of home to work flows. The American Community Survey (ACS) tabulates households’ responses on employment, workplace, and commuting behavior. The Longitudinal Employer-Household Dynamics (LEHD) program tabulates administrative records on jobs in the LEHD Origin-Destination Employment Statistics (LODES). Design differences across the datasets lead to divergence in a comparable statistic: county-to-county aggregate commute flows. To understand differences in the public use data, this study compares ACS and LEHD source files, using identifying information and probabilistic matching to join person and job records. In our assessment, we compare commuting statistics for job frames linked on person, employment status, employer, and workplace and we identify person and job characteristics as well as design features of the data frames that explain aggregate differences. We find a lower rate of within-county commuting and farther commutes in LODES. We attribute these greater distances to differences in workplace reporting and to uncertainty of establishment assignments in LEHD for workers at multi-unit employers. Minor contributing factors include differences in residence location and ACS workplace edits. The results of this analysis and the data infrastructure developed will support further work to understand and enhance commuting statistics in both datasets.

Description
This paper is a newer version of https://hdl.handle.net/1813/50976
Sponsorship
This work received support from NSF grant SES-1131848 (NCRN Cornell).
Date Issued
2017-04
Publisher
Center for Economic Studies
Keywords
U.S. Census Bureau
•
LEHD
•
LODES
•
ACS
•
Employer-employee matched data
•
Commuting
•
Record linkage
Previously Published as
Working Paper 17-34, Center for Economic Studies, U.S. Census Bureau. Online: https://ideas.repec.org/p/cen/wpaper/17-34.html
Type
article

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