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Big Data for Twenty-First-Century Economic Statistics, Volume 79 [Kõva köide]

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The papers in this volume analyze the deployment of Big Data to solve both existing and novel challenges in economic measurement. 

The existing infrastructure for the production of key economic statistics relies heavily on data collected through sample surveys and periodic censuses, together with administrative records generated in connection with tax administration. The increasing difficulty of obtaining survey and census responses threatens the viability of existing data collection approaches. The growing availability of new sources of Big Data—such as scanner data on purchases, credit card transaction records, payroll information, and prices of various goods scraped from the websites of online sellers—has changed the data landscape. These new sources of data hold the promise of allowing the statistical agencies to produce more accurate, more disaggregated, and more timely economic data to meet the needs of policymakers and other data users. This volume documents progress made toward that goal and the challenges to be overcome to realize the full potential of Big Data in the production of economic statistics. It describes the deployment of Big Data to solve both existing and novel challenges in economic measurement, and it will be of interest to statistical agency staff, academic researchers, and serious users of economic statistics.
Prefatory Note xi
Introduction: Big Data for Twenty-First-Century Economic Statistics: The Future Is Now 1(24)
Katharine G. Abraham
Ron S. Jarmin
Brian C. Moyer
Matthew D. Shapiro
I Toward Comprehensive Use of Big Data in Economic Statistics
1 Reengineering Key National Economic Indicators
25(44)
Gabriel Ehrlich
John C. Haltiwanger
Ron S. Jarmin
David Johnson
Matthew D. Shapiro
2 Big Data in the US Consumer Price Index: Experiences and Plans
69(30)
Crystal G. Konny
Brendan K. Williams
David M. Friedman
3 Improving Retail Trade Data Products Using Alternative Data Sources
99(16)
Rebecca J. Hutchinson
4 From Transaction Data to Economic Statistics: Constructing Real-Time, High-Frequency, Geographic Measures of Consumer Spending
115(32)
Aditya Aladangady
Shifrah Aron-Dine
Wendy Dunn
Laura Feiveson
Paul Lengermann
Claudia Sahm
5 Improving the Accuracy of Economic Measurement with Multiple Data Sources: The Case of Payroll Employment Data
147(26)
Tomaz Cajner
Leland D. Crane
Ryan A. Decker
Adrian Hamins-Puertolas
Christopher Kurz
II Uses of Big Data for Classification
6 Transforming Naturally Occurring Text Data into Economic Statistics: The Case of Online Job Vacancy Postings
173(36)
Arthur Turrell
Bradley Speigner
Jyldyz Djumalieva
David Copple
James Thurgood
7 Automating Response Evaluation for Franchising Questions on the 2017 Economic Census
209(20)
Joseph Staudt
Yifang Wei
Lisa Singh
Shawn Klimek
J. Bradford Jensen
Andrew Baer
8 Using Public Data to Generate Industrial Classification Codes
229(20)
John Cuffe
Sudip Bhattacharjee
Ugochukwu Etudo
Justin C. Smith
Nevada Basdeo
Nathaniel Burbank
Shawn R. Roberts
III Uses of Big Data for Sectoral Measurement
9 Nowcasting the Local Economy: Using Yelp Data to Measure Economic Activity
249(26)
Edward L. Glaeser
Hyunjin Kim
Michael Luca
10 Unit Values for Import and Export Price Indexes: A Proof of Concept
275(22)
Don A. Fast
Susan E. Fleck
11 Quantifying Productivity Growth in the Deliveryof Important Episodes of Care within the Medicare Program Using Insurance Claims and Administrative Data
297(42)
John A. Romley
Abe Dunn
Dana Goldman
Neeraj Sood
12 Valuing Housing Services in the Era of Big Data: A User Cost Approach Leveraging Zillow Microdata
339(34)
Marina Gindelsky
Jeremy G. Moulton
Scott A. Wentland
IV Methodological Challenges and Advances
13 Off to the Races: A Comparison of Machine Learning and Alternative Data for Predicting Economic Indicators
373(30)
Jeffrey C. Chen
Abe Dunn
Kyle Hood
Alexander Driessen
Andrea Batch
14 A Machine Learning Analysis of Seasonal and Cyclical Sales in Weekly Scanner Data
403(34)
Rishab Guha
Serena Ng
15 Estimating the Benefits of New Products
437(38)
W. Erwin Diewert
Robert C. Feenstra
Contributors 475(4)
Author Index 479(6)
Subject Index 485
Katharine G. Abraham is professor of economics and survey methodology at the University of Maryland and a research associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research. Ron S. Jarmin is deputy director and chief operating officer of the United States Census Bureau. Brian C. Moyer is director of the National Center for Health Statistics. Matthew D. Shapiro is the Lawrence R. Klein Collegiate Professor of Economics and director and research professor of the Survey Research Center, both at the University of Michigan, and a research associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research.