Food and agricultural industry locational determinants research: Aggregation bias and size measurement in the agricultural support industry

Federal administrative data present a valuable opportunity for food and agricultural industry locational outcome research. We review issues with aggregated U.S. public data and summarize current methods. An example empirical approach combines federal administrative and secondary data. We compare results with differing levels of industrial aggregation. Results indicate locational determinants vary in magnitude, sign, and significance across industries and their sub-industries, as well as between employers and non-employers – nuances commonly missed with public data. We conclude by emphasizing that studies relying on public (more-aggregated) data may miss locational outcome relationships or inappropriately generalize to sub-industries and suggest data access changes.

[1]  R. Dudensing,et al.  Estimating Determinants of Transportation and Warehousing Establishment Locations Using U.S. Administrative Data , 2022, REGION.

[2]  Scott Loveridge,et al.  Measurement error in US regional economic data , 2021, Journal of Regional Science.

[3]  S. Loveridge,et al.  Profit Pools and Determinants of Potential County-Level Manufacturing Growth , 2021, International Regional Science Review.

[4]  S. Loveridge,et al.  Estimating determinants of healthcare establishment locations with restricted federal administrative data. , 2021, Health economics.

[5]  S. Loveridge,et al.  Empirical methods in business location research , 2021, Regional Studies, Regional Science.

[6]  D. Thilmany,et al.  Local Foods Go Downstream: Exploring the Spatial Factors Driving U.S. Food Manufacturing , 2020 .

[7]  S. Loveridge,et al.  Business, Owner, and Regional Characteristics in Latino-owned Business Growth: An Empirical Analysis Using Confidential Census Microdata , 2020, International Regional Science Review.

[8]  S. Loveridge,et al.  A spatial model of growth relationships and Latino-owned business , 2019, The Annals of Regional Science.

[9]  S. Goetz,et al.  Excess Competition among Food Hubs , 2019 .

[10]  S. Loveridge,et al.  Differences Between Latino-Owned Businesses and White-, Black-, or Asian-Owned Businesses: Evidence From Census Microdata , 2018 .

[11]  S. Goetz,et al.  Store profitability and public policies to improve food access in non-metro U.S. counties , 2018 .

[12]  S. Goetz,et al.  State‐Level Cooperative Extension Spending and Farmer Exits , 2017 .

[13]  Brent Hueth,et al.  Food and Agricultural Industries: Opportunities for Improving Measurement and Reporting , 2016 .

[14]  R. Innes,et al.  Concentration, Product Variety, and Entry‐For‐Merger: Evidence from New Product Introductions in the U.S. Food Industry , 2016 .

[15]  Paul Wilson,et al.  The misuse of the Vuong test for non-nested models to test for zero-inflation , 2015 .

[16]  T. Schmit,et al.  Implications of Agglomeration Economies and Market Access for Firm Growth in Food Manufacturing , 2013 .

[17]  T. Hertz,et al.  Is There A Farm Labor Shortage , 2013 .

[18]  K. Chakraborty Estimation of Minimum Market Threshold for Retail Commercial Sectors , 2012 .

[19]  D. Lambert,et al.  Location determinants of food manufacturers in the United States, 2000–2004: are nonmetropolitan counties competitive? , 2009 .

[20]  Maggie Xiaoyang Chen,et al.  Location Decision of Heterogeneous Multinational Firms , 2009 .

[21]  Elisabet Viladecans-Marsal,et al.  Industrial Location at the Intra-Metropolitan Level: The Role of Agglomeration Economies , 2009 .

[22]  J. Haltiwanger,et al.  Market Selection, Reallocation, and Restructuring in the U.S. Retail Trade Sector in the 1990s , 2006, The Review of Economics and Statistics.

[23]  James D. Westervelt,et al.  1.5 Million Missing Numbers: Overcoming Employment Suppression in County Business Patterns Data , 2006 .

[24]  R. Griffith,et al.  Firm Location Decisions, Regional Grants and Agglomeration Externalities , 2006 .

[25]  Jason Faberman,et al.  The Flow Approach to Labor Markets: New Data Sources and Micro-Macro Links , 2006 .

[26]  T. Harris,et al.  Exploring Firm Location Beyond Simple Growth Models: A Double Hurdle Application , 2006 .

[27]  G. Schluter,et al.  Labor-Force Heterogeneity as a Source of Agglomeration Economies in an Empirical Analysis of County-Level Determinants of Food Plant Entry , 2005 .

[28]  M. Ahearn,et al.  Effects of Differing Farm Policies on Farm Structure and Dynamics , 2005 .

[29]  C. Weiß,et al.  Retailer concentration and product innovation in food manufacturing , 2005 .

[30]  B. Berry,et al.  RECENT DEVELOPMENTS OF CENTRAL PLACE THEORY , 2005 .

[31]  Adelheid Holl,et al.  Transport Infrastructure, Agglomeration Economies, and Firm Birth: Empirical Evidence from Portugal , 2004 .

[32]  Paulo Guimaraes,et al.  Industrial Location Modeling: Extending the Random Utility Framework , 2004 .

[33]  Jeffrey Alwang,et al.  Does Extension Work? Impacts of a Program to Assist , 2004 .

[34]  Douglas P. Woodward,et al.  A Tractable Approach to the Firm Location Decision Problem , 2003, Review of Economics and Statistics.

[35]  Russell Hillberry Aggregation Bias, Compositional Change, and the Border Effect , 2002 .

[36]  Octávio Figueiredo,et al.  Home-field advantage: location decisions of Portuguese entrepreneurs , 2002 .

[37]  Ron S. Jarmin,et al.  The Longitudinal Business Database , 2002 .

[38]  David Mushinski,et al.  A Note on the Geographic Interdependencies of Retail Market Areas , 2002 .

[39]  K. McNamara,et al.  THE LOCATION OF FOOD MANUFACTURING PLANT INVESTMENTS IN CORN BELT COUNTIES , 2000 .

[40]  J. W. Henderson,et al.  The Impact of Agglomeration Economies on Estimated Demand Thresholds: An Extension of Wensley and Stabler , 2000 .

[41]  Robert C. Feenstra,et al.  Aggregation Bias in the Factor Content of Trade: Evidence from U.S. Manufacturing , 2000 .

[42]  Fulong Wu Intrametropolitan FDI firm location in Guangzhou, China A Poisson and negative binomial analysis , 1999 .

[43]  J. Stabler,et al.  Demand‐Threshold Estimation for Business Activities in Rural Saskatchewan , 1998 .

[44]  K. McNamara,et al.  Community Attributes Influencing Local Food Processing Growth in the U.S. Corn Belt , 1997 .

[45]  Cletus C. Coughlin,et al.  Location determinants of new foreign-owned manufacturing plants , 1997 .

[46]  Thomas R. Harris,et al.  RURAL RETAIL BUSINESS THRESHOLDS AND INTERDEPENDENCIES , 1996 .

[47]  Daniel A. Gerlowski,et al.  WHAT ATTRACTS FOREIGN MULTINATIONAL CORPORATIONS? EVIDENCE FROM BRANCH PLANT LOCATION IN THE UNITED STATES , 1992 .

[48]  Douglas P. Woodward Locational Determinants of Japanese Manufacturing Start-Ups in the United States , 1992 .

[49]  Timothy F. Bresnahan,et al.  Entry and Competition in Concentrated Markets , 1991, Journal of Political Economy.

[50]  Leslie E. Papke,et al.  Interstate Business Tax Differentials and New Firm Location: Evidence from Panel Data , 1989 .

[51]  Q. Vuong Likelihood Ratio Tests for Model Selection and Non-Nested Hypotheses , 1989 .

[52]  Timothy J. Bartik,et al.  Business Location Decisions in the United States: Estimates of the Effects of Unionization, Taxes, and Other Characteristics of States , 1985 .

[53]  C. Gourieroux,et al.  Pseudo Maximum Likelihood Methods: Applications to Poisson Models , 1984 .

[54]  D. Carlton,et al.  The Location and Employment Choices of New Firms: An Econometric Model with Discrete and Continuous Endogenous Variables , 1983 .

[55]  John B. Parr,et al.  Theoretical Problems in Central Place Analysis , 1970 .

[56]  William L. Garrison,et al.  A Note on Central Place Theory and the Range of a Good , 1958 .