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From Transactions Data to Economic Statistics: Constructing Real-Time, High-Frequency, Geographic Measures of Consumer Spending

Aditya Aladangady, Shifrah Aron-Dine, Wendy Dunn, Laura Feiveson, Paul Lengermann, Claudia Sahm


This chapter is a preliminary draft unless otherwise noted. It may not have been subjected to the formal review process of the NBER. This page will be updated as the chapter is revised.

Chapter in forthcoming NBER book Big Data for Twenty-First Century Economic Statistics, Katharine G. Abraham, Ron S. Jarmin, Brian Moyer, and Matthew D. Shapiro, editors
Conference held March 15-16, 2019
Forthcoming from University of Chicago Press
in NBER Book Series Studies in Income and Wealth

Access to timely information on consumer spending is important to economic policymakers. The Census Bureau’s Monthly Retail Trade Survey is a primary source for monitoring consumer spending nationally but lags in the publication of the estimates and subsequent, sometimes large, revisions diminish its usefulness for real-time analysis. Moreover, the monthly Census data do not allow for the analysis of localized or short-lived economic shocks. Expanding the Census survey to include higher frequencies or subnational detail would be costly and would add substantially to respondent burden. In our work, we contribute an alternative approach to filling these information gaps by developing new estimates of retail spending that are both timely and granular. Specifically, we use anonymized transaction data from First Data (now Fiserv), a large electronic payments technology company, to construct daily estimates of spending at retailers and restaurants for detailed geographies. Our estimates are available only a few days after the transactions occur, and span from 2010 to the present. When aggregated to the national level and monthly frequency, the time-series pattern of our estimates is similar to the official Census statistics. We present two applications of these new data for economic analysis: First, we show how our estimates allowed the Federal Reserve to monitor spending in real time during the 2019 government shutdown, when Census data were delayed. Second, we describe how we leveraged the timely geographic detail to estimate the effects on spending of Hurricanes Harvey and Irma in 2017.

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This chapter first appeared as NBER working paper w26253, From Transactions Data to Economic Statistics: Constructing Real-time, High-frequency, Geographic Measures of Consumer Spending, Aditya Aladangady, Shifrah Aron-Dine, Wendy Dunn, Laura Feiveson, Paul Lengermann, Claudia Sahm
 
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