LGGNAPMEDec 5, 2025

Developing synthetic microdata through machine learning for firm-level business surveys

arXiv:2512.05948v2
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses confidentiality risks in business surveys for researchers and policymakers, though it is incremental as it builds on existing synthetic data methods for demographic data.

The paper tackles the challenge of re-identifying anonymized firm-level survey data by developing synthetic microdata using machine learning, demonstrating its effectiveness through econometric replication that shows high verisimilitude to true data.

Public-use microdata samples (PUMS) from the United States (US) Census Bureau on individuals have been available for decades. However, large increases in computing power and the greater availability of Big Data have dramatically increased the probability of re-identifying anonymized data, potentially violating the pledge of confidentiality given to survey respondents. Data science tools can be used to produce synthetic data that preserve critical moments of the empirical data but do not contain the records of any existing individual respondent or business. Developing public-use firm data from surveys presents unique challenges different from demographic data, because there is a lack of anonymity and certain industries can be easily identified in each geographic area. This paper briefly describes a machine learning model used to construct a synthetic PUMS based on the Annual Business Survey (ABS) and discusses various quality metrics. Although the ABS PUMS is currently being refined and results are confidential, we present two synthetic PUMS developed for the 2007 Survey of Business Owners, similar to the ABS business data. Econometric replication of a high impact analysis published in Small Business Economics demonstrates the verisimilitude of the synthetic data to the true data and motivates discussion of possible ABS use cases.

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