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The Business Dynamics Statistics of Coastal Counties (BDS-CC) is an experimental data product extending the set of statistics published by the Business Dynamics Statistics program. The BDS-CC provides annual measures of job creation, job destruction, openings, and closings for businesses in Coastal Shoreline (CS), Coastal Non-Shoreline (CNS), and Non-Coastal (NC) counties. Counties are grouped into these categories based on definitions from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). This product allows for comparisons across industries and coastal regions of the impact of natural disasters and other events that affect coastal areas. Additional details on the county classification and tabulations can be found in the Methodology dropdown below.
The BDS-CC data tables show key economic data including the number of establishments, firms, employment, job creation and destruction, establishment openings and closings, and number of startups and firm shutdowns for businesses in coastal and non-coastal areas. The BDS-CC series provides annual statistics for 1978 to 2022 for each of the coastal categories by firm size and firm age, initial firm size, establishment size and establishment age, initial establishment size, sector, 3-digit NAICS code, 4-digit NAICS code, urban/rural categories, and various coastal regions.
The BDS-Coastal Counties is an experimental product of the U.S. Census Bureau. The BDS-CC was developed by the Center for Economic Studies (CES). The BDS-CC data are compiled from the Longitudinal Business Database (LBD) and the coastal counties classifications from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). The LBD is a longitudinal database of business establishments and firms with coverage starting in 1976.
The Census Bureau has reviewed this data product to ensure appropriate access, use, and disclosure avoidance protection of the confidential source data used to produce this product (Data Management System (DMS) number: P-7508369, Disclosure Review Board (DRB) approval number: CBDRB-FY25-0042).
Values: “CNS”, “CS”, “NC”, “SW”, “U”
Description: Indicates whether an establishment is located in a Coastal Non-Shoreline (CNS), Coastal Shoreline (CS), Non-Coastal (NC), Statewide (SW), or Unknown (U) county in year t. A county is considered a CNS or CS county based on NOAA definitions. The definitions of SW and U are the same as those used in the core BDS. Cells designated as “SW” include establishments without a fixed location such as employee leasing establishments. Cells designated as “U” include establishments without a valid county code. For details, please see the BDS Codebook and Glossary. All other counties that are not CS, CNS, SW, or U are considered NC. For additional information about how these counties are assigned, please see the Methodology dropdown below.
Values: “Atlantic”, “Great Lakes”, “Gulf”, “Pacific”, “Non Coastal”, “SW”, “U”
Description: For businesses classified as CNS and CS, cregion indicates the closest body of water. For businesses classified as NC, SW, or U, cregion equals Non Coastal, SW, or U respectively.
Values: “MR”, “MU”, “PR”, “PU”, “SW”, “U”
Description: Indicates how rural or urban a county is based on the percentage of the total population count from the 2020 Decennial Census living in urban areas. The definitions are as follows:
For all other variable definitions refer to BDS Codebook and Glossary.
The Business Dynamics Statistics-Coastal Counties (BDS-CC) experimental data product uses county-level establishment geography to merge the Longitudinal Business Database (LBD) with a list of coastal counties from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). NOAA classifies counties based on whether they belong to the Coastal Watershed or not, using “NOAA coastal watersheds and U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) coastal cataloging units as delineated in the NOAA Coastal Assessment Framework.” The focus is on “land areas within which water flows into the ocean or Great Lakes” and expands beyond the counties that are directly adjacent to water. Counties are considered Coastal Watershed if they meet at least one of the following criteria: “(1) at a minimum, 15 percent of the county’s total land area is located within a coastal watershed or (2) a portion of or an entire county accounts for at least 15 percent of a coastal USGS 8-digit cataloging unit.” There are some counties on the Coastal Watershed list that are exceptions to these criteria and these are further described in the NOAA Coastal Counties document (NOAA, Defining Coastal Counties).
For the BDS-CC product, the broader category of Coastal Watershed counties is split into two groups – Coastal Shoreline (CS) and Coastal Non-Shoreline (CNS). NOAA defines Coastal Shoreline counties as those counties which are directly adjacent to the ocean, major estuaries, and the Great Lakes and Coastal Non-Shoreline are those counties in the Coastal Watershed that don’t directly border the water. To classify the remaining counties, Non-Coastal (NC) counties are defined as those that have a county designation in the LBD but are not on the NOAA coastal county list. There are two additional categories of counties: Statewide (SW) and Unknown (U). These categories are assigned to records when the specific location of the establishment is unknown or it can only be classified in a state and not at a more granular level of geography. This is consistent with the core BDS and more information about these two categories can be found on the BDS Codebook and Glossary webpage. This results in each county in the LBD being placed into one of five mutually exclusive categories: CS, CNS, NC, SW, or U. This coastal designation is then used to stratify statistics in the BDS-CC tables.
All coastal designations are based on 2010 county boundaries. Very few county boundary changes have occurred since 2010. One major exception is Connecticut, which changed from county designations to council of governments (COGs). All eight Connecticut counties are listed in NOAA’s Coastal Watershed list. Therefore, when we extrapolate to the COGs, all of the COGs are also included in the Coastal Watershed list. To determine the COGs that are Coastal Shoreline, we select those that directly border the water. For more information about county boundary changes, please see Appendix A in Chow and Stinson, 2025.
To provide additional geographic detail to our data tables, each coastal county is further classified into one of four coastal regions: Atlantic, Great Lakes, Gulf of America (Gulf), and Pacific. For the most part, all coastal counties in a state are in the same coastal region. The three exceptions are Florida (some counties in the Atlantic region and others in the Gulf region), New York (with counties in the Atlantic and Great Lakes regions), and Pennsylvania (with counties in the Atlantic and Great Lakes regions).
To tabulate our data by different urban/rural categories, we put each of the counties into an urban/rural classification based on four categories: predominantly urban, mostly urban, mostly rural, and predominantly rural. These categories are consistent with those used in other BDS products (for example, the BDS-Single Unit Firms with Revenue and BDS-SBA Covid Response tables). The urban-rural categorization is based on the percentage of the total population count from the 2020 Decennial Census living in urban areas. The definitions are as follows:
The remaining variables in the BDS-CC are analogous to those used in the core BDS: industry sector, 3-digit NAICS industry, 4-digit NAICS industry, firm age coarse, firm size coarse, initial firm size coarse, establishment age coarse, establishment size coarse, and initial establishment size coarse. Further details about these variables and their definitions can be found on the BDS Technical Documentation website.
Additionally, the BDS-CC follows the BDS Methodology to calculate the various employment and entity change statistics reported in the tables.
Chow, M., & Stinson, M. (2025). Business Dynamics Statistics of Coastal Counties: A Description of Differences in Coastal Areas Over Time. CES Discussion Paper Series, CES-WP-25-08, Center for Economic Studies, U.S. Census Bureau.
NOAA. “Defining Coastal Counties.”
Below are links to selected publications related to the BDS-Coastal Counties.
Chow, M., Fort, T., Goetz, C., Goldschlag, N., Lawrence, J., Perlman, E., Stinson, M., and White, T. (2021). Redesigning the Longitudinal Business Database. CES Discussion Paper Series, CES-WP-21-08, Center for Economic Studies, U.S. Census Bureau.
Chow, M., & Stanley, J. (2020). A Shore Thing: Post-Hurricane Outcomes for Businesses in Coastal Areas. CES Discussion Paper Series, CES-WP-20-27, Center for Economic Studies, U.S. Census Bureau.
Chow, M., & Stinson, M. (2025). Business Dynamics Statistics of Coastal Counties: A Description of Differences in Coastal Areas Over Time. CES Discussion Paper Series, CES-WP-25-08, Center for Economic Studies, U.S. Census Bureau.
Goetz, C. and Stinson, M., 2021. The Business Dynamics Statistics: Describing the Evolution of the U.S. Economy from 1978-2019. CES Discussion Paper Series, CES-WP-21-33, Center for Economic Studies, U.S. Census Bureau
Questions? Contact us at ces.bds@census.gov.
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EXPERIMENTAL DATA PRODUCT
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