1,119 results
Search Results
2. CITATIONS AND INCENTIVES IN ACADEMIC CONTESTS.
- Author
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Amegashie, J. Atsu
- Subjects
ECONOMISTS ,INCENTIVE awards ,DIRECT costing ,EUCLIDEAN geometry - Abstract
I consider a contest between scholars on the basis of three popular indices of citation. There exist equilibria in which there are more and better‐quality papers in the total citations contest than in the h‐index contest. In some cases, the total citations contest yields the same quality of papers but more papers than the Euclidean contest. As the cost of writing a paper increases,the h‐index is inferior to the total citations index in both the quality and quantity of papers. This result is partly driven by how the number of papers constrains how the h‐index counts citations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. QUANTIFYING THE LIFE CYCLE OF SCHOLARLY ARTICLES ACROSS FIELDS OF ECONOMIC RESEARCH.
- Author
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Anauati, Victoria, Galiani, Sebastian, and Gálvez, Ramiro H.
- Subjects
SCHOLARLY periodicals ,LIFE cycle hypothesis (Economic theory) ,ECONOMIC research ,BIBLIOGRAPHICAL citations ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Does the life cycle of economic papers differ across fields of economic research? By constructing and analyzing a large dataset that combines information on 9,672 articles published in the top five economic journals from 1970 to 2000 with detailed yearly citation data obtained from Google Scholar, we find that published articles do have a life cycle that differs across fields of economic research (which we divide into the categories of applied, applied theory, econometric methods, and theory). Applied and applied theory papers are the clear winners in terms of citation counts. For the first years after their publication, they receive higher numbers of citations per year than papers in other fields of research do. They also reach a higher peak number of citations per year and apparently sustain those peak levels for longer, in addition to being cited over longer periods of time (i.e., they have a longer lifespan). Citation patterns are much less favorable for theoretical papers, which are the object of fewer citations per annum in the first years following publication, have lower peak numbers and a shorter lifespan. Econometric method papers are a special case; the pattern for most of these papers is similar to the pattern for theory papers, but the most successful papers (as measured by the number of citations) on econometric methods are also the most successful papers in the entire discipline of economics. ( JEL A14) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Depth and breadth relevance in citation metrics.
- Author
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Stern, David I. and Tol, Richard S. J.
- Subjects
CONCORD ,EXPONENTS ,ALTMETRICS ,SUCCESSFUL people ,COUNTING - Abstract
The Euclidean length of a citation list is "depth relevant": the metric increases when citations are transferred from less to more cited papers. We introduce "breadth relevance," which favors consistent achievers over one‐hit wonders. The exponent of the CES aggregator then is less than unity rather than greater than unity, as for depth relevance. Using two datasets on citations of economists for the top 50 US and global universities, simply counting citations maximizes the correlation between the citation metrics of researchers and the peer‐reviewed rank of their department. However, citation depth may explain the allocation of researchers across lower‐ranked departments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. TOPICS AND GEOGRAPHICAL DIFFUSION OF KNOWLEDGE IN TOP ECONOMIC JOURNALS.
- Author
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Fontana, Magda, Montobbio, Fabio, and Racca, Paolo
- Subjects
DEPRECIATION ,ECONOMICS ,MICROECONOMICS ,URBAN economics ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
We study the evolution of topics in economics and their geographical specialization by analyzing 13,233 papers from seven top journals between 1985 and 2012 and their forward citations. The share of U.S. publications declines from 75% to 64% with a corresponding increase of the European share from 12% to 24%. We use topic modeling and document the evolution of the discipline over 27 years. We estimate, with a quasi‐structural model, the citation lag distribution for 18 different topics and three large geographical areas. The modal citation lag is about 6.7 years in the entire sample and 4.8 years for citations from the top 100 journals. We quantify (1) the home bias effect in citations, (2) how it fades away over time, (3) the long lasting impact of U.S. publications vis‐à‐vis other geographical areas, and (4) the higher speed of diffusion and faster obsolescence in the United States. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Optimal unemployment policy.
- Author
-
Lawson, Nicholas
- Subjects
JOB hunting ,CONSUMPTION (Economics) ,UNEMPLOYMENT insurance ,UNEMPLOYMENT ,DEMOGRAPHIC surveys ,INFORMATION sharing - Abstract
This paper shows that the optimal policy to deal with unemployment features important roles for monitoring of search and job search assistance, with the optimal combined policy also incorporating more generous unemployment insurance (UI). These results are significantly different from the previous literature, which has overwhelmingly focused on UI on its own. I incorporate two empirically relevant phenomena that have often been ignored: private consumption smoothing and fiscal externalities from income taxes. I estimate a job search model using indirect inference on data from the March Current Population Survey, and simulate the model to evaluate a variety of policy reforms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Economic Inquiry 2020 Editor's Report.
- Subjects
COMBUSTION ,MATHEMATICAL economics - Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. WHAT DO BRITISH HISTORICAL DATA TELL US ABOUT GOVERNMENT SPENDING MULTIPLIERS?
- Author
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Watanabe, Shingo
- Subjects
HISTORY of public spending ,WORLD War I ,MILITARY spending ,BRITISH history - Abstract
British data from the early 1700s through World War I reflect the results of numerous high‐quality natural experiments of government spending. Britain frequently participated in wars, increasing military spending massively. Wartime distortions were relatively limited because the government generally adopted tax smoothing policy and rarely implemented interventions. Government spending multiplier estimates are low or negative and significantly below unity. This paper finds no evidence that the multiplier was higher in the slack state than in the normal state. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. WILLFUL BLINDNESS: THE INEFFICIENT REWARD STRUCTURE IN ACADEMIC RESEARCH.
- Author
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LIEBOWITZ, STAN J.
- Subjects
AUTHORSHIP collaboration ,ECONOMIC periodicals ,ACADEMIC departments ,ECONOMISTS ,TENURE of college teachers ,EMPLOYEE promotions - Abstract
This article examines how economics departments judge research articles and assign credit to authors. It begins with a demonstration that only strictly prorated author credit induces researchers to choose efficient sized teams. Nevertheless, survey evidence reveals that most economics departments only partially prorate authorship credit, implying excessive coauthorship. Indeed, a half-century increase in coauthorship may be better explained by incomplete proration than by any increased specialization among authors. A possible explanation for the reliance on incomplete proration is the self-interest of economists who are more likely to engage coauthorship-full professors. The self-interest of senior faculty may also explain the relatively small role given to citations in senior promotions. A rational response by economists to the under-proration of author credit is to engage in false authorship. Although false authorship is of dubious ethical status, it may have the perverse impact of improving the efficiency of team production. Grossly excessive coauthorship, where little attention is paid to most authors listed on a paper, as found in some other academic disciplines, may be the path down which economics is headed if the reward structure is not altered. ( JEL A14, O30, I23) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. DIFFERENCES IN CITATION PATTERNS ACROSS JOURNAL TIERS: THE CASE OF ECONOMICS.
- Author
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Anauati, María Victoria, Galiani, Sebastian, and Gálvez, Ramiro H.
- Subjects
ECONOMIC research ,ECONOMETRIC models ,MICROECONOMICS ,URBAN economics ,LABOR economics - Abstract
We study how citation patterns differ between journal tiers in economics by analyzing citations patterns of more than 6,000 research articles published in top five, second tier, and top field economics journals. We find that top five journals' articles receive more citations and that the life cycles of those citations are longer. However, their influence (in term of citations) is overestimated: in its first twenty years since publication, the median top five article accumulates 4.25 as many citations when compared to non‐top five median articles. This ratio is strongly associated with the field of economics research and with articles' impact. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. DO ABCs GET MORE CITATIONS THAN XYZs?
- Author
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Huang, Wei
- Subjects
INITIALS ,SCIENTIFIC communication ,JOURNALISTS ,ALPHABET ,BIBLIOGRAPHICAL citations - Abstract
Using a sample of U.S.-based scientific journal articles, I examine the relationship between author surname initials and paper citations, finding that the papers with first authors whose surname initials appear earlier in the alphabet get more citations, and that this effect does not exist for non-first authors. Further analysis shows that the alphabetical order effect is stronger in those fields with longer reference lists, and that such alphabetical bias exists among citations by others and not for self-citations. In addition, estimates also reveal that the alphabetical order effect is stronger when the length of reference lists in citing papers is longer. These findings suggest that the order in reference lists plays an important role in the alphabetical bias. (JEL D0, O3, Z1) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Is economics self‐correcting? Replications in the American Economic Review.
- Author
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Ankel‐Peters, Jörg, Fiala, Nathan, and Neubauer, Florian
- Abstract
This paper reviews the impact of replications published as comments in the
American Economic Review between 2010 and 2020. We examine their citations and influence on the original papers' (OPs) subsequent citations. Our results show that comments are barely cited, and they do not affect the OP's citations—even if the comment diagnoses substantive problems. Furthermore, we conduct an opinion survey among replicators and authors and find that there often is no consensus on whether the OP's contribution sustains. We conclude that the economics literature does not self‐correct, and that robustness and replicability are hard to define in economics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. ECONOMIC INQUIRY2019 EDITOR's REPORT.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Economic Inquiry 2017 Editor's Report.
- Author
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Wilson, Wesley W.
- Subjects
ECONOMIC periodicals ,MICROECONOMICS - Abstract
The article highlights the periodical's publishing policies covering a wide variety of papers in both microeconomics and macroeconomics; discusses the instructions for submitting manuscripts to the periodical; and reports the copyright and subscription policies.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Political hierarchy spillovers: Evidence from China.
- Author
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Chen, Meng‐Ting and Zhang, Jiakai
- Subjects
- *
CITIES & towns , *GROSS domestic product - Abstract
This paper explores the impact of the political hierarchies of cities in China from different perspectives. First, we examine the economic disparities between prefectural cities and municipalities. Furthermore, this paper draws upon a quasi‐ experiment to analyze the impact of upgrading Chongqing to a municipality in 1997 using the synthetic control method. The city‐upgrading policy significantly increased Chongqing's gross domestic product (GDP) in the following 4 years. Finally, we find that the policy increased GDP in treated cities within 1200 km of Chongqing by about 10%–13% relative to the control cities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. A FEW GOODMEN: SURNAME-SHARING ECONOMIST COAUTHORS.
- Author
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Goodman, Allen C., Goodman, Joshua, Goodman, Lucas, and Goodman, Sarena
- Subjects
ECONOMISTS ,AUTHORSHIP collaboration ,PERSONAL names ,PUBLISHED articles ,ATTRIBUTION of authorship - Abstract
We explore the phenomenon of coauthorship by economists who share a surname. Prior research has included at most three economist coauthors who share a surname. Ours is the first paper to have four economist coauthors who share a surname, as well as the first where such coauthors are unrelated by marriage, blood, or current campus. ( JEL Y9) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Dynare replication of “A Model of Secular Stagnation: Theory and Quantitative Evaluation” by Eggertsson et al. (2019)
- Author
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Crescentini, Alex and Giri, Federico
- Abstract
This paper replicates the study “A Model of Secular Stagnation: Theory and Quantitative Evaluation” by Eggertsson et al. using the Dynare toolkit. Replication is important as it confirms the results of the original article, provides a user‐friendly version using Dynare, and shows how to deal with large‐scale models with occasionally binding constraints. The results show that the original Matlab code was fully replicated, but minor discrepancies were found between the paper's equations and the code. The two models produce similar dynamics but with small differences, particularly at the beginning of the simulation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Anticipating the honeymoon: Event study estimation of new stadium effects in Major League Baseball using the imputation method.
- Author
-
Szymanski, Stefan
- Subjects
- *
STADIUMS , *BASEBALL , *HONEYMOONS , *BASEBALL teams , *COUNTERFACTUALS (Logic) - Abstract
This paper estimates the impact of new stadiums on attendance and revenues of Major League Baseball teams between 1970 and 2019. Recent studies reveal that two‐way fixed effects (TWFE) models may produce biased estimates, proposing an "imputation" method instead. This paper uses the imputation method to generate a counterfactual estimate, based on untreated observations: the average treatment effect on the treated (ATT) equals the difference between actual and counterfactual estimates. The analysis shows that there were significant anticipation effects associated with new stadiums, up to three seasons before opening. It suggests previous estimates may significantly understate new stadium revenue gains. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. MEASUREMENT ERROR IN MACROECONOMIC DATA AND ECONOMICS RESEARCH: DATA REVISIONS, GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT, AND GROSS DOMESTIC INCOME.
- Author
-
Chang, Andrew C. and Li, Phillip
- Subjects
MEASUREMENT errors ,MACROECONOMICS ,GROSS domestic product ,GROSS domestic income ,ECONOMIC research - Abstract
We use a preanalysis plan to analyze the effect of measurement error on economics research using the fact that the Bureau of Economic Analysis both revises its gross domestic product (GDP) data and also publishes a second, theoretically identical estimate of U.S. output that only differs from GDP due to measurement error: gross domestic income (GDI). Using a sample of 23 models published in top economics journals, we find that reestimating models using revised GDP always gives the same qualitative result as the original publication. Estimating models using GDI instead of GDP gives a different qualitative result for three of 23 models (13%). (JEL C80, C82, E01) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The effect of population aging on pension enforcement: Do firms bear the burden?
- Author
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Zhang, Jiakai and Zhao, Renjie
- Subjects
POPULATION aging ,OLDER people ,RETIREMENT age ,SOCIAL security ,PENSIONS - Abstract
Population aging is widely assumed to have detrimental effects on economic development, especially through an increased social security burden. This paper starts with the potential problems of the pension system in China. We investigate how local governments respond to population aging and the impact of population aging on the firm pension contributions using administrative data from the period 2008–2015. We present three findings. First, population aging increases the pension contributions of firms. Second, fiscal pressure is the channel through which population aging affects pension enforcement. Last, the pension administration system could affect the net impact of population aging. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. The role of experience in deterring crime: A theory of specific versus general deterrence.
- Author
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Miceli, Thomas J., Segerson, Kathleen, and Earnhart, Dietrich
- Subjects
PUNISHMENT (Psychology) ,CRIME ,FORM perception ,ECONOMIC crime ,ECONOMIC models - Abstract
This paper examines the role of experience in determining the deterrent effect of criminal punishment. Economic models of crime typically assume potential offenders know the probability of apprehension. Thus, neither the individual's personal experience of being caught and punished nor the observation of someone else's punishment experience affects that individual's future behavior. This paper incorporates a role for experience in determining criminal activity, distinguishing between (1) how individuals form perceptions of the probability of punishment, including how those perceptions are influenced by what they experience or observe, and (2) how those perceptions, once formed, influence their decisions about criminal activity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Fiscal multipliers, expectations and learning in a macroeconomic agent‐based model.
- Subjects
MACROECONOMIC models ,CONSUMPTION (Economics) ,PUBLIC spending ,INCOME ,BUDGET - Abstract
This paper evaluates the government expenditure multiplier and the influence of agents' expectations and consumption choices thereupon in a pre‐existing estimated macroeconomic agent‐based model. If the simple consumption heuristic of the baseline model is replaced by inter‐temporal optimization subject to a budget constraint based on agents' estimations of future income, the multiplier becomes significantly smaller. When agents' beliefs about the effects of expenditure shocks are explicitly introduced, they can strongly increase or decrease the multiplier. If agents are allowed learn about the effects of government expenditure on their income from repeated shocks, they are able to correctly predict these effects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Retirement wealth, earnings risks, and intergenerational links.
- Author
-
Shao, Lei and Zhang, Jie
- Subjects
- *
WEALTH inequality , *TRANSFER (Law) , *WEALTH distribution , *INCOME , *SOCIAL security - Abstract
This paper investigates the accumulation and distribution of retirement wealth in a dynastic model with earnings risks, longevity uncertainties, and borrowing constraints. It resolves the wealth indeterminacy problem across generations in dynastic families by introducing a transaction cost for intergenerational transfers. It captures the pattern of inter vivos transfers, the relationship between wealth and earnings, and wealth inequality in the US data. Social security lowers precautionary savings by redistributing income from families with high earnings or short‐lived parents to others, thus reducing investment, the growth rate in income per capita, inequality in retirees' consumption, and the wealth‐earnings correlation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Favoritism under multiple sources of social pressure.
- Author
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Békés, Gábor, Borza, Endre, and Fleck, Márton
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL pressure , *SOCCER tournaments , *SOCCER , *CROWDS , *COVID-19 - Abstract
When social pressure leads to favoritism, policies might aim to reduce the bias by affecting its source. This paper shows that multiple sources may be present and telling them apart is important. We build a novel and granular dataset on European football games and revisit the view that supporting crowds make referees help the host team. We find this bias to remain unchanged even in stadiums closed due to Covid‐19. Instead, influential host organizations emerge as the source of social pressure. This has an adverse effect on maintaining the ranking of influential teams and hindering the progress of smaller teams. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Evidence on quality spillovers from speed enhancing policies in the workplace.
- Author
-
Hill, Alexandra E. and Beatty, Timothy K. M.
- Subjects
- *
SPEED , *LABOR productivity , *RESEARCH personnel , *CHILD abuse , *DATA quality , *STRAWBERRIES - Abstract
Empirical researchers often consider a single determinant of labor productivity: speed. This paper asks whether they are neglecting spillovers on output quality. Using high‐frequency data on the speed and quality of strawberry harvesters' work, we offer novel evidence that two distinct workplace policies associated with increases in worker speed lead to similar decreases in the quality of their work. We find that both peer speed and wage changes boost worker speed and lower output quality; 10 percent increases in speed are associated with reductions in quality on the order of 1.5–1.7 percent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Inflation surprises in a New Keynesian economy with a "true" consumption function.
- Author
-
Tamborini, Roberto
- Subjects
- *
MONETARY policy , *PRICE inflation , *REAL income , *PURCHASING power , *INCOME - Abstract
The resurgence of inflation has been accompanied by a reversal of prospects of growth, with a prominent role assigned to the fall of households' purchasing power. Yet this real income effect of inflation surprises, independent of restrictive monetary policy, is not present in the standard New Keynesian models for monetary policy. The reason lies in the formulation of the consumption‐based "IS equation". The paper shows how the income effect can be introduced by reformulating the consumption function, with the consequence that it exerts an autonomus stabilization effect on inflation. The main monetary policy implications are examined by means of simulations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Fasting and honesty: Experimental evidence from Egypt.
- Author
-
Rabie, Dina, Rashwan, Mohamed, and Miniesy, Rania
- Subjects
- *
FASTING , *HONESTY , *SELF-control , *RAMADAN , *RELIGIOUSNESS - Abstract
This paper examines the effect of religious fasting on truth‐telling using a laboratory experiment in Egypt. While fasting‐induced religiosity may promote truth‐telling, the physiological and psychological changes during fasting, due to alimentary abstention and self‐control exertion, may reduce honesty, especially when fasting is augmented with effort. We examine this question by tracing individual truth‐telling decisions, in the absence and presence of additional effort, both before and during Ramadan. We find that neither effort nor fasting alone affects honesty, but exerting effort while fasting reduces honesty. We provide suggestive evidence on the mechanisms potentially driving this negative effect on honesty. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Tariffs, product standards, and national treatment at the WTO.
- Author
-
Geng, Difei
- Subjects
- *
TARIFF , *INTERNATIONAL trade , *CONSUMPTION (Economics) - Abstract
This paper develops an oligopolistic model with consumption externalities to study (i) the policy interaction between tariffs and product standards; (ii) how such interaction may affect the welfare justification of national treatment (NT) in product standards. Absent NT, tariff reductions can lead to more discriminatory standards against foreign firms. Imposing NT eliminates discrimination but can induce higher tariffs which tend to undermine efficiency. As a result, the welfare justification of NT is stronger when tariffs are constrained. These findings suggest that the World Trade Organization's success in tariff liberalization can strengthen the case for its NT‐based approach to product standards. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. How much can hospital‐level interventions improve maternal health? Evidence from state Perinatal Quality Collaboratives.
- Author
-
Kiser, Jessica
- Subjects
- *
MATERNAL health , *PRENATAL care , *INTENSIVE care units , *BLACK women , *INFANT health - Abstract
Over the last 20 years, nearly all states have adopted Perinatal Quality Collaboratives (PQCs), which set guidelines for hospitals to provide higher standards of prenatal care. In this paper, I use individual‐level natality data from 1989 to 2019 and a stacked difference in differences design comparing maternal and infant health outcomes in US states that have recently established a PQC to those that have not yet established one. Estimates indicate that PQCs decrease eclampsia, with the effect driven by Black mothers. Evidence also shows that PQCs reduce intensive care unit admissions for mothers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. From high school to higher education: Is recreational marijuana a consumption amenity for US college students?
- Author
-
El Fatmaoui, Ahmed
- Subjects
- *
MARIJUANA legalization , *SECONDARY education , *COLLEGE students , *PUBLIC universities & colleges , *GRADUATION rate , *UNIVERSITY rankings , *COMMENCEMENT ceremonies - Abstract
This paper examines how recreational marijuana legalization (RML) affects first‐time college enrollment in the US using a unique college‐level dataset and various estimation methods such as difference‐in‐differences and event study. I find that RML increases enrollments by approximately up to 9%, without compromising degree completion or graduation rate, and it boosts college competitiveness by offering a positive amenity, as evidenced by the rise in out‐of‐state enrollments relative to neighboring states. In addition, I find no evidence that RML affects college prices, quality, or in‐state enrollment. This effect is stronger for non‐selective public colleges in early‐adopting RML states. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Reject or revise: Gender differences in persistence and publishing in economics.
- Author
-
Shastry, Gauri Kartini and Shurchkov, Olga
- Subjects
- *
GENDER differences (Psychology) , *PERSISTENCE (Economics) , *WOMEN college teachers , *COLLEGE teachers - Abstract
We design an experiment to study gender differences in reactions to editorial decisions on submissions to top economics journals. Respondents read a hypothetical editor's letter where the decision (e.g., revise and resubmit) is randomized across participants. Relative to an R&R, female assistant professors who receive a rejection perceive a significantly lower likelihood of subsequently publishing the paper in any leading journal than comparable male assistant professors. We do not find this gender difference among tenured professors. We consider several mechanisms, pointing to gender differences in attribution of negative feedback to ability and confidence under time constraints as likely explanations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Macroprudential policies and Brexit: A welfare analysis.
- Author
-
Rubio, Margarita
- Subjects
- *
FINANCIAL policy , *PUBLIC welfare policy , *FINANCIAL security , *SYSTEMIC risk (Finance) , *REGIME change - Abstract
Brexit will have implications on financial stability and the implementation of macroprudential policies. The United Kingdom (UK) will no longer be subject to the jurisdiction of the European Systemic Risk Board. This paper studies the welfare implications of this change of regime. By means of a dynamic stochastic general equilibrium model, I compare the pre‐Brexit scenario with the new one, in which the UK sets macroprudential policy independently. I find that, after Brexit, the UK is better off by setting its own macroprudential policy without taking into account Europe's welfare as a whole. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Privacy regulation and firm performance: Estimating the GDPR effect globally.
- Author
-
Frey, Carl Benedikt and Presidente, Giorgio
- Subjects
- *
ORGANIZATIONAL performance , *GENERAL Data Protection Regulation, 2016 , *SMALL business , *PERSONALLY identifiable information , *PRIVACY - Abstract
This paper examines how privacy regulation shaped firm performance. Controlling for firm and country‐industry‐year unobserved characteristics, we compare the outcomes of firms at different levels of exposure to EU markets, before and after the enforcement of the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) in 2018. We find that the GDPR had the unintended consequence of harming the profitability of companies targeting European consumers through the cost channel. Technology firms experienced a 2.1% decline in profits, but not in sales. The GDPR increased extra expenses, added to firms wage bills, and accelerated patenting in GDPR‐related technology fields. The main burdens have been borne by smaller companies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Social learning about climate risks.
- Author
-
Xu, Yilan and Box‐Couillard, Sébastien
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL learning , *SOCIAL belonging , *FLOOD insurance , *HURRICANE Harvey, 2017 , *RISK perception , *SOCIAL networks - Abstract
With a social network adjacency matrix constructed from the Facebook Social Connectedness Index (SCI), this paper examines whether social learning facilitates climate risk perception updates to inform climate adaptation. We find that Hurricanes Harvey and Irma‐induced regional flooding increased flood insurance policies nationwide to the extent of each county's social network proximity to the flooded areas, with a corresponding update in climate risk perception. Social learning resulted in an additional 250,000 policies in flooded counties and 81,000 policies in unflooded counties over 3 years. We find evidence of the salience effect but no support for adverse selection or over‐insurance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Capital controls, banking competition, and monetary policy.
- Author
-
Ghossoub, Edgar A., Harrison, Andre, and Reed, Robert R.
- Subjects
- *
CAPITAL controls , *MONETARY policy , *BANKING industry , *FINANCIAL institutions , *INTERNATIONAL markets - Abstract
How do capital controls and banking concentration affect economic development? This paper develops a general equilibrium model to study these important issues. To do so, we construct a framework with heterogeneous agents and imperfectly competitive financial intermediaries who help depositors manage liquidity risk. Importantly, higher levels of concentration raise the cost of domestic borrowing which increase the reliance on international capital markets. Finally, once the rate of money growth is sufficiently high, capital controls bind and the effects of monetary policy on capital formation are more pronounced. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. INTERNATIONAL TRANSMISSION MECHANISM AND WORLD BUSINESS CYCLE.
- Author
-
Shen, Yifan and Abeysinghe, Tilak
- Subjects
BUSINESS cycles ,AUTOREGRESSION (Statistics) ,INTERNATIONAL trade ,DYNAMICS ,MACROECONOMICS - Abstract
Understanding international transmission mechanism that generates the world business cycle is of immense interest. In this paper, we compile a rich global dataset and utilize a trade‐linked structural vector autoregression (SVAR) model with a relatively realistic identification scheme to construct a worldwide dynamic interdependency system. Empirical results indicate that the trade‐linked SVAR system can largely capture the common dynamic properties of national business cycle fluctuations, providing a meaningful transmission foundation to the world business cycle derived from dynamic factor models. Based on the worldwide trade‐linked SVAR system, we further shed light on three crucial topics in international economics. The findings and methods in this paper help to evaluate the macroeconomic consequences of recent trade dispute between world major economies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Global digital platforms, technology transfer and foreign direct investment policies in two‐sided markets.
- Author
-
Klimenko, Mikhail and Qu, Jingwen
- Subjects
FOREIGN investments ,TECHNOLOGY transfer ,INVESTMENT policy ,DIGITAL technology - Abstract
This paper examines the preferences of a foreign firm and a host country government over two modes of FDI in two‐sided markets: de novo entry (through the establishment of a new platform) and acquisition of the domestic incumbent platform. Technology transfer, cross‐side network externalities and platform service differentiation determine the ranking of the host country welfare gains and the entrant's profits under the two entry modes. In the case where the foreign entrant and the host government disagree over the entry modes ranking, asymmetric foreign equity restrictions can induce the welfare‐optimal choice of the entry mode by the foreign firm. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Monopsony, wage discrimination, and public policy.
- Author
-
Alderman, Brianna L., Blair, Roger D., and Saygin, Perihan Ö.
- Subjects
GOVERNMENT policy ,LABOR supply ,WAGES ,PROFIT maximization ,LABOR market ,SEX discrimination ,PAY for performance - Abstract
A vast number of empirical studies have found that monopsony power is pervasive in labor markets. In some circumstances, the exercise of monopsony results in wage discrimination that is not taste‐based. Instead, it results from profit maximization in the presence of different labor supply functions of two distinct groups of workers. This paper examines the profit maximizing employment decisions of a monopsonist under these conditions, as well as the public policy regarding wage discrimination. The economic effects of the current statutes are also examined, as well as some policy recommendations to strengthen the prohibition of wage discrimination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Let there be light: Daylight saving time and road traffic collisions.
- Author
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James, Jonathan
- Subjects
DAYLIGHT saving ,TRAFFIC fatalities - Abstract
This paper examines the impact of daylight saving time (DST) on fatal road crashes in Australia. I exploit within year transitions to and from DST in a regression discontinuity in time framework. To examine the long run effect of the policy, I use trials of DST implemented in various states, and a DST extension due to the Sydney Olympics. Neither the transition to or out of DST, nor the long run effects of DST have an impact on fatalities on the road. However, there is evidence of reallocation of accidents over the day due to ambient light. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. TO LEAN OR NOT TO LEAN AGAINST AN ASSET PRICE BUBBLE? EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE.
- Author
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Evgenidis, Anastasios and Malliaris, Anastasios G.
- Subjects
ECONOMISTS ,MONETARY policy ,DELIBERATION ,WAGES ,HOME prices - Abstract
Since the Global Financial Crisis of 2007–2009, economists are reconsidering the appropriate role of monetary policy towards equity bubbles. This paper contributes to these deliberations by estimating the response of the stock market to monetary policy tightening by using a Bayesian time‐varying VAR model. By introducing the cyclically adjusted price/earnings ratio, we propose a method that estimates its fundamental and bubble components. We find that asset prices will initially fall and eventually rise again but without the risk of feeding the bubble. Counterfactual policy experiments provide additional evidence that monetary policy can lean against equity and housing prices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. THE POT RUSH: IS LEGALIZED MARIJUANA A POSITIVE LOCAL AMENITY?
- Author
-
Zambiasi, Diego and Stillman, Steven
- Subjects
MARIJUANA legalization ,AMENITY migration ,STATE laws ,PERMUTATIONS - Abstract
This paper examines the amenity value of legalized marijuana by analyzing the impact of marijuana legalization on migration to Colorado. Colorado is the pioneering state in this area having legalized medical marijuana in 2000 and recreational marijuana in 2012. We test whether potential migrants to Colorado view legalized marijuana as a positive or negative local amenity. We use the synthetic control methodology to examine in‐ and out‐migration to/from Colorado versus migration to/from counterfactual versions of Colorado that have not legalized marijuana. We find strong evidence that potential migrants view legalized marijuana as a positive amenity with in‐migration significantly higher in Colorado compared with synthetic‐Colorado after the writing of the Ogden memo in 2009 that effectively allowed state laws already in place to be activated, and additionally after marijuana was legalized in 2013 for recreational use. When we employ permutation methods to assess the statistical likelihood of our results given our sample, we find that Colorado is a clear and significant outlier. We find no evidence for changes in out‐migration from Colorado suggesting that marijuana legalization did not change the equilibrium for individuals already living in the state. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Do pledges lead to more volunteering? An experimental study.
- Author
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Capra, C. Mónica, Jiang, Bing, and Su, Yuxin
- Subjects
VOLUNTEERS ,VOLUNTEER service ,CHARITABLE giving ,ALTRUISM - Abstract
The effect of pledges on donations is ambiguous. Pledges can boost donations because pledges make it easier for people to accept a request without incurring the costs of donating right away. However, pledges can also decrease donations because individuals who pledge renege on their promises. In this paper, we study the effect of pledges on volunteering using an online experiment. We find that pledges decrease immediate rejection to volunteering requests, but pledges are often reneged later, resulting in no overall change in volunteering rates. We provide a theoretical framework for understanding the conditions under which these results emerge. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Purchases over the SNAP benefit cycle: Evidence from supermarket panel data.
- Author
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Harris‐Lagoudakis, Katherine and Wich, Hannah
- Subjects
- *
FOOD stamps , *PANEL analysis , *SUPERMARKETS , *PURCHASING , *DISBURSEMENTS - Abstract
This paper investigates the effect of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefit disbursement on intramonthly household level purchases made from a supermarket retailer. We find that spending, the likelihood of shopping, the bulk expenditure share and the national brand expenditure share increase by $2, 1.5, 2, and 0.6% points, respectively, on the day that SNAP benefits are disbursed. We also compare and contrast estimates that use variation in the indicator for benefit receipt to estimates that utilize variation in the probability of SNAP benefit receipt. We find substantial differences between the two approaches for the outcome of spending. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Replication of “How much does immigration boost innovation?”.
- Author
-
Wright, Taylor J.
- Abstract
Identifying the causal impact of immigration on outcomes commonly involves using a “shift‐share” or Bartik instrument, exploiting country‐specific immigration inflows (shifts) and location specific prior shares for the same countries. New findings suggest that identifying variation may come not from the shifts, as previously believed, but rather from the shares. In this paper, I first replicate Hunt and Gauthier‐Loiselle (HGL) who find skilled immigration increases innovation, and second employ new tests from the shift‐share literature. I find that the results of HGL replicate and hold up well to these new tests. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. On the impact of institutional change: Rights reassignment and career length.
- Author
-
Schmidt, Martin B.
- Abstract
Rottenberg argued that the reassignment of negotiating rights from owners to players, that would accompany free agency in professional sports, would have little impact on locational or market outcomes. Empirical investigations into such reassignment have produced mixed results. The present paper examines the impact such reassignment had on professional sports athletes' career length. By examining the univariate time series and panel data behavior of Major League Baseball players' average tenure and retention rates, we find that the increased negotiating power associated with the advent of free agency had the impact of shortening average player career length. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Designing school choice mechanisms: A structural model and demand estimation.
- Author
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Xu, Zhiyi and Hammond, Robert G.
- Subjects
- *
SCHOOL choice , *STRUCTURAL models , *ECONOMIC efficiency , *EDUCATION policy , *PUBLIC schools - Abstract
Designing the markets that allocate public school seats is a crucial policy consideration. This paper compares the design of school choice mechanisms in terms of economic efficiency, stability, and strategic behavior. We estimate demand for schools using data from a large US public school system with novel indicators of students' levels of strategic sophistication. We find important benefits of reserving a set of seats to be assigned by a pure lottery. In settings that share features in common with the school system we study, our findings suggest that non‐selective criteria such as lotteries induce a large increase in truth‐telling. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Equity‐efficiency tradeoffs in international bargaining.
- Author
-
Bagh, Adib and Ederington, Josh
- Subjects
- *
NEGOTIATION , *TREATIES , *BARGAINING power , *ENVIRONMENTAL regulations , *PRODUCTION standards - Abstract
This paper analyzes the welfare impact of expanding the negotiation agenda of an international agreement between asymmetric countries (e.g., including specific negotiations over environmental regulations or labor standards in a conventional trade agreement) and demonstrates why such proposed expansions are contentious. A main result is that agenda expansions that provide more bargaining flexibility will increase the efficiency of the agreement but can result in a less equitable agreement that hurts the country that is at a bargaining disadvantage. Similarly, we demonstrate that decreases in bargaining game asymmetry can also make the disadvantaged country worse‐off even as it increases global welfare. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. New evidence on crude oil market efficiency.
- Author
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Hu, Liang and Lee, Yoon‐Jin
- Subjects
- *
PETROLEUM , *EFFICIENT market theory , *STOCHASTIC dominance , *FUTURES market , *COMMODITY exchanges - Abstract
This paper examines the Efficient Market Hypothesis (EMH) in crude oil amid the "financialization of commodity markets" and the "fracking revolution". It applies the generalized spectral derivative test (Hong and Lee 2005) on both West Texas Intermediate and Brent spot and futures markets, alongside a stochastic dominance test (Linton et al., 2005) to investigate arbitrage opportunities across markets and benchmarks. The findings indicate that financialization has made each market more efficient but also created more arbitrage opportunities in spot‐futures markets at both benchmarks. The fracking revolution has fragmented oil markets but had little impact on EMH in individual markets or across markets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Culture and the labor supply of female immigrants.
- Author
-
Bredtmann, Julia and Otten, Sebastian
- Subjects
LABOR supply ,WOMEN immigrants ,WOMEN'S roles ,MARRIED women ,EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
This paper analyzes the impact of source‐country culture on the labor supply of female immigrants in Europe. We find that the labor supply of immigrant women is positively associated with the female‐to‐male labor force participation ratio in their source country, which serves as a proxy for the country's preferences and beliefs regarding women's roles. This suggests that the culture and norms of their source country play an important role for immigrant women's labor supply. However, contradicting previous evidence for the US, we do not find evidence that the cultural effect persists through the second generation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Cautions when normalizing the dependent variable in a regression as a z‐score.
- Author
-
Penney, Jeffrey
- Subjects
DEPENDENT variables ,GAUSSIAN distribution ,SQUARE root ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,INFERENCE (Logic) - Abstract
It is common in empirical analysis to facilitate inference by transforming the dependent variable to follow a standard normal distribution. In this paper, I show that using this transformation results in the estimated treatment effects being systematically attenuated toward zero and bounded in magnitude. The level of attenuation can be empirically relevant. I propose an alternative normalization wherein the dependent variable is divided by the square root of its within variation, which corrects these issues. I show that, in a simple linear regression, the method produces an estimated treatment effect that is numerically identical to Cohen's d. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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