2,324 results
Search Results
2. Dry Holes in Economic Research: Comment.
- Author
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Mayer, Thomas
- Subjects
ECONOMICS ,RESEARCH ,PUBLISHING ,ECONOMICS literature - Abstract
Comments on David Laband and Robert Tollison's (2003) analysis of the productivity of economic research. Suggestion that the increased investment made in economic research since the mid-1970s has gone to reward rent-seeking and is therefore wasted; Failure of the evidence to support the hypothesis; Investment in research and the proportion of dry holes; Determination of how often a paper is cited during the five years immediately following its publication.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Who Are the Giants on Whose Shoulders We Stand?
- Author
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Laband, David N. and Majumdar, Suman
- Subjects
SCIENTIFIC community ,ECONOMISTS ,CITATION analysis ,WORKING class ,ECONOMICS ,AUTHORS ,NOBEL Prize winners - Abstract
The scientific community is just that - a community - and the success/influence of any one individual likely reflects, at least in certain measure, the contributions made previously by others. This suggests that rather than merely ranking economists on the basis of raw citation counts, one might gain real insights about the giants laboring in relative obscurity by identifying who the authors of exceptionally influential papers drew their inspiration from. We identify the most-highly-cited (409) papers published in economics from 2001-2005, then examine who the authors of these high-impact papers drew from in terms of developing the ideas/arguments/applications presented in these papers. We find that a very small group of individuals had a comparatively large impact on the economics profession, in terms of influencing the subsequent work of authors of extraordinarily highly-cited papers. Further, there is relatively little consistency between our list of 'giants' and Nobel Prize winners in Economics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Backward‐oriented economics.
- Author
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Frey, Bruno S.
- Subjects
SCHOLARLY periodicals ,STATISTICS ,ECONOMIC policy - Abstract
Nowadays, academic journals of high standing rarely accept a conceptual idea in a paper not instantly accompanied by econometric estimates. The idea would almost certainly get rejected. Empirical validation based on past statistical data has produced an unfortunate backward orientation in economics. While one can learn from the past, this approach fails when the underlying conditions strongly change. The paper suggests various possibilities to overcome the intense publication pressure in so‐called top journals and the overemphasis on instant empirical evidence. Academia is, however, unlikely to adapt. As economics is too backward oriented, other disciplines or cranks may well dominate future economic policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Externally funded trade policy reforms and firm productivity: Evidence from a world database of reforms funded by foreign aid agencies.
- Author
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Habyarimana, Jean Baptiste and Kakkar, Vikas
- Subjects
COMMERCIAL policy ,INTERNATIONAL economic assistance ,DATABASES ,INTERNATIONAL trade ,REFORMS ,ACCOUNTING firms ,TARIFF preferences ,PRODUCTIVITY accounting - Abstract
This paper examines the impact of externally funded trade policy reforms on firm productivity by combining data from the International Aid Transparency Initiative and World Bank Enterprise Surveys. By specifying baseline and end‐line surveys based on the 2006 to 2020 World Bank Enterprise Surveys, we find that 70 of 83 countries received external funds for trade policy reforms, and primarily use records based on 45,886 firms with data on productivity across these countries. Applying difference‐in‐differences and triple‐difference techniques, this paper finds that the impact of externally funded trade policy reforms is significant, accounting for 12% of firms' average productivity growth in the recipient countries relative to firms in non‐recipient countries. We also show that externally funded trade policy reforms improve firms' international‐trade‐climate in the recipient countries by 0.17 standard deviations, which translates into a 27% increase in the average productivity of firms with a good international‐trade‐climate in recipient countries over that of firms in non‐recipient countries and firms with poor international trade climate in recipient countries. These results suggest that interventions should focus on financing trade policy reforms that are more likely to improve the international‐trade‐climate of firms in the recipient countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Quality Control in Economics.
- Author
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Laband, D.N., Tollison, R.D., and Karahan, G.
- Subjects
ECONOMICS ,SCHOLARLY periodicals - Abstract
This paper analyzes the editorial screening process in economics, employing data from the American Economic Review, Journal of Political Economy, and Quarterly Journal of Economics. We examine three issues: the decline of critical commentary in economics, the increased referencing behavior of authors, and the decline in the citation of economic research. We find that there is empirical evidence in favor of the idea that these trends are mostly due to more ex ante investment by authors in their papers and less need for ex post quality control. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Meta‐mining: The political economy of meta‐analysis.
- Author
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Paldam, Martin
- Subjects
PUBLICATION bias ,DATA mining - Abstract
Meta‐analysis studies the literature reporting estimates of one parameter, which at present is assumed positive. The purpose of the analysis is to find the best meta‐average, which corrects the mean of the estimates for bias. The two main biases are: (i) Publication bias, where the correction nearly always makes the average smaller. (ii) Omitted variable bias, where the correction typically makes the average larger. Consequently, the bias is likely to increase if the correction is for the wrong bias. This allows a game of meta‐mining to be played. A case study demonstrates the scope for meta‐mining, and that it has been done. The game of meta‐mining is surely against the purpose of meta‐analysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. DIE EWG IM KOMA: (Ein weiteres Kapitel der Politischen Ökonomiel).
- Author
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Salin, Edgar
- Subjects
PRICE inflation ,MONETARY unions ,MONETARY systems ,PAPER money ,CENTRAL banking industry ,EUROPEAN communities - Abstract
ZUSAMMENFASSUNG Die Währungskrise der jüngsten Vergangenheit scheint behoben, doch gleicht der Zustand der EWG bei näherer Betrachtung dem Zustand eines Patienten im Koma: Ein Erwachen zum Leben ist möglich, aber auch ein Hinübergehen in den Tod. Ein Blick in die Geschichte lehrt, dass die Schaffung und Aufrechterhaltung einer Weltwährung vielfach erfolgreich gewesen ist, selbst wenn sich innerhalb der «Weltwährungsunion» Staaten zu Partialunionen zusammengeschlossen haben. Eine neue freiwillige Neuordnung der Paritäten ist notwendig; ihr muss minde-stens eine Verdreifachung des Goldpreises zugrunde gelegt werden. Ob die Staaten der EG dieser Neuordnung zustimmen, bleibt heute fraglich. Doch selbst das Zustandekommen eines diesbezüglichen Abkommens bleibt vergängliches Stück-werk, wenn der weltweiten Inflation, Folge eines globalen Übermasses an Liqui-dität, nicht Einhalt geboten werden kann. Die Notenbanken müssten sich deshalb bereit erklären, einen Teil der durch die Erhöhung des Goldpreises erzielten Buchgewinne in Form von Papiergeld an den IWF abzuführen. SUMMARY The last monetary crisis seems to be managed; but regarding the situation of the European Community one can compare it with a fainting patient. There are two possibilities, either to wake up or to die. History shows that in many cases the creation and maintenance of a world currency were successful, although there had been some states within the 'world monetary union' which formed partial unions. A new voluntary order of the parities is necessary. It must be based on a gold price which should at least be trebled. The question today is whether the member states of the EC agree to this reform. Even if this agreement is realized it can never be successful as long as the world-wide inflation, caused by the international liquidity excess, cannot be stopped. Therefore central banks should be willing to hand over a part of the book-profit, realized by the higher gold price, to the IMF in form of paper money. RÉSUMÉ La dernière crise monétaire semble parée; la situation de la CEE reste pourtant comparable à celle d'un agonisant: et la vie et la mort sont possibles. L'histoire prouve qu'on a souvent créé et maintenu avec succès un système monétaire mondial, quoique plusieurs états attachés à ce système formaient entre eux des unions partielles. II faut faire un effort volontaire pour arriver à un nouvel ordre des parités, basé sur le prix de l'or qu'il faudra au moins tripler. Les états membres de la CE accepteraient-ils une telle réforme? Même si c'était le cas, elle ne pourrait être efficace, à moins qu'on ne réussisse à arrêter l'inflation universelle, causée par un excès de liquidité international. Les banques centrales devraient remettre une partie de leurs gains comptables - réalisés par la hausse du prix de l'or - au FIM en forme de papier-monnaie. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1973
- Full Text
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9. Income distribution and nudity on social media: Attention economics of Instagram stars.
- Author
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Gaenssle, Sophia
- Subjects
SOCIAL media ,INCOME distribution ,GENDER differences (Sociology) ,INTERNET celebrities ,NUDITY ,CRITICAL success factor - Abstract
Social media stars gain star‐status with uploads on social media pages like YouTube, TikTok, or Instagram. One of the most popular platforms is "Instagram" owned by Meta/Facebook. The growing social, cultural, and economic power of so‐called influencers raises questions about key drivers of success and, moreover, distribution of income on social media platforms. Instagram has been accused of strategically favoring images with nude content. In order to shed light on this socio‐critical aspect, this paper examines the following research questions: Does body exposure drive income success on Instagram? Is there a difference between male and female content in this regard? This paper empirically analyzes 500 top Instagram stars within the categories (1) fashion and beauty, (2) fitness and sports, (3) music, (4) photo and arts, and (5) food and vegan. The data provide information on popularity, posting behavior, and price estimates per post. Using hybrid regression models, the results show indeed positive impact of body exposure on monetary success. Accounts with high level of body exposure achieve higher prices and advertising revenues than accounts with less nudity, regardless of the gender. Regarding gender differences, male content achieves on average higher advertising prices, whereas female accounts provide more branded content and eventually achieve higher advertising revenues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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10. Seventy‐five years West German currency reform: Crisis as catalyst for the erosion of the market order.
- Author
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Schnabl, Gunther
- Subjects
CURRENCY crises ,CAPITALISM ,ECONOMIC reform ,PRICE regulation ,EROSION ,SOCIAL cohesion - Abstract
The paper analyzes the role of the 1948 currency and economic reform in West Germany for growth and social cohesion in Germany and Europe. It describes the theoretical foundation by Walter Eucken and the implementation and defense of the new economic order by Ludwig Erhard. The paper stresses the positive impact of the market economy on growth and welfare in Germany and Europe. Then, it is shown that Eucken's constituting principles of the market economy were gradually eroded after euro introduction in course of crises, with the negative repercussions on growth and equality being explained. The policy conclusion is that only the reconstitution of price stability in the euro area can prevent a further decline of welfare in Europe. The 1948 economic reforms provide an important blueprint for the necessary reform process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. The cost of love: Solving the gift anomaly.
- Author
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Khalil, Elias L.
- Subjects
COST shifting ,BUDGET ,SEXUAL intercourse ,COST - Abstract
Friendship‐and‐love affords bonding that satisfies what can be called "transcendental preferences"—in contradistinction of "substantive preferences" afforded by, for example, food, clothes, and shelter. Substantive preferences involve ordinary "substantive cost," whereas transcendental preferences involve "bonding cost" that includes heartaches, obsession, and emotional turmoil. What about the cost of gifts such as flowers, time, and other carriers of friendship‐and‐love? The greater is the expenditure on gifts, the greater the bonding cost. This paper investigates the following question: How should we model bonding cost, which includes the cost of gift, in relation to substantive cost? Given bonding cost and substantive cost share the same budget, neoclassical economists treat them as commensurable and, hence, transcendental and substantive preferences make up a unidimensional objective function. This treatment, however, originates the "gift anomaly": If people easily substitute between the two genera of preferences, why do they consider the demand of payments for visiting their grandmothers—or payments for voting and sexual intercourse—as repugnant (taboo)? To solve the gift anomaly, this paper is critical of the standard economist's entry point. This paper proposes bonding and substantive costs as incommensurable and, corollary, transcendental and substantive preferences as incommensurable as well. This paper further shows how, without undermining the incommensurability thesis, the incommensurability is up to a limit: the two genera of costs and, corollary, the two genera of preferences are still linked via the income effect—as opposed to the substitution effect. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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12. Editorial Ruminations: Publishing Kyklos.
- Author
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Frey, Bruno S., Eichenberger, Reiner, and Frey, René L.
- Subjects
RUMINATION (Digestion) ,INTELLECTUAL capital ,INTELLECTUALS ,RISK assessment ,ACADEMIC accommodations ,ACADEMIC achievement ,ACADEMIC employment ,KNOWLEDGE workers - Abstract
Scholars today are under increasing pressure to publish in A journals, the main role of which consists in certifying that a paper meets traditional academic standards. Consequences of this pressure are multiple authorship, the slicing of ideas, and incentives to deviate from the truth. The overburdened reviewers' evaluations are characterized by selfish efforts to protect their intellectual capital and to avoid risk. The behaviour of editors depends much on whether there are a large or small number of editors. The editors of Kyklos respond to these developments by welcoming innovative papers that go beyond standardized orthodoxy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Are environmental problems a barometer of corruption in the eyes of residents? Evidence from China.
- Author
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Yan, Guoyao, Hao, Yu, Guo, Yunxia, and Wu, Haitao
- Subjects
GEOGRAPHICAL perception ,ENVIRONMENTAL degradation ,CORRUPTION ,PUBLIC opinion ,SOCIAL stability - Abstract
Actual environmental pollution will worsen people's perception of environmental problems, which may affect people's perception of government corruption, and thus affect the governments' credibility and social stability. From the micro perspective of residents' comprehensive feelings on environmental issues, this paper uses panel data for the period 2014–2018 obtained from a large‐scale dynamics survey in China to investigate the impact of environmental issues on corruption perception. The empirical results suggest that residents' perception of environmental problems has a significantly positive linear correlation with their corruption perception. Moreover, the causal explanation of this correlation is strengthened after the introduction of exogenous environmental condition variables that profoundly affect residents' environmental perception and after mitigating endogenous bias via the instrumental variable method. The findings of this study deeply reveal the political value of environmental governance, suggesting that the deterioration of environmental problems can increase public perception of government corruption, and this relationship is distinct in different demographic groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Learning from corporate governance: First conceptualization of a liability for political decision-making.
- Author
-
Follert, Florian
- Subjects
CORPORATE governance ,DECISION making ,JUDGMENT (Psychology) ,MONETARY incentives ,CORPORATION law - Abstract
The institution of liability serves to mitigate the lack of care in almost all areas, whether private or business. However, we have not yet found such an institution in political decision-making. Surprisingly, the literature has not discussed a specific institution that subjects political actors who fail to exercise due diligence in their decision-making regarding personal liability. Hence, this paper aims to fill this gap and derive the necessity of internalizing the negative effects resulting from the imperfections of the market for political services in general and the democratic process, particularly by a liability rule. To design the new institution, we draw on the findings of corporate governance, combining economic thinking in incentives and legal knowledge expressed in the law of the corporation. In this respect, this paper is the first to make a concrete proposal for political liability accompanied by a political judgment rule. However, it is important to emphasize that the aim is not to punish a wrong decision but to provide strong incentives to prevent it ex ante. Political liability must be understood as a process-oriented institution that considers uncertainty and decision-making complexities. By proposing and analyzing this new institution, this work contributes to a broader discussion of incentive structures in the political process of modern democracies and shows how the political sphere can learn from the corporate world. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. A market for citizenships: Should citizenship be commodified?
- Author
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Bengtsson, Ingemar
- Subjects
CITIZENSHIP ,INTERNATIONAL taxation ,TAX base ,MARKET value ,MARKET prices ,ORGANIZATIONAL citizenship behavior ,INDUSTRIAL relations - Abstract
Starting from the assumption that citizenship is property that would be more valuable if it were transferable, the paper explores the idea of commodification of citizenship. The paper provides arguments in favor of commodification and recommendations to how the market for citizenships should be designed. A market for citizenships could result in an improved matching between employer and employee when citizens swap citizenship with each other. Successful States could issue new citizenships and thus make it possible for a greater share of the world population to live and work within the countries with the best institutions. The combined effect would be a higher global productivity. Additionally, market prices on citizenships would provide information on institutional quality and thus provide politicians with information on voters' preferences as well as voters with information on the quality of the work of the government. The market value of a tradable citizenship is also found to be a candidate as tax base for a redistributive tax on a global level that could address some of the inherent inequality with birthright citizenships. Those potential benefits aside, several problems with a market for citizenship are also found and discussed, among those the age-dependent value of citizenships. Received: 14 June 2021 Revised: 31 March 2022 Accepted: 25 February 2023 DOI: 10.1111/kykl.12347 This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. © 2023 The Author. Kyklos published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. Kyklos. 2023;76:705--723. wileyonlinelibrary.com/journal/kykl 705 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. KYKLOS Editorial Policy.
- Subjects
PERIODICALS ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Presents the editorial policy of 'KYKLOS,' a refereed economics review.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. THE LIQUIDITY THEORY OF MONEY.
- Author
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Schmölders, G.
- Subjects
LIQUIDITY (Economics) ,CHANGE ,FACTS (Philosophy) ,QUANTITY theory of money ,INDEXATION (Economics) ,BANK notes ,PAPER money - Published
- 1960
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. COMMENTS ON PROFESSOR NURKSE'S PAPER.
- Author
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Adler, John H.
- Subjects
PRICE maintenance ,ECONOMIC stabilization ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,PRICE increases ,SUPPLY & demand ,ELASTICITY (Economics) ,ECONOMIC impact - Published
- 1958
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. The problem of evil: An economic approach.
- Subjects
REWARD (Psychology) ,GOOD & evil ,ECONOMIC models ,THEODICY - Abstract
This paper develops an economic model to study the philosophical problem of evil. God's creation of the world is modeled as a problem of optimal incentives. A principal (God) must choose a world so that the populating agents behave according to his benevolent objective. In a world, the physical environment resembles a contract that determines the rewards and punishments for different choices. The agents' behavioral rule determines how they respond to these incentives. I characterize a contract and a behavioral rule that solve the principal's problem, and evil is evidenced. Specifically, evil endogenously aligns the agents' actions with the principal's objective. Other insights on the origin, cause, and role of evil are also derived from the model. The result of this analysis is a theodicy arisen from an economic model. As a byproduct, this paper shows how an economic model can be used to study philosophical or theological questions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Are genetic traits associated with riots? The political legacy of prehistorically determined genetic diversity*.
- Subjects
GENETIC variation ,PUBLIC goods ,POLITICAL stability ,RIOTS ,INCOME inequality ,EQUALITY - Abstract
This paper establishes that the worldwide distribution of political instability has its deep historical roots in genetic diversity, predetermined over the prehistoric course of the exodus of Homo sapiens from East Africa tens of thousands of years ago. It proposes that the relationship between prehistorically determined genetic diversity and contemporary political instability follows a U‐shaped pattern. More specifically, genetic diversity at first reduces the persistence of political instability by increasing the opportunity cost of engaging in riots and revolts. However, genetically fragmented societies tend to suffer from interpersonal mistrust and the under‐provision of public goods, which plausibly undermine the establishment of politically stable regimes. Using an ancestry‐adjusted index of predicted genetic diversity, this paper consistently finds precise estimates that genetic diversity imparts a U‐shaped influence on different measures of political instability and the probability of observing the occurrence of riots and revolts across 141 countries. Furthermore, the contribution of genetic diversity to political instability is at least partially mediated through income/productivity levels, the provision of public goods, income inequality and social trust. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Dry Holes in Economic Research: Reply.
- Author
-
Laband, David N. and Tollison, Robert D.
- Subjects
ECONOMICS ,RESEARCH ,PUBLISHING ,ECONOMICS literature ,SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
Replies to the comments made by Thomas Mayer (2004) regarding the productivity of economic research. Optimal rate of scientific exploration and little evidence of socially efficient investment, at least with respect to economics; Technical issues raised by Mayer; Increased production of highly-cited papers.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Dying to die: New micro and macro evidence that suicide terrorists are suicidal.
- Author
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Varaine, Simon
- Subjects
SUICIDE ,SUICIDE risk factors ,SUICIDE terrorism ,SUICIDE bombings ,TERRORISTS - Abstract
The self‐sacrifice of suicide terrorists is subject to sophisticated models of altruistic sacrifice. Yet, a simpler account is that it reflects common suicidal tendencies. This paper offers new micro and macro evidence supportive of this hypothesis. At the micro level, the paper compares a sample of suicide and non‐suicide terrorists in the United States from 1948 to 2017. Results indicate that suicide terrorists are more likely to display various established suicidal risk factors including history of child abuse, absent parent/s, and relationship troubles. Results from Bayesian Model Averaging indicate that suicide risk factors outperform other individual factors (e.g., ideology and lone‐actor terrorism) in explaining suicide terrorism. At the macro level, the paper takes advantage of the cross‐national variations in suicidal tendencies to explain the incidence of suicide and non‐suicide terrorist attacks worldwide from 1991 to 2014. Results reveal that countries with higher share of deaths from suicide display higher incidences of suicide attacks but similar incidences of non‐suicide attacks. However, other contextual factors such as the share of Muslims also predict the incidence of suicide terrorism. The decision of some terrorists to sacrifice their life may well have been subject to over‐theorization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. How Robust Is the Evidence on the Impact of Diasporas on Institutional Quality in Home Countries?
- Author
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Tran, Ngoc Thi Minh, Cameron, Michael P., and Poot, Jacques
- Subjects
COUNTRY of origin (Immigrants) ,PANEL analysis ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,DEVELOPING countries ,EVIDENCE - Abstract
Summary: This paper conducts a robustness analysis of the impact of diasporas on institutional quality in home countries. Using the Database on Immigrants in OECD Countries (DIOC), we attest that the home country institutional development role of diasporas found in the literature is robust to modifications in terms of the dataset, the measurement of diasporas and the instrumental variable procedures used in our cross‐sectional and panel analyses. The novelty of this paper is that we take the heterogeneity of diasporas into account in terms of their distribution across host countries, their duration of stay, and the level of development of their home countries. As in earlier literature, we find robust evidence that diasporas enhance institutional quality in home countries. We also find that the intensity of the diffusion of advanced institutions from developed host countries to home countries through the international migration channel is weaker with diasporas characterized by shorter average duration of stay and with diasporas from developing home countries. However, this diffusion effect is not significantly related to the distribution of diasporas across OECD host countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. A Market Mechanism for Scientific Communication: A Proposal.
- Author
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Riyanto, Y.E. and Yetkiner, I.H.
- Subjects
SCIENTIFIC communication ,COMMUNICATION of technical information ,MARKETS - Abstract
Proposes a market-based mechanism to formalize the access, circulation and feedback processes for pre-print papers by defining incentives for both the authors and reviewers, to be part of a scientific network. Mechanism for quality differentiation; Enabling of efficient and effective communications within the scientific community.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Political equality and quality of government.
- Author
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Ezcurra, Roberto and Zuazu, Izaskun
- Subjects
EQUALITY ,POWER (Social sciences) ,RIGHT to education ,EMPLOYEE participation in management ,ACTING education ,ECONOMIC liberty - Abstract
This paper examines the relationship between political equality and quality of government. Our hypothesis is that political equality fosters access to inclusive education and ultimately promotes good governance. We empirically test this hypothesis using data for 145 countries with different levels of economic development. In order to overcome potential endogeneity problems, our identification strategy exploits the variation in political equality in geographically neighbouring countries by means of spatial econometric techniques. The results reveal a positive and statistically significant effect of political equality on the quality of government. This implies that countries where political power is more evenly distributed tend on average to have higher levels of institutional quality. In fact, this result is not affected by the inclusion in the analysis of a substantial number of controls that may be correlated with both political equality and quality of government, including the extent of democracy and the degree of economic inequality. In fact, the observed link between political equality and governance remains robust to alternative measures of quality of government, estimation techniques, and other sensitivity checks. Our estimates also show that education acts as a transmission channel linking political equality and quality of government. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. A family member's death increases religious activity: Evidence from Germany.
- Author
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Friehe, Tim and Pfeifer, Christian
- Subjects
PARENTAL death ,PANEL analysis ,FAMILIES ,RELIGIOUSNESS - Abstract
Religiosity influences economic behavior in various domains, but what determines religiosity? Using data from the representative Socio‐Economic Panel Study for Germany (SOEP), this paper shows that religious activity increases after a family member's death. The life event's effect is larger after a partner's death when compared to a parent's death. Our results indicate that the influence of a family member's death on religious activity is temporary and are consistent with the religious coping hypothesis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Smartphones and attitudes to intimate partner violence: Evidence from Africa.
- Author
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Gillanders, Robert and McNamara, Glenn
- Subjects
INTIMATE partner violence ,WIFE abuse ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,WIVES - Abstract
This paper, using data from the Afrobarometer surveys, examines the potential for smartphones to influence attitudes to intimate partner violence (IPV). Controlling for ownership of television and radio, we find that those living in areas with a higher incidence of smartphone ownership are more likely to state that it is never justifiable for a man to beat his wife. This is the case for both male and female respondents. We find that the strength of the association between regional smartphone proliferation and attitudes to IPV is similar for those who frequently get news from social media and those who get news from elsewhere. This suggests that our results are not driven entirely by personal social media use. Finally, we only find a statistically significant relationship for those who are socially conservative. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Sunlight, culture and state capacity.
- Author
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Ezcurra, Roberto
- Subjects
SUNSHINE ,ULTRAVIOLET radiation ,CULTURAL transmission ,CAPACITY building ,CULTURE - Abstract
This paper examines the impact of ultraviolet radiation (UV‐R) on state capacity. The results indicate that the intensity of UV‐R is a strong predictor of cross‐country differences in state capacity. Countries with a higher degree of UV‐R exposure tend on average to have weaker states. This finding remains unaffected after controlling for different variables that may be correlated with both UV‐R and state capacity, including an extensive set of geographical, historical and contemporary factors. The observed link between sunlight and state capacity is not driven by potential outliers and is robust to the employment of alternative measures of state capacity, estimation methods and other sensitivity checks. Furthermore, the analysis also reveals that the individualistic–collectivist dimension of culture acts as a transmission channel connecting UV‐R and state capacity. The estimates show that a lower degree of UV‐R exposure leads to the adoption of individualistic values, which in turn contribute to the development of state capacity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Book reviews.
- Author
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Hammes, David L.
- Subjects
- PAPERS in Experimental Economics (Book), SMITH, Vernon L., 1927-
- Abstract
Reviews the book, `Papers in Experimental Economics,' by Vernon L. Smith. Collection of papers on experimental economics between 1962 and 1990; Father of modern experimental economics; History of the study of Economics under controlled conditions.
- Published
- 1993
30. Corporate philanthropy, political connections, and costs of equity capital.
- Author
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Liu, Chuyuan, Tang, Jing, and Huang, Chenghao
- Abstract
We examine how investors' perceptions of firms' philanthropic behaviors alter the effect of corporate philanthropy on costs of equity capital. Using a sample of Chinese A‐share listed firms from 2007 to 2018, we find that firms making philanthropic donations have higher equity financing costs. In contrast, firms without politically connected executives, experiencing provincial official turnovers, and located in provinces with fiscal pressure do not see an increase in costs of equity capital. In addition, Chinese investors consider strategic corporate philanthropy to establish political connections less valuable after anticorruption campaigns are launched, hence requiring higher rates of return from firms making monetary donations. Overall, this paper provides evidence that investors' perceptions of firm behavior are shaped by unique institutional factors in emerging markets, resulting in unintended economic consequences for firms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Public goods and diversity in democracies and non‐democracies.
- Author
-
Raabe, Roxanne, Sander, Christian J., and Schneider, Andrea
- Abstract
This paper analyzes how ethnic diversity affects the provision of public goods in democratic and non‐democratic societies when political parties compete for voter support by offering a mix of private and public goods. Our model implies that increasing diversity that leads to more heterogeneous preferences for public goods decreases the provision of public goods in democracies, where political power is distributed equally among citizens, while there is a weaker or no effect in non‐democracies, where political power is distributed unequally among citizens. When measuring diversity by ethnic fractionalization and public good provision by either levels of government expenses, expenditures on health, or life expectancy, we indeed observe a negative association between diversity and the provision of public goods in democracies but no or only a weak association in non‐democracies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. KYKLOS Editorial Policy.
- Subjects
SCHOLARLY periodicals ,EDITORS - Abstract
Discusses the editorial policy of the periodical 'Kyklos.' Role of referees; Length of time between writing a paper and publishing it; Types of contributions most preferred by editors.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Hot hand or choking under pressure – Evidence from professional basketball.
- Author
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Jane, Wen‐Jhan
- Subjects
BASKETBALL games ,BASKETBALL ,BASKETBALL fans ,PROFESSIONAL employees - Abstract
This paper examines the existence of a hot hand and whether performing in front of a supportive audience creates a psychological pressure, which may impair performance. Using the task of free throwing in basketball competitions involving National Basketball Association (NBA) regular season and playoff games, I find strong evidence of a hot hand and a negative causal effect of the spectators on the probability of a successful shoot. The results support the hot hand fallacy and are in line with the hypothesis of choking under pressure when performing skill‐based tasks. Furthermore, contrary to what would be expected given the evidence in favor of a choking phenomenon, the effect of star players is insignificant. The hot hand effects for stars and non‐stars are the same in direction. Finally, efforts increase the performance, and the influence of hot hands and choking are not different between home and away shootings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Labor market effects of COVID‐19 in Sweden and its neighbors: Evidence from administrative data.
- Author
-
Juranek, Steffen, Paetzold, Jörg, Winner, Hannes, and Zoutman, Floris
- Subjects
LABOR market ,COVID-19 ,COVID-19 pandemic ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission ,EMPLOYMENT furloughs - Abstract
This paper studies the labor market effects of non‐pharmaceutical interventions (NPIs) to combat the COVID‐19 pandemic. We focus on the Nordic countries which showed one of the highest variations in NPIs despite having similar community spread of COVID‐19 at the onset of the pandemic: While Denmark, Finland and Norway imposed strict measures ('lockdowns'), Sweden decided for much lighter restrictions. Empirically, we use novel administrative data on weekly new unemployment and furlough spells from all 56 regions of the Nordic countries to compare the labor market outcomes of Sweden with the ones of its neighbors. Our evidence suggests that the labor markets of all countries were severely hit by the pandemic, although Sweden performed slightly better than its neighbors. Specifically, we find the worsening of the Swedish labor market to occur around 2 to 3 weeks later than in the other Nordic countries, and that its cumulative sum of new unemployment and furlough spells remained significantly lower (about 20–25%) during the time period of our study (up to week 21 of 2020). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. To follow or not to follow the herd? Transparency and social norm nudges.
- Author
-
Kantorowicz‐Reznichenko, Elena and Kantorowicz, Jaroslaw
- Subjects
SOCIAL norms ,DEFAULT (Finance) ,SOCIAL services ,GOVERNMENT policy ,HERDING - Abstract
Behavioral interventions in general, and nudges in particular have become in recent years a popular (soft) regulatory instrument all around the world. Despite the excitement around this policy‐relevant field, some concerns have been raised. Nudges utilize behavioral biases in order to direct an individual's behavior. People, however, are usually not aware of the fact that such biases are used to influence their behavior. Making nudges transparent is important in democratic societies; yet, this might inhibit their effectiveness. Whether transparency inhibits the effect of a nudge was examined with respect to default nudges. However, this is the first paper to examine the effectiveness of transparent social norm nudges. Using an online experiment, we find that unlike with defaults, where transparency seems not to have inhibitive effects, disclosing the way social norms work and the purpose of using them diminishes the positive social norm effect. By means of heterogeneity analysis, we show that these results (the positive effect of the nudge and the inhibitive influence of transparency) hold only for male participants. Given the proliferation of nudges in public policies around the world, these results call for further research on nudges and transparency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Top graduate programmes in economics: Historical evolution and recent evidence.
- Author
-
O'Hagan, John
- Subjects
ELITE (Social sciences) ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,EVIDENCE ,ECONOMICS education ,DOCTOR of philosophy degree ,UNDERGRADUATES - Abstract
The first part of the paper provides a novel overview narrative of the historical evolution of PhD programmes in economics from 1880, drawing on multiple sources. The second part is empirical, and, also novel in terms of the data constructed. It attempts to bring the narrative up to date by looking at the cohorts of winners of the main young economist awards in economics in the US and Europe over the last twenty years or so and to chart at which universities they obtained their doctorates and undergraduate degrees. The total number of young (at the time of the award) economists so involved exceeds 350. The evolution of the American‐style PhD programme of today is traced to the emigration of European economists to the US from Nazi‐occupied Europe in the 1930s, and its subsequent spread first to Britain and then Continental Europe documented. What is new in the last twenty years or so is the emergence of many Top‐50 economics departments in Europe, with corresponding highly regarded PhD programmes. However, in relation to the recent elite young award‐winning economists the position in terms of PhD education of Harvard and MIT particularly remains largely unchallenged, in both the US and Europe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Collusion, political connection, and tax avoidance in China.
- Author
-
Tsai, Pi‐Han, Liu, Yongzheng, and Liu, Xin
- Subjects
COLLUSION ,TAXATION - Abstract
Our paper is the first to examine the impact of government‐firm collusion on firm tax avoidance in China by applying an instrumental variable approach. We take political turnover of local leaders as an external shock to the existing collusion and investigate firms' tax avoidance activities during local leadership transition. By using data on political turnover of prefectural leaders and listed firms from 2007 to 2014, we find that political turnover leads to the instability of existing collusion, and consequently a decrease in firm tax avoidance. This provides evidence of the pre‐existing collusion between government and firms. We then rule out the possibility that such change is driven by the effect of political uncertainty or tax competition by considering the heterogeneous effect of firms and cities. Finally, we show that firms' political connections, captured by political ties and ownership of firms, stabilize the existing collusion and help firms maintain their advantage while facing external political shocks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Optimal taxation for democracies with less than perfect voters: A public choice perspective.
- Author
-
Congleton, Roger D.
- Subjects
OPTIMAL taxation ,SOCIAL choice ,TAX incidence ,FISCAL policy ,VOTERS - Abstract
This paper analyzes optimal tax policy from the perspective of voters who want public policies to systematically advance their interests. Self‐acknowledged ignorance implies that voters have a practical interest in transparent and stable tax systems that allow personal tax burdens to be calculated accurately and easily. Such properties reduce voter mistakes. However, a voter's normative interests may conflict with these practical interests, because ideas about a good life or good society often support tax system complexity. Tradeoffs between these two aims of democratic tax systems imply that the optimal tax system for a democracy neither minimizes voter errors nor maximizes a social welfare function. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Freedom, diversity and the taste for revolt.
- Author
-
Maimone Ansaldo Patti, Dario, Marino, Alba, and Navarra, Pietro
- Subjects
TASTE ,LIBERTY ,HYPOTHESIS ,PROBABILITY theory ,REVOLUTIONARIES - Abstract
Do freedom and social diversity affect individual preferences for revolutionary action? In this paper, we study the interplay between subjective freedom, defined as autonomy in decision‐making, and social diversity, measured through the extent of religious and/or ethno–linguistic fractionalization. Our paper is based on three hypotheses about the impact of the above two variables and their interaction on individual preferences for revolt. Our hypotheses are tested using a dataset containing information on about 44,000 individuals and covering 51 different countries during the 1990–2003 period. Our research suggests that people that define themselves as free individuals are less likely to support revolutionary actions, while the extent of fractionalization mildly affects such a probability. Interestingly, subjective freedom moderates the impact of diversity on the individual preferences for revolt if the extent of fractionalization is below a certain threshold. Instead, when above, subjective freedom enhances the impact of diversity on the taste for revolt. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Transparency, civic capital and political accountability: A virtuous relation?
- Author
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Albanese, Giuseppe, Galli, Emma, Rizzo, Ilde, and Scaglioni, Carla
- Subjects
POLITICAL accountability ,GOVERNMENT accountability ,PUBLIC administration ,CITIES & towns - Abstract
Our paper investigates the intertwined relation among transparency, civic capital and political accountability in a large sample of Italian municipalities using a new indicator of institutional transparency. Firstly, we test the hypothesis that civic capital affects transparency of public administrations; secondly, we verify whether in municipalities where civic capital is high, citizens' attention toward government accountability is also high, making it politically unfeasible to disregard the demand for transparency. We find that civic capital positively affects transparency and the latter, in turn, is politically rewarding for the local administrators only conditional to the level of civic capital. Our findings are robust to different samples and endogeneity concerns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. School Hours and Maternal Labor Supply.
- Author
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Shure, Nikki
- Subjects
WORKING hours ,LABOR supply ,PRIMARY schools ,WOMEN employees ,SOCIOECONOMICS - Abstract
Summary This paper examines the effect of extending the primary school day on maternal labor supply. I exploit the staggered nature of the recent German reform to extend school hours and assess whether or not gaining access to a full day school increases the likelihood that mothers enter into the labor market or extend their hours worked if already employed. I use the German Socio‐Economic Panel data set (GSOEP) and link it to a self‐collected school‐level data set with geographical information software (GIS). Using a flexible difference‐in‐difference approach in the estimation of linear probability and logit models, I find that the policy has a statistically significant effect of approximately five percentage points at the extensive margin, drawing more women into the labor market. I find no significant effect of the policy at the intensive margin; women who were already working do not extend their hours worked. This has implications for policies to extend the school day that do not correspond to the working day. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Do Linguistic Structures Affect Human Capital? The Case of Pronoun Drop.
- Author
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Feldmann, Horst
- Subjects
LINGUISTIC analysis ,HUMAN capital ,LINGUISTICS -- Social aspects ,EMPIRICAL research ,LINGUISTS ,SCHOOL enrollment - Abstract
Summary: This paper empirically studies the human capital effects of grammatical rules that permit speakers to drop a personal pronoun when used as a subject of a sentence. By de‐emphasizing the significance of the individual, such languages may perpetuate ancient values and norms that give primacy to the collective, inducing governments and families to invest relatively little in education because education usually increases the individual's independence from both the state and the family and may thus reduce the individual's commitment to these institutions. Carrying out both an individual‐level and a country‐level analysis, the paper indeed finds negative effects of pronoun‐drop languages. The individual‐level analysis uses data on 114,894 individuals from 75 countries over 1999‐2014. It establishes that speakers of such languages have a lower probability of having completed secondary or tertiary education, compared with speakers of languages that do not allow pronoun drop. The country‐level analysis uses data from 101 countries over 1972‐2012. Consistent with the individual‐level analysis, it finds that countries where the dominant languages permit pronoun drop have lower secondary school enrollment rates. In both cases, the magnitude of the effect is substantial, particularly among females. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Editorial Policy.
- Subjects
EDITORIALS ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Presents the editorial policy of the economics journal 'Kyklos.' Ability of the authors to convey their thoughts; Revisions of articles.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. KYKLOS Editorial Policy.
- Subjects
SERIAL publications ,EDITORS - Abstract
Focuses on the policy specifications in the KYKLOS journal. Decision making on the general quality of the paper by editors; Oral report by the authors to speed up the process of publishing; Number of revision allowed for the paper.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Marches, Capital et Incertitude (Book Review).
- Author
-
Bernard, Georges
- Subjects
- *
ECONOMICS , *NONFICTION - Abstract
Reviews the book 'Marchés, Capital et Incertitude,' edited by M. Boiteux, Th. de Montbrial, and B. Munier.
- Published
- 1987
46. Does money laundering inflate residential house prices? Evidence from the Italian provincial markets.
- Author
-
Novaro, Riccardo, Piacenza, Massimiliano, and Turati, Gilberto
- Subjects
HOME prices ,MONEY laundering ,VIOLENT crimes ,DRUG traffic ,HOUSING market ,MARKET prices - Abstract
In this paper, we provide an estimate of the impact of money laundering on residential house market prices. The housing market is commonly exploited by criminal organizations to clean illegal profits. The increase in demand due to money laundering contrasts the negative externality of crime on house prices, which has been investigated by a large literature. We build a new dataset on residential house prices at the provincial level in Italy over the period 2005–2012, obtaining a sample of 672 observations. We then estimate a hedonic equilibrium price model, controlling for proxies both for illegal profits derived from "entrepreneurial" crimes (drug dealing, receiving stolen goods, prostitution) and for violent crimes (extortions), together with traditional market drivers. Adding to the evidence from the traditional literature, which remarks the negative impact of crime on house prices, our findings suggest that money laundering from "entrepreneurial" crimes creates an upward distortion in the housing market prices. The impact is stronger where retail markets for illicit trades are richer. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Punishing or rallying 'round the flag? Heterogeneous effects of terrorism in South Tyrol.
- Subjects
TERRORIST organizations ,TERRORISM ,WAR ,ITALIAN language ,INCUMBENCY (Public officers) - Abstract
This paper studies the electoral effects of terrorism by examining a rich panel dataset on the South Tyrolean case. A Northern and predominantly German‐speaking region of Italy, South Tyrol was the theater of a long war of attrition fought between the majority language group and the Italian state for autonomy and independence. Using detailed information on the whole record of 337 terrorist attacks occurring between 1956 and 1991, I find that (i) low‐scale terror or attacks which targeted police forces negatively affected incumbent support; (ii) high‐scale terror or attacks which targeted civilians or caused deaths were conducive of rally‐round‐the‐Italian‐flag momenta; (iii) support to terrorists sensibly drops after deadly attacks. These findings highlight the role of terror intensity and violence in driving the impact of terrorism on incumbent actors and terrorist organizations and help reconcile the coexistence of seemingly contradictory effects of terrorism documented in the literature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Contact and Commitment to Development: Evidence from quasi‐random missionary assignments.
- Author
-
Crawfurd, Lee
- Subjects
LOW-income countries ,MISSIONARIES ,INTERNET forums ,PUBLIC support ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
SUMMARY Public support for global development in rich countries is critical for sustaining effective government and individual action. But the causes of public support are not well understood. Does spending time living in a developing country play a role in generating individual commitment to development? Addressing this question is fraught with selection bias, as individuals are rarely exogenously assigned to spend time in different countries. In this paper I address this question using a natural experiment – the quasi‐random assignment of missionaries from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter‐day Saints to two‐year missions in different world regions. I provide the first causal estimates of the effect of travel to a developing country on attitudes to global development. Data comes from a new survey gathered through mission alumni Facebook groups. Missionaries assigned to low‐income and middle‐income world regions (Africa, Asia, Latin America, and Caribbean) have similar prior characteristics to those assigned to high‐income Europe. Those assigned to Africa self‐report greater interest in global development and greater charitable attitudes and behaviours. However, they also express stronger opposition to immigration from poor countries, and are less likely to be involved in political campaigns to address global development. Spending time in lower income countries may lead to greater support for charity but less support for political change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The Impact of Career Politicians: Evidence from US Governors.
- Author
-
Pickard, Harry
- Subjects
GOVERNORS ,POLITICIANS ,FEDERAL aid ,FEDERAL government ,DEPENDENT variables - Abstract
SUMMARY This paper exploits the presence of Congressional experience in US governors that permits the identification of the relationship between political career experience and intergovernmental transfers. I assemble a novel dataset of governors' political background and match this to federal transfer data from 1950 to 2008. Governors with Congressional experience have 0.8 percentage points more transfers to their state. I show evidence for one potential channel that this may act through, the federal grants system. The findings are robust to outliers in the data, selection effects, close elections and an alternative dependent variable based on a state's share of total federal transfers [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Are Happier People Better Citizens?
- Author
-
Guven, Cahit
- Subjects
HAPPINESS ,INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) ,LONGITUDINAL method ,OPTIMISM ,EMPIRICAL research ,CITIZENSHIP ,HYPOTHESIS - Abstract
This paper offers new findings which support the hypothesis that a causal link from happiness to social capital might exist. The paper exploits the very long German socio-economic panel of around 15000 people. Using the prospective study methodology, it finds that happier people contribute more to social capital. Both parametric and nonparametric results suggest that there exists an inverted-U shape relationship between happiness to social capital. Moreover, optimism appears to be an important channel through which happiness is linked to social capital. The paper also presents residual happiness as a measure of optimism which might be a valuable tool for empirical researchers. The results are robust to inclusion of various controls including the initial level of social capital, random sampling, non-linearity, different measures of social capital, and estimation techniques. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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