13,772 results on '"APPLIED economics"'
Search Results
2. Asymmetric stabilizing impact of international reserves
- Author
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Lee, Dongwon, Kim, Kyungkeun, and Lee, Dong Won
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Public Health and Health Services ,Applied Economics ,Banking ,Finance and Investment ,Economics ,Finance ,Banking ,finance and investment ,Applied economics ,Other economics - Abstract
This article studies international reserves’ nominal exchange rate stabilizing impact in emerging markets and developing countries, with a particular focus on its nonlinearity and asymmetry across different states of the economy. Using the fixed-effects and dynamic panel threshold models, we find the reserves to short-term debt threshold ratio after which the marginal stabilizing effect of reserves begins to fall during tranquil times. Such diminishing returns, however, do not appear to exist even at the excessive level of reserves during the global financial crisis, partly justifying precautionary demand for international reserves. These results call for extending reserve pooling or swap arrangements to enhance efficiency of reserve management by holding adequate, rather than excess, international reserves with an access to emergency lending during the crisis.
- Published
- 2024
3. Choosing to protect: public support for flood defense over relocation in climate change adaptation
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Freihardt, Jan, Buntaine, Mark T, and Bernauer, Thomas
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Economics ,Applied Economics ,Climate Action ,managed retreat ,climate change adaptation ,flooding ,public opinion ,survey experiment ,remain and protect ,planned relocation ,Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences - Abstract
Abstract: Policy makers worldwide face tough choices over how to prioritize public funding for adaptation to climate change. One particularly difficult choice is whether to opt for policies that promote relocation away from flood risks or infrastructure investments that protect against flooding. Local communities commonly prefer protective infrastructure, but it is less obvious that the general public will support this approach due to the growing costs. We study public opinion on these adaptation approaches using a choice experiment with nationally representative samples in the United States and Germany (n = 2400 each). We asked participants to prioritize federal funding between two hypothetical, equally sized communities differing in their adaptation strategy, flood frequency, lives and economic assets at risk, economic vitality, geographic distance, and political orientation. In both countries, we find surprisingly strong support for protective infrastructure over relocation policies among the general public, even under conditions where relocation could be an attractive alternative for addressing the growing costs of protective infrastructure and rebuilding efforts.
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- 2024
4. Analysing non-linearities and threshold effects between street-level built environments and local crime patterns: An interpretable machine learning approach
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Lee, Sugie, Ki, Donghwan, Hipp, John R, and Kim, Jae Hong
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Criminology ,Human Society ,Networking and Information Technology R&D (NITRD) ,Machine Learning and Artificial Intelligence ,Generic health relevance ,Urban and Regional Planning ,Applied Economics ,Human Geography ,Urban & Regional Planning ,Urban and regional planning ,Human geography ,Policy and administration - Abstract
Despite the substantial number of studies on the relationships between crime patterns and built environments, the impacts of street-level built environments on crime patterns have not been definitively determined due to the limitations of obtaining detailed streetscape data and conventional analysis models. To fill these gaps, this study focuses on the non-linear relationships and threshold effects between built environments and local crime patterns at the level of a street segment in the City of Santa Ana, California. Using Google Street View (GSV) and semantic segmentation techniques, we quantify the features of the built environment in GSV images. Then, we examine the non-linear relationships and threshold effects between built environment factors and crime by applying interpretable machine learning (IML) methods. While the machine learning models, especially Deep Neural Network (DNN), outperformed negative binomial regression in predicting future crime events, particularly advantageous was that they allowed us to obtain a deeper understanding of the complex relationship between crime patterns and environmental factors. The results of interpreting the DNN model through IML indicate that most streetscape elements showed non-linear relationships and threshold effects with crime patterns that cannot be easily captured by conventional regression model specifications. The non-linearities and threshold effects revealed in this study can shed light on the factors associated with crime patterns and contribute to policy development for public safety from crime.
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- 2024
5. Understanding and valuing human connections to deep-sea methane seeps off Costa Rica
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Pereira, Olívia S, Jacobsen, Mark, Carson, Richard, Cortés, Jorge, and Levin, Lisa A
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Economics ,Applied Economics ,Life on Land ,Choice modelling ,Deep sea ,Ecosystem services ,Existence value ,Methane seeps ,Environmental Science and Management ,Other Economics ,Agricultural Economics & Policy ,Ecology ,Applied economics ,Other economics - Published
- 2024
6. Capital controls and trade policy
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Lloyd, Simon P and Marin, Emile A
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Economics ,Applied Economics ,Econometrics ,Economic Theory ,Capital-flow management ,Free-trade agreements ,Ramsey policy ,Tariffs ,Trade policy ,Applied economics ,Economic theory - Published
- 2024
7. A cost-effectiveness analysis of intrauterine spacers used to prevent the formation of intrauterine adhesions following endometrial cavity surgery
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Schmerold, Luke, Martin, Coby, Mehta, Aashay, Sobti, Dhruv, Jaiswal, Ajit Kumar, Kumar, Jatinder, Feldberg, Ian, Munro, Malcolm G, and Lee, Won Chan
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Epidemiology ,Economics ,Applied Economics ,Health Sciences ,Comparative Effectiveness Research ,Prevention ,Cost Effectiveness Research ,Health Services ,Clinical Research ,Pediatric ,Good Health and Well Being ,Pregnancy ,Female ,Infant ,Newborn ,Humans ,United States ,Cost-Effectiveness Analysis ,Quality of Life ,Uterine Diseases ,Uterus ,Tissue Adhesions ,Intrauterine adhesions ,decision tree ,cost-effectiveness ,budget impact ,incidence ,recurrence ,pregnancy ,lysis of adhesions ,intrauterine surgery ,I11 ,I1 ,I ,I10 ,I18 ,H51 ,H ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychology ,Health Policy & Services ,Applied economics - Abstract
AimTo assess, from a United States (US) payer's perspective, the cost-effectiveness of gels designed to separate the endometrial surfaces (intrauterine spacers) placed following intrauterine surgery.Materials and methodsA decision tree model was developed to estimate the cost-effectiveness of intrauterine spacers used to facilitate endometrial repair and prevent the formation (primary prevention) and reformation (secondary prevention) of intrauterine adhesions (IUAs) and associated pregnancy- and birth-related adverse outcomes. Event rates and costs were extrapolated from data available in the existing literature. Sensitivity analyses were conducted to corroborate the base case results.ResultsIn this model, using intrauterine spacers for adhesion prevention led to net cost savings for US payers of $2,905 per patient over a 3.5-year time horizon. These savings were driven by the direct benefit of preventing procedures associated with IUA formation ($2,162 net savings) and the indirect benefit of preventing pregnancy-related complications often associated with IUA formation ($3,002). These factors offset the incremental cost of intrauterine spacer use of $1,539 based on an assumed price of $1,800 and the related increase in normal deliveries of $931. Model outcomes were sensitive to the probability of preterm and normal deliveries. Budget impact analyses show overall cost savings of $19.96 per initial member within a US healthcare plan, translating to $20 million over a 5-year time horizon for a one-million-member plan.LimitationsThere are no available data on the effects of intrauterine spacers or IUAs on patients' quality of life. Resultingly, the model could not evaluate patients' utility related to treatment with or without intrauterine spacers and instead focused on costs and events avoided.ConclusionThis analysis robustly demonstrated that intrauterine spacers would be cost-saving to healthcare payers, including both per-patient and per-plan member, through a reduction in IUAs and improvements to patients' pregnancy-related outcomes.
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- 2024
8. Racial/Ethnic differences in the association between parental wealth and child behavior problems
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Sun, Sicong, Chiang, Chien-jen, and Hudson, Darrell L
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Human Society ,Demography ,Mental Health ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric ,Social Determinants of Health ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Wealth ,Child development ,Race ,Ethnicity ,Behavior problems ,Socioeconomic status ,Applied Economics ,Social Work ,Social work ,Sociology - Published
- 2024
9. Expert and operator perspectives on barriers to energy efficiency in data centers
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Newkirk, Alex C, Hanus, Nichole, and Payne, Christopher T
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Civil Engineering ,Economics ,Engineering ,Applied Economics ,Affordable and Clean Energy ,Data centers ,Energy efficiency ,Organizational behavior ,Non-technical barriers ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Urban and Regional Planning ,Applied economics ,Civil engineering - Abstract
It was last estimated in 2016 that data centers (DCs) comprise approximately 2% of total US electricity consumption. However, this estimate is currently being updated to account for the massive increase in computing needs due to streaming, cryptocurrency, and artificial intelligence (AI). To prevent energy consumption that tracks with increasing computing needs, it is imperative we identify energy efficiency strategies and investments beyond the low-hanging fruit solutions. In a two-phased research approach, we ask: What non-technical barriers still impede energy efficiency (EE) practices and investments in the data center sector, and what can be done to overcome these barriers? In particular, we are focused on social and organizational barriers to EE. In Phase I, we performed a literature review and found that technical solutions are abundant in the literature, but fail to address the top-down cultural shifts that need to take place in order to adapt new energy efficiency strategies. In Phase II, reported here, we interviewed 16 data center operators/experts to ground-truth our literature findings. Our interview protocols focus on three aspects of DC decision-making: procurement practices, metrics and monitoring, and perceived barriers to energy efficiency. We find that vendors are the key drivers of procurement decisions, advanced efficiency metrics are facility-specific, and there is convergence in the design of advanced facilities due to the heat density of parallelized infrastructure. Our ultimate goals for our research are to design DC decarbonization policies that target organizational structure, empower individual staff, and foster a supportive external market.
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- 2024
10. Industrial Composition of Syndicated Loans and Banks’ Climate Commitments
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Hale, Galina, Meisenbacher, Brigid, and Nechio, Fernanda
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Economics ,Banking ,Finance and Investment ,Applied Economics ,Commerce ,Management ,Tourism and Services ,Climate Action - Abstract
In the past two decades, a number of banks joined global initiatives aimed to mitigate climate change by “greening” their asset portfolios. We study whether banks that made such commitments have a different emission exposure of their portfolios of syndicated loans than banks that did not. We rely on loan-level information with global coverage combined with country-industry information on emissions. We find that all banks have reduced their loan-emission exposures over the last 8 years. However, we do not find differences between banks that did and those that did not signal their sustainability goals, with the exception of early signers of Principles of Responsible Investments (PRI), who already had lower exposure to emissions through their syndicated lending. In addition, banks that signed PRI shortened the maturity of the loans extended to highly-emitting industries but only temporarily. Thus, we conclude that banks reduced their exposure to climate transition risks on average, but voluntary climate commitments did not contribute to syndicated loan reallocation away from highly-emitting sectors.
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- 2024
11. Defining geoeconomics amid shifts in global hegemony: Critical geographies of new international conjunctures
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Sparke, Matthew
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Urban and Regional Planning ,Applied Economics ,Human Geography ,Geography ,Urban and regional planning ,Human geography ,Sociology - Abstract
Recent shifts in global hegemony make the need for critical geographical accounts of geoeconomics and geopolitics that much more critical. They underline that we need to come to terms with their dialectical relationships and tensions, doing so in relation to both underlying struggles over international hegemony and uneven capitalist development as well as in relation to all sorts of complex overlying socio-cultural formations. Critical geographers can combine their diverse approaches more effectively to do this analytical work by adapting recent forms of conjunctural analysis in urban, economic and regional geography.
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- 2024
12. Testing Models of Strategic Uncertainty: Equilibrium Selection in Repeated Games
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Boczoń, Marta, Vespa, Emanuel, Weidman, Taylor, and Wilson, Alistair J
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Economics ,Applied Economics ,Economic Theory ,Applied economics ,Econometrics ,Economic theory - Abstract
Abstract: In repeated games, where both collusive and noncollusive outcomes can be supported as equilibria, it is crucial to understand the likelihood of selection for each type of equilibrium. Controlled experiments have empirically validated a selection criterion for the two-player repeated prisoner’s dilemma: the basin of attraction for always defect. This prediction device uses the game primitives to measure the set of beliefs for which an agent would prefer to unconditionally defect rather than attempt conditional cooperation. This belief measure reflects strategic uncertainty over others’ actions, where the prediction is for noncooperative outcomes when the basin measure is full, and cooperative outcomes when empty. We expand this selection notion to multi-player social dilemmas and experimentally test the predictions, manipulating both the total number of players and the payoff tensions. Our results affirm the model as a tool for predicting long-term cooperation, while also speaking to some limitations when dealing with first-time encounters.
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- 2024
13. Socioeconomic Disparities in Privatized Pollution Remediation: Evidence from Toxic Chemical Spills
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Marion, Justin and West, Jeremy
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Economics ,Applied Economics ,Health Disparities ,Minority Health ,Social Determinants of Health ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Applied economics - Abstract
Governments often privatize the administration of regulations to third-party specialists paid for by the regulated parties. We study how the resulting conflict of interest can have unintended consequences for the distributional impacts of regulation. In Massachusetts, the party responsible for hazardous waste contamination must hire a licensed contractor to quantify the environmental severity. We find that contractors’ evaluations favor their clients, exhibiting substantial score bunching just below thresholds that determine government oversight of the remediation. Client favoritism is more pronounced in socioeconomically disadvantaged neighborhoods and is associated with inferior remediation quality, highlighting a novel channel for inequities in pollution exposure. (JEL D63, J15, K32, L51, Q53, R23)
- Published
- 2024
14. Heterogeneous experience and constant-gain learning
- Author
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Duffy, John and Shin, Michael
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Economics ,Applied Economics ,Pediatric ,Bounded rationality ,Learning ,Experience ,Heterogeneity ,Perpetual-youth model ,Constant-gain learning ,Economic Theory ,Banking ,Finance and Investment ,Banking ,finance and investment ,Econometrics ,Economic theory - Abstract
Recent evidence suggests that agents may base their forecasts for macroeconomic variables mainly on their personal life experiences. We connect this behavior to the concept of constant-gain learning (CGL) in macroeconomics. Our approach incorporates both heterogeneity in the life cycle via the perpetual youth model and learning from experience (LfE) into a linear expectations model where agents are born and die with some probability every period. For LfE, agents employ a decreasing-gain learning (DGL) model using data only from their own lifetimes. While agents are using DGL individually, we show that in the aggregate, expectations follow an approach related to CGL, where the gain is now tied to the probabilities of birth and death. We provide a precise characterization of the relationship between CGL and our model of perpetual youth learning (PYL) and show that PYL can well approximate CGL while pinning down the gain parameter with demographic data. Calibrating the model to U.S. demographics leads to gain parameters similar to those found in the literature. Further, variation in birth and death rates across countries and time periods can help explain the empirical time-variation in gains. Finally, we show that our approach is robust to alternative ways of modeling individual agent learning.
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- 2024
15. Regulation and the demand for credit default swaps in experimental bond markets
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Weber, Matthias, Duffy, John, and Schram, Arthur
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Economics ,Applied Economics ,Applied economics ,Econometrics ,Economic theory - Abstract
Credit default swaps (CDS) played an important role in the financial crisis of 2008 leading to calls for regulation. Here, we seek to understand the impact of a CDS regulation that restricts the possibility to hold naked CDS. We use a controlled laboratory experiment analyzing CDS pricing in a bond market subject to default risk. Our results show that the regulation achieves the goal of increasing the use of CDS for hedging purposes while reducing the use of CDS for speculation. This success does not come at the expense of lower initial public offering (IPO) prices for the bonds or worse pricing of bonds or CDS in the secondary market.
- Published
- 2024
16. Patient-Centered Innovation
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Jung, Olivia S, Kyle, Michael Anne, McCree, Paula, and Nadel, Hiyam M
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Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,8.1 Organisation and delivery of services ,Health and social care services research ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Patients ,Patient Participation ,Advisory Committees ,Patient-Centered Care ,patient innovation ,patient engagement ,innovation contest ,quality improvement ,practice transformation ,open social innovation ,Public Health and Health Services ,Applied Economics ,Health Policy & Services ,Applied economics ,Health services and systems ,Policy and administration - Abstract
BackgroundInvolving patients in the health-care delivery innovation has many benefits. Open social innovation (OSI) presents a fitting lens to examine and advance patient engagement in innovation. OSI offers a participatory approach to innovation, in which diverse groups of participants collaboratively generate ideas and scale solutions on complex social challenges.PurposeThis study: (1) describes a pilot application of OSI, in which individuals serving on a hospital's patients and family advisory councils (PFACs) were invited to participate in an innovation contest; and (2) explores the extent to which patients' beliefs about their role in innovation relate to their participation in the contest.Methodology/approachWe conducted an innovation contest that invited PFAC members to share ideas that would improve patient experiences and then vote on and select the ideas that they wanted to see move forward. We measured patients' beliefs about their role in innovation in a survey before the contest.ResultsTwenty individuals submitted 27 ideas. Patients who expressed preference for more involvement in innovation were more likely to participate.ConclusionsUsing OSI may help expand patient engagement in innovation, particularly among those who want to be more involved but do not feel authorized to voice ideas in traditional advisory committees.Practical implicationsOSI spurred collaboration among patients, clinicians, quality improvement staff, hospital administrators, and other stakeholders in idea generation, elaboration, and implementation. More experimentation and research are needed to understand how OSI can be leveraged to capture patients' voice and incorporate them in care delivery innovation.
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- 2024
17. How land use patterns keep driving cheap: Geographic support for transportation taxes
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Millard-Ball, Adam and Kapshikar, Purva
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Human Society ,Human Geography ,Built Environment and Design ,Urban and Regional Planning ,Life on Land ,built environment ,environment/sustainability ,land use ,driving taxes ,transport ,Applied Economics ,Urban & Regional Planning ,Urban and regional planning ,Human geography ,Policy and administration - Abstract
Economists tend to favour price-based approaches, such as gasoline and carbon taxes, to address the negative impacts of car travel, while urban planners tend to emphasise land use planning such as compact development. In this paper, we argue that the two approaches are synergistic. We use precinct-level data from two California referenda to show that land use planning makes pricing more feasible: voters in dense, transit-oriented neighbourhoods are more willing to support a carbon price and increased gasoline taxes. Political ideology is a more important determinant of voting patterns, but in a closely divided election, land use patterns, public transportation, and other aspects of the built environment can determine the success of a referendum on driving taxes. Our results also imply that the voluminous research on land use and transportation underestimates the long-run impacts of compact development on driving, through ignoring the ways in which urban form shapes the politics of taxation.
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- 2024
18. Robo advisors and access to wealth management
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Reher, Michael and Sokolinski, Stanislav
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Economics ,Banking ,Finance and Investment ,Applied Economics ,Commerce ,Management ,Tourism and Services ,Clinical Research ,Political Science ,Finance ,Banking ,finance and investment ,Applied economics - Published
- 2024
19. COVID-19 Learning loss and recovery
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Singh, Abhijeet, Romero, Mauricio, and Muralidharan, Karthik
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Economics ,Applied Economics ,Law ,Applied economics - Published
- 2024
20. Do notifications affect households’ willingness to pay to avoid power outages? Evidence from an experimental stated-preference survey in California
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Gorman, Will and Callaway, Duncan
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Economics ,Applied Economics ,value of lost load ,electric reliability ,Public Safety Power Shutoffs ,Business and Management ,Policy and Administration ,Energy ,Applied economics ,Policy and administration - Abstract
How much should electric utilities pay to maintain a reliable electricity system? This paper describes an open-ended stated-preference experiment that generates estimates for how advanced notification impacts household willingness-to-pay (WTP) to avoid outages. We find positive and statistically significant WTP to avoid power outages of $10/kWh, consistent with the expectation that outages are costly to the residential sector. We find notification reduces the WTP, but the effects are not statistically significant. There is limited evidence that these results vary by income and wealth levels. Back-up power ownership is positively correlated with respondents’ WTP to avoid outages.
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- 2024
21. Search, unemployment, and the Beveridge curve: Experimental evidence
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Duffy, John and Jenkins, Brian C
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Economics ,Applied Economics ,Economic Theory ,Decent Work and Economic Growth ,Beveridge curve ,Job search ,Matching ,Vacancies ,Unemployment ,Experimental economics ,job search ,matching ,experimental economics ,Econometrics ,Applied economics ,Development studies - Abstract
We report on a laboratory experiment testing the predictions of the Diamond–Mortensen–Pissarides (DMP) search-and-matching model, which is a workhorse, decentralized model of unemployment and the labor market. We focus on the job vacancy posting problem that firms face in the DMP model. We explore the model's comparative statics predictions concerning variations in the separation rate, the vacancy posting cost, and the firm's surplus earned per employee. Across all treatments, we find strong evidence for an inverse relationship between vacancies and unemployment, consistent with the Beveridge curve. We also find that the results of our various comparative statics exercises are in-line with the predictions of the theory.
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- 2024
22. Correcting attrition bias using changes-in-changes
- Author
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Ghanem, Dalia, Hirshleifer, Sarojini, Kédagni, Désiré, and Ortiz-Becerra, Karen
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Economics ,Applied Economics ,Clinical Research ,8.4 Research design and methodologies (health services) ,Health and social care services research ,Statistics ,Econometrics ,Applied economics - Abstract
Attrition is a common and potentially important threat to internal validity in treatment effect studies. We extend the changes-in-changes approach to identify the average treatment effect for respondents and the entire study population in the presence of attrition. Our method, which exploits baseline outcome data, can be applied to randomized experiments as well as quasi-experimental difference-in-difference designs. A formal comparison highlights that while widely used corrections typically impose restrictions on whether or how response depends on treatment, our proposed attrition correction exploits restrictions on the outcome model. We further show that the conditions required for our correction can accommodate a broad class of response models that depend on treatment in an arbitrary way. We illustrate the implementation of the proposed corrections in an application to a large-scale randomized experiment.
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- 2024
23. Climate Adaptation through Trade: Evidence and Mechanism from Heatwaves on Firms' Imports
- Author
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Zhang, Zhiyue, Zhang, Wenhao, Wu, Qingyang, Liu, Jiahe, and Jiang, Lei
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Economics ,Applied Economics ,Econometrics ,Economic Theory ,Climate Action ,Climate change ,Adaptation ,Extreme heat ,Imports ,Trade ,Applied economics ,Economic theory - Published
- 2024
24. Legislature size and welfare: Evidence from Brazil
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Mignozzetti, Umberto, Cepaluni, Gabriel, and Freire, Danilo
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Applied Economics ,Economics ,Human Society ,Policy and Administration ,Political Science ,Clinical Research ,Political Science & Public Administration ,Applied economics ,Policy and administration ,Political science - Abstract
Abstract: How does legislature size impact public service provision? Despite the importance of institutional design for democratic governance, the effect of legislative features on citizen welfare remains little understood. In this article, we use a formal model to show that increasing legislature size improves public goods delivery. We argue that changes in bargaining costs depend on whether additional legislators share the executive's party affiliation: More opposition members reduce the equilibrium public goods provision, while more government‐aligned members increase it. We test this theory by exploiting sharp discontinuities in city‐council size in Brazil. We show that an additional city councilor has a 91% chance of belonging to the mayoral coalition, and this significantly improves primary school enrollment and infant mortality rates. To explore possible mechanisms, we surveyed 174 former city councilors and analyzed 346,553 bills proposed between 2005 and 2008. This article has implications for the design of representative institutions.
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- 2024
25. Geographic Variation in Cesarean Sections in the United States: Trends, Correlates, and Other Interesting Facts
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Robinson, Sarah, Royer, Heather, and Silver, David
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Economics ,Applied Economics ,Applied economics - Published
- 2024
26. A toolkit for setting and evaluating price floors
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Hernández, Carlos Eduardo and Cantillo-Cleves, Santiago
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Economics ,Applied Economics ,Econometrics ,Price controls ,Price floors ,Intermediation ,Market power ,Incidence ,Transportation ,Economic Theory ,Applied economics ,Economic theory - Published
- 2024
27. A Tutorial on Net Benefit Regression for Real-World Cost-Effectiveness Analysis Using Censored Data from Randomized or Observational Studies
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Chen, Shuai, Bang, Heejung, and Hoch, Jeffrey S
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Economics ,Applied Economics ,Cost Effectiveness Research ,Comparative Effectiveness Research ,Health Services ,Clinical Research ,Humans ,Cost-Effectiveness Analysis ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,censoring ,cost-effectiveness analysis ,net benefit regression ,non-randomized study ,observational data ,propensity scores ,Public Health and Health Services ,Health Policy & Services ,Applied economics ,Health services and systems ,Public health - Abstract
HighlightsWe illustrate the steps involved in carrying out cost-effectiveness analysis using net benefit regressions with possibly censored demo data by providing step-by-step guidance and code applied to a data set.We demonstrate the importance of these new methods by illustrating how naïve methods for handling censoring can lead to biased cost-effectiveness results.
- Published
- 2024
28. Digital activism to achieve meaningful institutional change: A bricolage of crowdsourcing, social media, and data analytics
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Mindel, Vitali, Overstreet, Robert E, Sternberg, Henrik, Mathiassen, Lars, and Phillips, Nelson
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Economics ,Applied Economics ,Commerce ,Management ,Tourism and Services ,Strategy ,Management and Organisational Behaviour ,Institutional change ,Crowdsourcing ,Resource bricolage ,Institutional theory ,Science -activist collaboration ,Case study ,Business and Management ,Marketing ,Science Studies ,Strategy ,management and organisational behaviour ,Applied economics - Published
- 2024
29. Forecasting long-term energy demand and reductions in GHG emissions
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Golfam, Parvin, Ashofteh, Parisa-Sadat, and Loáiciga, Hugo A
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Economics ,Applied Economics ,Climate Action ,Affordable and Clean Energy ,Energy demand forecasting ,Low Emissions Analysis Platform (LEAP) model ,RSP scenario ,GHG emissions ,Renewable energy resources ,Residential solar panels ,Civil Engineering ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Urban and Regional Planning ,Applied economics ,Civil engineering - Published
- 2024
30. Human capital affects religious identity: Causal evidence from Kenya
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Alfonsi, Livia, Bauer, Michal, Chytilová, Julie, and Miguel, Edward
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Economics ,Applied Economics ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Quality Education ,C93 ,O12 ,Z12 ,Development Studies ,Applied economics ,Development studies - Abstract
We study how human capital and economic conditions causally affect the choice of religious denomination. We utilize a longitudinal dataset monitoring the religious history of more than 5,000 Kenyans over twenty years, in tandem with a randomized experiment (deworming) that has exogenously boosted education and living standards. The main finding is that the program reduces the likelihood of membership in a Pentecostal denomination up to 20 years later when respondents are in their mid-thirties, while there is a comparable increase in membership in traditional Christian denominations. The effect is concentrated and statistically significant among a sub-group of participants who benefited most from the program in terms of increased education and income. The effects are unlikely due to increased secularization, because the program does not reduce measures of religiosity. The results help explain why the global growth of the Pentecostal movement, sometimes described a "New Reformation", is centered in low-income communities.
- Published
- 2024
31. Mental Models and Learning: The Case of Base-Rate Neglect
- Author
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Esponda, Ignacio, Vespa, Emanuel, and Yuksel, Sevgi
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Economics ,Applied Economics ,Mental Health ,Brain Disorders ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Commerce ,Management ,Tourism and Services ,Commerce ,management ,tourism and services - Abstract
We experimentally document persistence of suboptimal behavior despite ample opportunities to learn from feedback in a canonical updating problem where people suffer from base-rate neglect. Our results provide insights on the mechanisms hindering learning from feedback. Importantly, our results suggest mistakes are more likely to be persistent when they are driven by incorrect mental models that miss or misrepresent important aspects of the environment. Such models induce confidence in initial answers, limiting engagement with and learning from feedback. We substantiate these insights in an alternative scenario where individuals involved in a voting problem overlook the importance of being pivotal. (JEL D83, D91)
- Published
- 2024
32. Built out cities? A new approach to measuring land use regulation
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Monkkonen, Paavo, Manville, Michael, and Lens, Michael
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Economics ,Banking ,Finance and Investment ,Applied Economics ,Commerce ,Management ,Tourism and Services ,Clinical Research ,Life on Land ,Land use regulation ,Measurement ,Housing production ,Urban and Regional Planning ,Banking ,finance and investment ,Applied economics - Published
- 2024
33. An Analysis of Safe Parking Programs: Identifying Program Features and Outcomes of an Emerging Homelessness Intervention
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Lewis, Leslie R, Bussell, Mirle Rabinowitz, and Livingstone, Stacey
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Social Work ,Human Society ,Clinical Research ,Urban and Regional Planning ,Applied Economics ,Policy and Administration ,Urban & Regional Planning ,Applied economics ,Human geography ,Policy and administration - Published
- 2024
34. Changing economics of China’s power system suggest that batteries and renewables may be a lower cost way to meet peak demand growth than coal
- Author
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Kahrl, Fritz and Lin, Jiang
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Economics ,Applied Economics ,Affordable and Clean Energy ,Energy Modelling ,Energy management ,Energy systems - Abstract
Concerns around reliability in China's electricity sector have rekindled interest in a traditional solution: building more coal-fired generation. However, over the past decade China's electricity sector has seen significant changes in supply costs, demand patterns, and regulation and markets, with falling costs for renewable and storage generation, "peakier" demand, and the creation of wholesale markets. These changes suggest that traditional approaches to evaluating the economics of different supply options may be outdated. This paper illustrates how a net capacity cost metric - fixed costs minus net market revenues - might be a useful metric for evaluating supply options to meet peak demand growth in China. Using a simplified example with recent resource cost data, the paper illustrates how, with a net capacity cost metric, electricity storage and solar PV may be a more cost-effective option for meeting peak demand growth than coal-fired generation.
- Published
- 2024
35. Individual evolutionary learning in repeated beauty contest games
- Author
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Anufriev, Mikhail, Duffy, John, and Panchenko, Valentyn
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Economics ,Applied Economics ,Economic Theory ,Econometrics ,Banking ,finance and investment ,Applied economics - Published
- 2024
36. Panel discussion of: Adverse effects of place-based policies?
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Neumark, David
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Economics ,Applied Economics ,Econometrics ,Economic Theory ,Applied economics ,Economic theory - Published
- 2024
37. Contribution of carbon pricing to meeting a mid-century net zero target
- Author
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Haites, Erik, Bertoldi, Paolo, König, Michael, Bataille, Christopher, Creutzig, Felix, Dasgupta, Dipak, du Can, Stéphane de la rue, Khennas, Smail, Kim, Yong-Gun, Nilsson, Lars J, Roy, Joyashree, and Sari, Agus
- Subjects
Climate Change Impacts and Adaptation ,Earth Sciences ,Environmental Sciences ,Climate Change Science ,Human Society ,Policy and Administration ,Carbon pricing ,emissions trading schemes ,carbon tax ,policy instruments ,emissions-intensive ,trade-exposed (EITE) sectors ,Applied Economics ,Law ,Climate change science ,Climate change impacts and adaptation ,Policy and administration - Abstract
A mid-century net zero target creates a challenge for reducing the emissions of emissions-intensive, trade-exposed sectors with high cost mitigation options. These sectors include aluminium, cement, chemicals, iron and steel, lime, pulp and paper and petroleum refining. Available studies agree that decarbonization of these sectors is possible by mid-century if more ambitious policies are implemented soon. Existing carbon pricing policies have had limited impact on the emissions of these sectors because their marginal abatement costs almost always exceed the tax rate or allowance price. But emissions trading systems with free allowance allocations to emissions-intensive, trade-exposed sectors have minimized the adverse economic impacts and associated leakage. Internationally coordinated policies are unlikely, so implementing more ambitious policies creates a risk of leakage. This paper presents policy packages a country can implement to accelerate emission reduction by these sectors with minimal risk of leakage. To comply with international trade law the policy packages differ for producers whose goods compete with imports in the domestic market and producers whose goods are exported. Carbon pricing is a critical component of each package due its ability to minimize the risk of adverse economic impacts on domestic industry, support innovation and generate revenue. The revenue can be used to assist groups adversely impacted by the domestic price and production changes due to carbon pricing and to build public support for the policies.
- Published
- 2024
38. State-level regulation of disinfection byproducts in the United States
- Author
-
Wang, Jie, McNally, Max G, Ulibarri, Nicola, Gim, Changdeok, Olson, Valerie A, and Feldman, David L
- Subjects
Policy and Administration ,Human Society ,Prevention ,Generic health relevance ,Clean Water and Sanitation ,Disinfection byproducts ,Policy analysis ,Policy instruments ,Water quality regulation ,Applied Economics ,Environmental Engineering ,Applied economics ,Policy and administration - Abstract
ABSTRACT: Disinfection byproducts (DBPs), residual compounds formed from the chemical disinfection of drinking water, can cause a host of damaging public health and environmental impacts. This study evaluates the landscape of regulations designed to reduce the occurrence and/or impact of DBPs, focusing on regulations issued by the US states. Drawing on a systematic search of state administrative codes and agency websites, we first identify the presence, absence, and layering of DBP-related regulations. We then evaluate the number and types of policy tools – the specific approaches required by each regulation, such as monitoring requirements, economic incentives, and required treatment technologies – to identify how DBPs are being managed and how states cluster with relatively more and less robust regulatory frameworks. Finally, we evaluate the relationship between the regulatory approach and the frequency of drinking water quality violations for DBP compounds. While most states have at least one DBP-specific regulation, these vary substantially in their comprehensiveness. The most-used policy tools (monitoring, compliance schedules, and reporting) directly reflect federal regulations; few states have adopted innovative tools such as collaboration or financial incentives. We observe no relationship between regulatory efforts and water quality violations, suggesting that current policy implementation may not adequately address the complex risk of DBPs.
- Published
- 2024
39. Communication, coordination, and surveillance in the shadow of repression
- Author
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Chau, Tak‐Huen, Hassan, Mai, and Little, Andrew T
- Subjects
Applied Economics ,Economics ,Human Society ,Policy and Administration ,Political Science ,Political Science & Public Administration ,Applied economics ,Policy and administration ,Political science - Abstract
Abstract: Communication technology helps protesters organize, but also allows the government to monitor and repress their actions. We study this trade‐off in a model where protesters want to show up at the same time and place, but also want to avoid government forces. If leaders of a movement can send messages observed only by other protesters, they can successfully coordinate on a variety of sites and force the government to spread resources thin, helping the success of the movement. If the government always observes the messages too, protesters can do no better than always going to a “focal site” knowing that the government will send all resources there as well, and thus experience higher levels of repression for the sake of coordinating tactics. Intermediate cases where messages are partially observed generate dynamics where new technologies and media that are relatively known to other protesters and not the government are used until the government can reliably infiltrate them and the protesters move on to a new medium. When some protesters are more informed than others, the model can explain protest tactics observed in recent prominent cases like having smaller “parallel” protests at the same time but different location of the main gathering.
- Published
- 2024
40. Political risk and firm exit: evidence from the US–China Trade War
- Author
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Vortherms, Samantha A and Zhang, Jiakun Jack
- Subjects
Banking ,Finance and Investment ,Commerce ,Management ,Tourism and Services ,Strategy ,Management and Organisational Behaviour ,Peace ,Justice and Strong Institutions ,Political risk ,trade war ,foreign direct investment ,China ,global value chains ,international business ,international trade ,Applied Economics ,Policy and Administration ,Political Science ,International Relations ,Banking ,finance and investment ,Policy and administration ,Political science - Abstract
When do political risks lead to divestment from a profitable market? Existing theories argue both that foreign investors may be sensitive to political tensions, but that they may only be sensitive to violent conflict. Using the crucial case of the US–China Trade War, we outline how political risks increased rates of exit among foreign firms while firm entrenchment mitigated these risks. Using a new dataset on all foreign-invested enterprises registered in China between 2017 and 2019, we implement triple interaction models to isolate the impact of increased political risks, investor national origin, and entrenchment on firm exit. Our findings show that heightened political risks during the trade war did increase firm exits by 34%–3% points over the pre-conflict baseline. Tariffs, the targeted effect of the trade war, increase US firm exits by 1% point. Firm exit is determined by the balance of heightened political risks against the availability of firm-level resources to mitigate these risks. These findings reconcile the conflicting expectations of the ‘business as usual’ and ‘follow the flag’ literatures about how firms respond to political risk, highlighting the tremendous collateral damage tariffs can cause in an age of global value chains.
- Published
- 2024
41. Proptech and the private rental sector: New forms of extraction at the intersection of rental properties and platform rentierisation
- Author
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Rogers, Dallas, Maalsen, Sophia, Wolifson, Peta, and Fields, Desiree
- Subjects
Human Geography ,Human Society ,Sustainable Cities and Communities ,build to rent ,digital ,housing ,landlords ,platform ,Urban and Regional Planning ,Applied Economics ,Urban & Regional Planning ,Urban and regional planning ,Human geography ,Policy and administration - Abstract
Private renting increasingly comprises a complex ecosystem of actors who assemble housing within the market, and collect rental income and data from tenants, and data on the material assets themselves. Our analysis – at the intersection of rentier and platform capitalism – focuses on landed (material real estate) and technological (digital infrastructure and data) property in Australia’s private rental system. Drawing out relationships between the various actors – landlords, rental property managers and real estate agencies, software developers and providers, property developers and investors – and both their properties and their uses of Proptech (property technology), we show how housing and technology are being leveraged for profit in new ways. In Australia, landed property retains its precedence for established (individual and institutional) landlords, whose interest in Proptech relates to enhancing or value-adding to rental housing assets. For Proptech and institutional real estate players seeking to consolidate both landed and technology property, capturing the tech landscape is increasingly important; indeed, securing control and/or consolidation of technology property is a key motivation for building and/or using Proptech among the largest property developers. Our findings show how rent extraction operates across and between different types and scales of property and market actors, and in new ways that differentiate the figure of the rentier while upholding the dynamics of the rentier model.
- Published
- 2024
42. The Mortgage‐Cash Premium Puzzle
- Author
-
REHER, MICHAEL and VALKANOV, ROSSEN
- Subjects
Economics ,Applied Economics ,Commerce ,Management ,Tourism and Services ,House Prices ,Cash Buyers ,Asset Pricing Puzzles ,Affordability ,Banking ,Finance and Investment ,Finance ,Banking ,finance and investment ,Applied economics - Abstract
ABSTRACT: All‐cash homebuyers account for one‐third of U.S. home purchases between 1980 and 2017. We use multiple data sets and research designs to robustly estimate that mortgaged buyers pay an 11% premium over all‐cash buyers to compensate home sellers for mortgage transaction frictions. A dynamic, representative‐seller model implies only a 3% premium, which would suggest an 8% puzzle. Accounting for heterogeneity in selling conditions explains half of this difference, but a puzzle holds in conditions with high transaction risk. An experimental survey of U.S. homeowners replicates these patterns and suggests that belief distortions can explain the puzzle in these high‐risk states.
- Published
- 2024
43. Speculating on collapse: Unrealized socioecological fixes of agri-food tech
- Author
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Guthman, Julie and Fairbairn, Madeleine
- Subjects
Sociology ,Human Society ,Agri-food tech sector ,alternative protein ,vertical farming ,socioecological fix ,strategic devaluation ,Urban and Regional Planning ,Applied Economics ,Human Geography ,Geography ,Urban and regional planning ,Human geography - Abstract
Circa 2023, after receiving much hype and investment, two agri-food technologies touted for their world-changing potential, bioengineered animal protein substitutes and vertical (indoor) farms, began to falter economically. Tech sector observers attributed the fall to typical hype cycle dynamics; this paper provides a deeper read. Based on research involving over ninety interviews with agri-food tech sector actors and observation at nearly 100 industry events, we show an unrealized socioecological fix as first conceptualized by Ekers and Prudham. As attempts at preemption, these technologies were able to attract excess capital to an area believed to be in need of fixing, and their backers anticipated and in some cases tried to promote the devaluation of legacy production systems. But the technologies on offer failed to become cost competitive in a timely way since legacy production systems continued to be productive and profitable. It was these new companies that became uncompetitive and overvalued, which in turn turned investments in them into bad ones. Ironically, the agri-food tech sector has eschewed a path which might have made their products competitive, which is social regulation of legacy production systems. Instead they effectively speculated that such systems would implode under their own contradictions.
- Published
- 2024
44. Selective exposure and echo chambers in partisan television consumption: Evidence from linked viewership, administrative, and survey data
- Author
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Broockman, David E and Kalla, Joshua L
- Subjects
Political Science ,Human Society ,Cardiovascular ,Applied Economics ,Political Science & Public Administration ,Applied economics ,Policy and administration ,Political science - Abstract
Abstract: Influential theories doubt that partisan television's audience is sufficiently large, moderate, or isolated from cross‐cutting sources for it to meaningfully influence public opinion. However, limitations of survey‐based television consumption measures leave these questions unresolved. We argue that nonpolitical attributes of partisan channels can attract voters to form habits for watching channels with slants they do not fully share. We report findings from three novel datasets which each link behavioral measures of television consumption to political administrative or survey data. We find that approximately 15% of Americans consume over 8 hours/month of partisan television. Additionally, weak partisans, independents, and outpartisans comprise over half of partisan channels’ audiences. Finally, partisan television consumers largely consume only one partisan channel and remain loyal to it over time, consistent with “echo chambers.” These findings support our argument and suggest partisan television's potential to influence public opinion cannot be dismissed.
- Published
- 2024
45. The politics of rejection: Explaining Chinese import refusals
- Author
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Kim, Sung Eun, Perlman, Rebecca L, and Zeng, Grace
- Subjects
Political Science ,Human Society ,Applied Economics ,Political Science & Public Administration ,Applied economics ,Policy and administration ,Political science - Abstract
Abstract: Health and safety standards offer a convenient means by which governments can claim to be protecting the population, even while pursuing more parochial goals. In the realm of international trade, such standards have most often been studied as a means of veiled protectionism. Yet precisely because health and safety standards create ambiguity about their intent, nations may seek to use them for goals that extend well beyond protecting domestic industry. We theorize that governments will, at times, enforce regulations in ways intended to exact political retribution. To show this, we collect original data on import refusals by Chinese border inspectors between 2011 and 2019. Though ostensibly intended to keep dangerous products out of the hands of Chinese consumers, we demonstrate that import refusals have systematically been used by the Chinese government as a way to punish states that act against China's interest.
- Published
- 2024
46. Non linear correlated random effects models with endogeneity and unbalanced panels
- Author
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Bates, Michael D, Papke, Leslie E, and Wooldridge, Jeffrey M
- Subjects
Economics ,Applied Economics ,Econometrics ,Control function ,correlated random effects ,quasi-maximum likelihood estimation ,sufficient statistic - Published
- 2024
47. Water, dust, and environmental justice: The case of agricultural water diversions
- Author
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Abman, Ryan, Edwards, Eric C, and Hernandez‐Cortes, Danae
- Subjects
Economics ,Applied Economics ,Climate-Related Exposures and Conditions ,Social Determinants of Health ,Climate Action ,dust pollution ,environmental justice ,water markets ,water rights ,Agricultural Economics & Policy ,Applied economics - Abstract
Abstract: Water diversions for agriculture reduce ecosystem services provided by saline lakes around the world. Exposed lakebed surfaces are major sources of dust emissions that may exacerbate existing environmental inequities. This paper studies the effects of water diversions and their impacts on particulate pollution arising from reduced inflows to the Salton Sea in California via a spatially explicit particle transport model and changing lakebed exposure. We demonstrate that lakebed dust emissions increased ambient and concentrations and worsened environmental inequalities, with historically disadvantaged communities receiving a disproportionate increase in pollution. Water diversion decisions are often determined by political processes; our findings demonstrate the need for distributional analysis of such decisions to ensure equitable compensation.
- Published
- 2024
48. Alcohol Ban and Crime: The ABCs of the Bihar Prohibition
- Author
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Chaudhuri, Kalyani, Jha, Natasha, Nilayamgode, Mrithyunjayan, and Suryanarayana, Revathy
- Subjects
Development Studies ,Economics ,Applied Economics ,Human Society ,Applied economics ,Development studies - Published
- 2024
49. Exploring variations in local land use regulations in the U.S.: What matters and at what level?
- Author
-
Kim, Jae Hong and Won, Jongho
- Subjects
Built Environment and Design ,Economics ,Applied Economics ,Urban and Regional Planning ,Life on Land ,H70 General ,R52 Land Use and Other Regulations ,R38 Government Policy ,Human Geography ,Urban & Regional Planning ,Urban and regional planning ,Applied economics - Abstract
While the geography of land use control is shaped by various forces operating at multiple levels, how land use is regulated in the U.S. has been examined with a narrow focus on either intraregional variation (within a single region) or aggregate differences between regions. This article presents an investigation of the geographical distribution of land use control with explicit consideration of both local and regional factors. Using data from two nation-wide surveys and other sources of information, it shows that substantial variation exists not only between regions but also within regions, calling for more attention to what matters and at what level. It is also found that the multilevel determinants of land use regulations are not uniform across regulation types. While low-density zoning is largely determined by local factors with limited interregional variation, a higher level of heterogeneity between regions is detected for impact fees and affordable housing requirements.
- Published
- 2024
50. Expecting the unexpected: Stressed scenarios for economic growth
- Author
-
González‐Rivera, Gloria, Rodríguez‐Caballero, C Vladimir, and Ruiz, Esther
- Subjects
Economics ,Econometrics ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Decent Work and Economic Growth ,growth vulnerability ,multilevel factor model ,scenario analysis ,stressed factors ,Applied Economics ,Applied economics - Abstract
Summary: We propose the construction of conditional growth densities under stressed factor scenarios to assess the level of exposure of an economy to small probability but potentially catastrophic economic and/or financial scenarios, which can be either domestic or international. The choice of severe yet plausible stress scenarios is based on the joint probability distribution of the underlying factors driving growth, which are extracted with a multilevel dynamic factor model (DFM) from a wide set of domestic/worldwide and/or macroeconomic/financial variables. All together, we provide a risk management tool that allows for a complete visualization of the dynamics of the growth densities under average scenarios and extreme scenarios. We calculate growth‐in‐stress (GiS) measures, defined as the 5% quantile of the stressed growth densities, and show that GiS is a useful and complementary tool to growth‐at‐risk (GaR) when policymakers wish to carry out a multidimensional scenario analysis. The unprecedented economic shock brought by the COVID‐19 pandemic provides a natural environment to assess the vulnerability of US growth with the proposed methodology.
- Published
- 2024
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