> Publishers' series
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no. 24, 03 (March, 2024):
Accounting for the growth of real wages of U.S. manufacturing production workers in the twentieth century John H. Pencavel
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2024]
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no. 24, 02 (February, 2024):
Sticky wages on the layoff margin Steven J. Davis, Pawel M. Krolikowski
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2024]
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no. 24, 01 (January, 2024):
A framework for geoeconomics Christopher Clayton, Matteo Maggiori, Jesse Schreger
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2024]
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no. 23, 29 (December, 2023):
Market design for surface water Billy A. Ferguson, Paul Milgrom
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2023]
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no. 23, 25 (August, 2023):
The impacts of COVID-19 on racial inequality in business earnings Robert Fairlie
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), August 2023
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no. 23, 23 (August, 2023):
Selling subscriptions Liran Einav, Ben Klopack, Neale Mahoney
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2023]
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no. 23, 26 (January, 2023):
How competition shapes information in auctions Agathe Pernoud, Simon Gleyze
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2023]
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no. 23, 18 (April, 2023):
The effects of changes in social security's delayed retirement credit evidence from administrative data Mark Duggan, Irena Dushi, Sookyo Jeong, Gina Li
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2023]
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no. 23, 21 (July, 2023):
Who values human capitalists' human capital? the earnings and labor supply of U.S. physicians Joshua D. Gottlieb, Maria Polyakova, Kevin Rinz, Hugh Shiplett, Victoria Udalova
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2023]
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no. 23, 19 (July, 2023):
The evolution of working from home Jose Maria Barrero, Nicholas Bloom, Steven J. Davis
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2023]
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no. 23, 24 (June, 2023):
The macroeconomic dynamics of labor market policies Erik Hurst, Elena Pastorino, Thomas Winberry, Patrick Kehoe
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2023]
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no. 23, 22 (July, 2023):
Managing an energy shock: fiscal and monetary policy Adrien Auclert, Hugo Monnery, Matthew Rognlie, Ludwig Straub
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2023]
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no. 23, 28 (December, 2023):
Identity and economic incentives Kwabena Donkor, Lorenz Goette, Maximilian W. Müller, Eugen Dimant, Michael Kurschilgen
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2023]
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no. 23, 15 (March, 2023):
Remote work across jobs, companies, and space Peter John Lambert, Stephen Hansen, Nicholas Bloom, Bledi Taska, Raffaella Sadun, Steven J. Davis
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2023]
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no. 23, 07 (February, 2023):
Election-denying Republican candidates underperformed in the 2022 Midterms Andrew B. Hall, Janet Malzahn
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2023]
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no. 23, 11 (February, 2023):
Financial crisis in a socialist setting impact on political behavior, social trust, and economic values Ran Abramitzky, Netanel Ben-Porath, Victor Lavy, Michal Palgi
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2023]
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no. 23, 05 (February, 2023):
Liquidity, debt denomination, and currency dominance Antonio Coppola, Arvind Krishnamurthy, Chenzi Xu
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2023]
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no. 23, 12 (February, 2023):
Bank funding risk, reference rates, and credit supply Harry R. Cooperman, Darrell Duffie, Yilin Yang, Stephan Luck, Zachry Z. Wang
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2023]
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no. 23, 02 (February, 2023):
Measuring and mitigating racial disparities in tax audits Hadi Elzayn, Evelyn Smith, Thomas Hertz, Arun Ramesh, Jacob Goldin, Daniel E. Ho, Robin Fisher
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2023]
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no. 23, 10 (January, 2023):
Time savings when working from home Cevat Giray Aksoy, Jose Maria Barrero, Nicholas Bloom, Steven J. Davis, Mathias Dolls and Pablo Zarate
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2023]
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no. 23, 09 (January, 2023):
Wildfire influence on recent US pollution trends Marshall Burke, Marissa L. Childs, Brandon De la Cuesta, Minghao Qiu, Jessica Li, Carlos F. Gould, Sam Heft-Neal, Michael Wara
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2023]
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no. 23, 13 (March, 2023):
Monetary tightening and U.S. bank fragility in 2023 mark-to-market losses and uninsured depositor runs? Erica Jiang, Gregor Matvos, Tomasz Piskorski, and Amit Seru
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2023]
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no. 23, 06 (February, 2023):
China in tax havens Christopher Clayton, Amanda Dos Santos, Matteo Maggiori, Jesse Schreger, Antonio Coppola
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2023]
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no. 23, 03 (January, 2023):
The trickling up of excess savings Adrien Auclert, Matthew Rognlie, Ludwig Straub
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2023]
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no. 23, 16 (March, 2023):
Financial market exposure increases generalized trust, particularly among the politically polarized Saumitra Jha, Moses Shayo, Chagai M. Weiss
Stanford, CA: SIEPR Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, [2023]
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no. 23, 14:
How are gender norms perceived? Leonardo Bursztyn, Alexander W. Cappelen, Bertil Tungodden, Alessandra Voena, David Yanagizawa-Drott
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2023]
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no. 23, 08 (February, 2023):
Behavior mediates the health effects of extreme wildfire smoke events Sam Heft-Neal, Carlos F. Gould, Marissa Childs, Mathew V. Kiang, Kari Nadeau, Mark Duggan, Eran Bendavid, Marshall Burke
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2023]
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no. 23, 04 (February, 2023):
The slow diffusion of earnings inequality Isaac Sorkin, Melanie Wallskog
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2023]
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no. 23, 27 (October, 2023):
Corporate tax policy in developed countries and economic activity in Africa Jeffrey L. Hoopes, Rebecca Lester, Daniel Klein
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2023]
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no. 23, 20 (July, 2023):
Law-abiding immigrants: the incarceration gap between immigrants and the US-born, 1850-2020 Ran Abramitzky, Leah Platt Boustan, Juan David Torres, Elisa Jácome, Santiago Pérez
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2023]
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no. [23, 01] (January, 2023):
The impact of privatization evidence from the hospital sector Mark Duggan, Atul Gupta, Emilie Jackson, Zachary S. Templeton
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2023]
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no. 22, 04 (January, 2022):
Competitive bidding in drug procurement evidence from China Shengmao Cao, Lisa Xuejie Yi, Chuan Yu
Stanford, CA: SIEPR Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, [2022]
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no. 22, 16 (July, 2022):
Producing health: measuring value added of nursing homes Liran Einav, Amy Finkelstein, Neale Mahoney
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2022]
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no. 22, 15 (July, 2022):
Internationalizing like China Christopher Clayton, Amanda Dos Santos, Matteo Maggiori, Jesse Schreger
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2022]
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no. 22, 13 (July, 2022):
The impact of COVID-19 on community college enrollment and student success evidence from California administrative data George Bulman, Robert Fairlie
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2022]
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no. 22, 20 (June, 2022):
On the role of learning, human capital, and performance incentives for wages Braz Camargo, Fabian Lange, Elena Pastorino
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2022]
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no. 22, 17 (July, 2022):
Quality regulation and competition evidence from pharmaceutical markets Juan Pablo Atal, José Ignacio Cuesta, Morten Sæthre
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2022]
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no. 22, 14 (July, 2022):
Firms and unemployment insurance take-up Marta Lachowska, Isaac Sorkin, Stephen A. Woodbury
Stanford, CA: SIEPR Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, [2022]
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no. 22, 22 (Sept, 2022):
Smiles in profiles: improving fairness and efficiency using estimates of user preferences in online marketplaces Susan Athey, Dean Karlan, Emil Palikot, Yuan Yuan
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2022]
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no. 22, 21 (July, 2022):
The distributional impact of the minimum wage in the short and long run Erik Hurst, Patrick Kehoe, Elena Pastorino, Thomas Winberry
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2022]
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no. 22, 19 (August, 2022):
Do pre-registration and pre-analysis plans reduce p-hacking and publication bias? Abel Brodeur, Nikolai M. Cook, Jonathan S. Hartley, Anthony Heyes
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2022]
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no. 22, 018 (August, 2022):
Trickle-down effects of affirmative action a case study in France José De Sousa, Muriel Niederle
Stanford, CA: SIEPR Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, [2022]
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no. 22, 23 (September, 2022):
The impacts of Covid-19 illnesses on workers Gopi Shah Goda, Evan J. Soltas
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2022]
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no. 22, 32 (October, 2022):
The productivity of professions: evidence from the emergency department David C. Chan Jr, Yiqun Chen
Stanford, CA: SIEPR Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, [2022]
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no. 22, 34 (October, 2022):
Older workers' employment and social security spillovers through the second year of the COVID-19 pandemic Gopi Shah Goda, Emilie Jackson, Lauren Hersch Nicholas, and Sarah Stith
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2022]
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no. 22, 38 (November, 2022):
Effective and scalable programs to facilitate labor market transitions for women in technology Susan Athey, Emil Palikot
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2022]
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no. 22, 31 (October, 2022):
Work and pleasure: investigating the rise of digital nomads in Mexico Alma Andino Frydman
Stanford, CA: SIEPR Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, [2022]
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no. 22, 36 (November, 2022):
Maternal and infant health inequality new evidence from linked administrative data Kate Kennedy-Moulton, Sarah Miller, Petra Persson, Maya Rossin-Slater, Laura R. Wherry, Gloria Aldana
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2022]
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no. 22, 39 (November, 2022):
Experience rating as an automatic stabilizer Mark Duggan, Andrew C. Johnston, Audrey Guo
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2022]
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no. 22, 33 (October, 2022):
Global universal basic skills: current deficits and implications for world development Sarah Gust, Eric A. Hanushek, and Ludger Woessmann
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2022]
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no. 22, 35 (November, 2022):
Targeting precision medicine evidence from prenatal screening Peter Conner, Liran Einav, Amy Finkelstein, Petra Persson, Heidi Williams
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2022]
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no. 22, 37 (November, 2022):
Heterogeneity in damages from a pandemic Amy Finkelstein, Geoffrey Kocks, Maria Polyakova, Victoria Udalova
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2022]
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no. 22, 10 (June, 2022):
Excess savings and twin deficits the transmission of fiscal stimulus in open economies Rishabh Aggarwal, Adrien Auclert, Matthew Rognlie, Ludwig Straub
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2022]
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no. 22, 12 (April, 2022):
Disability insurance income saves lives Alexander Gelber, Timothy Moore, Zhuan Pei, Alexander Strand
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2022]
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no. 22, 27 (September, 2022):
Working from home around the world Cevat Giray Aksoy, Jose Maria Barrero, Nicholas Bloom, Steven J. Davis, Mathias Dolls, Pablo Zarate
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2022]
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no. 22, 24 (July, 2022):
The shift to remote work lessens wage-growth pressures Jose Maria Barrero, Nicholas Bloom, Steven J. Davis, Brent H. Meyer, Emil Mihaylov, David Altig
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2022]
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no. 22, 10 (Oct, 2022):
Does EdTech substitute for traditional learning? evidence from a large-scale experiment Eric Bettinger, Robert Fairlie, Anastasia Kapuza, Elena Kardanova, Prashant Loyalka, Andrey Zakharov
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, [2022]
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no. 22, 30 (September, 2022):
Firming up price inflation Philip Bunn, Lena S. Anayi, Nicholas Bloom, Paul Mizen, Gregory Thwaites, Ivan Yotzov
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2022]
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no. 22, 28 (July, 2022):
How hybrid working from home works out Nicholas Bloom, Ruobing Han, James Liang
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2022]
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no. 22, 29 (April, 2022):
Pandemic-era uncertainty Brent H. Meyer, Emil Mihaylov, Jose Maria Barrero, Steven J. Davis, David Altig, Nicholas Bloom
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2022]
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no. 22, 07 (January, 2022):
Teacher labor market equilibrium and student achievement Michael Bates, Michael Dinerstein, Andrew C. Johnston, and Isaac Sorkin
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2022]
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no. 22, 11 (June, 2022):
Falling ill raises the health insurer's administration bill Rudy Douven, Lukas Kauer
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2022]
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no. 22, 06 (February, 2022):
Is there a VA advantage? evidence from dually eligible veterans David C. Chan Jr,, David Card, Lowell Taylor
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2022
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no. 22, 09 (March, 2022):
The impact of COVID-19 on community college enrollment and student success evidence from California administrative data George Bulman (UC Santa Cruz), Robert Fairlie (UC Santa Cruz & NBER)
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2022]
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no. 22, 08 (March, 2022):
Using Donald Trump's COVID-19 vaccine endorsement to give public health a shot in the arm a large-scale ad experiment Bradley J. Larsen, Timothy J. Ryan, Steven Greene, Marc J. Hetherington, Rahsaan Maxwell, Steven Tadelis
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2022]
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no. 22, 40 (November, 2022):
Investment and subjective uncertainty Nicholas Bloom, Itay Saporta-Eksten, Lucia S. Foster, Scott W. Ohlmacher, Steven J. Davis
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2022]
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no. 22, 05 (February, 2022):
Polarization and state legislative elections Cassandra Handan-Nader, Andrew C.W. Myers, Andrew B. Hall
Stanford, CA: SIEPR Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, [2022]
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no. 22, 03 (January, 2022):
Equilibrium effects of pharmaceutical bundling evidence from India Shengmao Cao, Chirantan Chatterjee
Stanford, CA: SIEPR Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, [2022]
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no. 22, 42 (December, 2022):
How abundant are reserves? evidence from the wholesale payment system by Gara Afonso, Darrell Duffie, Lorenzo Rigon and Hyun Song Shin
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2022]
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no. 22, 41 (October, 2022):
Long social distancing Jose Maria Barrero, Nicholas Bloom, Steven J. Davis
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2022]
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no. 22, 26 (February, 2022):
Management and misallocation in Mexico Nicholas Bloom, Leonardo Iacovone, Mariana Pereira-Lopez, John Van Reenen
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2022]
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no. 22, 25 (September, 2021):
Internet access and its implications for productivity, inequality, and resilience Jose Maria Barrero, Nicholas Bloom, Steven J. Davis
Stanford, CA: SIEPR Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, [2022]
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no. 21, 022 (April, 2021):
Risk perceptions and protective behaviors evidence from COVID-19 pandemic M. Kate Bundorf, Jill DeMatteis, Grant Miller, Maria Polyakova, Jialu L. Streeter, Jonathan Wivagg
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 026 (April, 2021):
Selecting the most effective nudge evidence from a large-scale experiment on immunization Abhijit Banerjee, Arun G. Chandrasekhar, Suresh Dalpath, Esther Duflo, John Floretta, Matthew O. Jackson, Harini Kannan, Francine N. Loza, Anirudh Sankar, Anna Schrimpf, and Maheshwor Shrestha
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 027 (April, 2021):
Why working from home will stick Jose Maria Barrero, Nicholas Bloom, Steven J. Davis
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 029 (March, 2021):
The world management survey at 18 lessons and the way forward Daniela Scur, Raffaella Sadun, John Van Reenen, Renata Lemos, Nicholas Bloom
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 031 (January, 2021):
The impact of COVID-19 on US firms Nicholas Bloom, Robert S. Fletcher, Ethan Yeh
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 035 (June, 2021):
The effects of changes in social security's delayed retirement credit evidence from administrative data Mark Duggan, Irena Dushi, Sookyo Jeong, Gina Li
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 037 (June, 2021):
Digital addiction Hunt Allcott, Matthew Gentzkow, Lena Song
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 038 (June, 2021):
The impact of increased access to telemedicine Dan Zeltzer, Liran Einav, Joseph Rashba, Ran D. Balicer
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 050 (October, 2021):
The economics of the public option evidence from local pharmaceutical markets Juan Pablo Atal, José Ignacio Cuesta, Felipe González, Cristobal Otero
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 049 (October, 2021):
Exposures and behavioral responses to wildfire smoke Marshall Burke, Sam Heft-Neal, Jessica Li, Anne Driscoll, Patrick Baylis, Matthieu Stigler, Joakim Weill, Jennifer Burney, Jeff Wen, Marissa Childs, Carlos F Gould
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 055 (November, 2021):
Where is standard of living the highest? local prices and the geography of consumption Rebecca Diamond, Enrico Moretti
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 052 (November, 2021):
Estimating the net fiscal cost of a child tax credit expansion Jacob Goldin, Elaine Maag, and Katherine Michelmore
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 056 (December, 2021):
Race and economic well-being in the United States Jean-Felix Brouillette, Charles I. Jones, and Peter J. Klenow
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 044 (August, 2021):
Demographics, wealth, and global imbalances in the twenty-first century Adrien Auclert, Hannes Malmberg, Frédéric Martenet, Matthew Rognlie
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 58 (November, 2021):
Quantifying bargaining power under incomplete information a supply-side analysis of the used-car industry Bradley J. Larsen, Anthony Lee Zhang
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2021]
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no. 21, 041 (July, 2021):
The impact of Covid-19 on older workers' employment and social security spillovers Gopi Shah Goda, Emilie Jackson, Lauren Hersch Nicholas, Sarah See Stith
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 045 (August, 2021):
How well does bargaining work in consumer markets? a robust bounds approach Joachim Freyberger and Bradley J. Larsen
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 046 (August, 2021):
The impact of financial assistance programs on health care utilization Alyce Adams, Raymond Kluender, Neale Mahoney, Jinglin Wang, Francis Wong, Wesley Yin
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 040 (July, 2021):
The IO of selection markets Liran Einav, Amy Finkelstein, Neale Mahoney
Stanford, CA: SIEPR Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2021
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no. 21, 042 (July, 2021):
Fairness in incomplete information bargaining: theory and widespread evidence from the field Daniel Keniston, Bradley J. Larsen, Shengwu Li, J.J. Prescott, Bernardo S. Silveira, and Chuan Yu
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 002 (January, 2021):
Heroes and villains: the effects of combat heroism on autocratic values and Nazi collaboration in France Julia Cagé, Anna Dagorret, Pauline Grosjean, Saumitra Jha
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 003 (January, 2021):
Preparing for a pandemic accelerating vaccine availability Amrita Ahuja, Susan Athey, Arthur Baker, Eric Budish, Juan Camilo Castillo, Rachel Glennerster, Scott Duke Kominers, Michael Kremer, Jean Lee, Canice Prendergast, Christopher M. Snyder, Alex Tabarrok, Brandon Joel Tan, Witold Wiecek
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 007 (January, 2021):
Tax filing and take-up experimental evidence on tax preparation outreach and EITC participation Jacob Goldin, Tatiana Homonoff, Rizwan Javaid, Brenda Schafer
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 011 (March, 2021):
How did absentee voting affect the 2020 U.S. election? Jesse Yodery, Cassandra Handan-Nadery, Andrew Myersz, Tobias Nowackiy, Daniel M. Thompsonx, Jennifer A. Wu, Chenoa Yorgason, Andrew B. Hall
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 014 (February, 2021):
Portfolios for long-terminvestors John H. Cochrane
Stanford, CA: SIEPR Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2021
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no. 21, 015 (March, 2021):
Platform annexation Susan Athey, Fiona Scott Morton
Stanford, CA: SIEPR Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2021
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no. 21, 001 (January, 2021):
Family spillover effects of marginal diagnoses the case of ADHD Petra Persson (Stanford University, NBER & CEPR), Xinyao Qiu (Stanford University), Maya Rossin-Slater (Stanford University, NBER & IZA)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2021
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no. 21, 004 (January, 2021):
Interacting regional policies in containing a disease Arun G. Chandrasekhar, Paul Goldsmith-Pinkham, Matthew O. Jackson, Samuel Thau
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 005 (January, 2021):
Sales losses in the first quarter of the COVID-19 pandemic evidence from California administrative data Robert Fairlie and Frank M. Fossen
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 006 (January, 2021):
Is automatic enrollment consistent with a life cycle model? Jason Scott, John B. Shoven, Sita Slavov, John G. Watson
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 012 (March, 2021):
Hours, employment, and earnings of American manufacturing workers from the nineteenth to the twentieth centuries John H. Pencavel
Stanford, CA: SIEPR Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2021
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no. 21, 018 (April, 2021):
Madison's missing branch Bruce M. Owen
Stanford, CA: SIEPR Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2021
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no. 21, 020 (April, 2021):
The impact of COVID-19 on community college enrollment and student success evidence from California administrative data George Bulman, Robert Fairlie
Stanford, CA: SIEPR Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2021
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no. 21, 008 (February, 2021):
Getting the price right? the impact of competitive bidding in the medicare program Hui Ding, Mark Duggan, and Amanda Starc
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 009 (January, 2021):
Recipes and economic growth a combinatorial march down an exponential tail Charles I. Jones
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 010 (February, 2021):
Trading stocks builds financial confidence and compresses the gender gap Saumitra Jha, Moses Shayo
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 016 (March, 2021):
Digital resilience: how work-from-home feasibility affects firm performance John (Jianqiu) Bai, Erik Brynjolfsson, Wang Jin, Sebastian Steffen, Chi Wan
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 017 (March, 2021):
Financial and total wealth inequality with declining interest rates Daniel L. Greenwald (MIT Sloan), Matteo Leombroni (Stanford University), Hanno Lustig (Stanford University & NBER), Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh (Columbia University, NBER, CEPR, & ABFER)
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 013 (March, 2021):
Replicating the Dow Jones Industrial Average Jacky Lin, Genevieve C. Selden, John B. Shoven, Clemens Sialm
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 019 (April, 2021):
The impact of paid family leave on employers: evidence from New York Ann P. Bartel, Maya Rossin-Slater, Christopher J. Ruhm, Meredith Slopen, Jane Waldfogel
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 021 (April, 2021):
Minority student and teaching assistant interactions in STEM Daniel Oliver, Robert Fairlie, Glenn Millhauser, Randa Roland
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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[no. 21, 59]:
Affirmative action in centralized college admission systems evidence from Brazil Nano Barahona, Sebastián Otero, Cauê Dobbin
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), [2021]
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no. 21, 023 (May, 2021):
Gender and the dynamics of economics seminars Pascaline Dupas, Alicia Sasser Modestino, Muriel Niederle, Justin Wolfers, Seminar Dynamics Collective
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 028 (April, 2021):
What triggers stock market jumps? Scott R. Baker, Nicholas Bloom, Steven J. Davis, Marco C. Sammon
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 039 (April, 2021):
The effects of high-skilled firm entry on incumbent residents Franklin Qian (Stanford University), Rose Tan (LinkedIn)
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 030 (April, 2021):
Business-level expectations and uncertainty Nicholas Bloom, Steven J. Davis, Lucia Foster, Brian Lucking, Scott Ohlmacher, Itay Saporta-Eksten
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 033 (May, 2021):
The donut effect of Covid-19 on cities Arjun Ramani, Nicholas Bloom
Stanford, CA: SIEPR Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2021
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no. 21, 034 (May, 2021):
This time is not so different income dynamics during the COVID-19 recession Brian D. Bell, Nicholas Bloom, Jack Blundell
Stanford, CA: SIEPR Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2021
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no. 21, 036 (June, 2021):
Heterogeneity in the impact of privatizing social health insurance evidence from California's medicaid program Mark Duggan, Craig Garthwaite, Adelina Yanyue Wang
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 051 (October, 2021):
Who benefits from the child tax credit? Jacob Goldin and Katherine Michelmore
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 054 (October, 2021):
Reshaping global trade: the immediate and long-run effects of bank failures Chenzi Xu
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
-
no. 21, 053 (November, 2021):
Support for paid family leave among small employers increases during the COVID-19 pandemic Ann P. Bartel, Maya Rossin-Slater, Christopher J. Ruhm, Meredith Slopen, and Jane Waldfogel
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 048 (September, 2021):
A taste of their own medicine guideline adherence and access to expertise Amy Finkelstein, Petra Persson, Maria Polyakova, Jesse Shapiro
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 024 (January, 2021):
Government and private household debt relief during COVID-19 Susan F. Cherry, Erica Xuewei Jiang, Gregor Matvos, Tomasz Piskorski, Amit Seru
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 025 (May, 2021):
Automated enforcement of irrigation regulations and social pressure for water conservation Jeremy West, Robert W. Fairlie, Bryan Pratt, Liam Rose
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 032 (May, 2021):
Exchange rates and monetary policy with heterogeneous agents sizing up the real income channel Adrien Auclert, Matthew Rognlie, Martin Souchier, Ludwig Straub
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 21, 057 (September, 2021):
Selection with variation in diagnostics skill evidence from radiologists David C. Chan, Matthew Gentzkow, Chuan Yu
Stanford, CA: SIEPR Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, [2021]
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no. 21, 043 (August, 2021):
Intermediaries in bargaining: evidence from business-to-business used-car inventory negotiations Bradley J. Larsen, Carol Hengheng Lu, and Anthony Lee Zhang
Stanford, CA: SIEPR Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2021
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no. 21, 047 (September, 2021):
Price regulation in credit markets a trade-off between consumer protection and credit access José Ignacio Cuesta (Stanford University), Alberto Sepúlveda (Financial Market Commission, Chile)
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2021
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no. 20, 015 (April, 2020):
The neutral partisan effects of vote-by-mail evidence from county-level roll-outs Daniel M. Thompson (Stanford University), Jennifer Wu (Stanford University), Jesse Yoder (Stanford University), Andrew B. Hall (Stanford University)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2020
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no. 20, 013 (April, 2020):
Consumer protection in an online world an analysis of occupational licensing Chiara Farronato (Harvard University & NBER), Andrey Fradkin (Boston University), Bradley J. Larsen (Stanford University & NBER), Erik Brynjolfsson (MIT Sloan & NBER)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2020
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no. 20, 019 (April, 2020):
Spending less after (seemingly) bad news Mark Garmaise, Yaron Levi, Hanno Lustig
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, April 2020
-
no. 20, 021 (May, 2020):
The impacts of COVID-19 on minority unemployment first evidence from April 2020 CPS microdata Kenneth A. Couch (University of Connecticut), Robert W. Fairlie (University of California, Santa Cruz & NBER), Huanan Xu (Indiana University, South Bend)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2020
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no. 20, 022 (May, 2020):
The impact of Covid-19 on small business owners evidence of early-stage losses from the April 2020 Current Population Survey Robert Fairlie
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2020
-
no. 20, 020 (May, 2020):
Funding direct payments to Americans through social security deferral Andrew G . Biggs (American Enterprise Institute), Joshua Rauh (Stanford University)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2020
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no. 20, 045 (November, 2020):
Can low retirement savings be rationalized? Jason S. Scott, John B. Shoven, Sita N. Slavov, John G. Watson
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2020
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no. 20, 049 (November, 2020):
Parental resources and college attendance evidence from lottery wins George Bulman, Robert Fairlie, Sarena Goodman, Adam Isen
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2020
-
no. 20, 050 (December, 2020):
The effect of occupational licensing stringency on the teacher quality distribution Bradley J. Larsen (Stanford University & NBER), Ziao Ju (Stanford University), Adam Kapor (Princeton University & NBER), Chuan Yu (Stanford University)
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2020
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no. 20, 052 (December, 2020):
Optimal default options the case for opt-out minimization B. Douglas Bernheim (Stanford University & NBER), Jonas Mueller-Gastell (Stanford University)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2020
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no. 20, 056 (December, 2020):
The role of referrals in immobility, inequality, inefficiency and in labor markets Lukas Bolte, Nicole Immorlica and Matthew O. Jackson
Stanford, CA: SIEPR Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2020
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no. 20, 057 (December, 2020):
Advanced technologies adoption and use by U.S. firms evidence from the annual business survey by Nikolas Zolas, Zachary Kroff, Erik Brynjolfsson, Kristina McElheran, David N. Beede, Cathy Buffington, Nathan Goldschlag, Lucia Foster, Emin Dinlersoz
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2020
-
no. 20, 046 (November, 2020):
Optimal vaccine subsidies for endemic and epidemic diseases Matthew Goodkin-Gold, Michael Kremer, Christopher M. Snyder, Heidi L. Williams
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2020
-
no. 20, 053 (December, 2020):
Wealth trajectories across key milestones longitudinal evidence from life-course transitions Gopi Shah Goda (Stanford University & NBER), Jialu Liu Streeter (Stanford University)
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2020
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no. 20, 055 (December, 2020):
Changes in social network structure in response to exposure to formal credit markets Abhijit Banerjee, Emily Breza, Arun G. Chandrasekhar, Esther Duflo, Matthew O. Jackson, Cynthia Kinnan
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), December 26, 2020
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no. 20, 054 (December, 2020):
Trauma at school: the impacts of shootings on students' human capital and economic outcomes Marika Cabral, Bokyung Kim, Maya Rossin-Slater,Molly Schnell, Hannes Schwandt
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2020
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no. 20, 058 (December, 2020):
Digital capital and superstar firms Prasanna Tambe, Lorin Hitt, Daniel Rock, Erik Brynjolfsson
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2020
-
no. 20, 044 (November, 2020):
An analysis of the performance of target date funds John B. Shoven, Daniel B. Walton
Stanford, CA: SIEPR Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2020
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no. 20, 047 (November, 2020):
Why is end-of-life spending so high? evidence from cancer patients Dan Zeltzer, Liran Einav, Amy Finkelstein, Tzvi Shir, Salomon M. Stemmer, Ran D. Balicer
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2020
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no. 20, 048 (November, 2020):
Designing advance market commitments for new vaccines Michael Kremer (University of Chicago & NBER), Jonathan Levin (Stanford University & NBER), Christopher M. Snyder (Dartmouth College & NBER)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2020
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no. 20, 051 (December, 2020):
Reclaiming spectrum from incumbents in inefficiently allocated bands transaction costs, competition, and flexibility Gregory L . Rosston (Stanford University), Andrzej Skrzypacz (Stanford University)
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2020
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no. 20, 039 (October, 2020):
The performance of consumers' cooperatives in America John Pencavel
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2020
-
no. 20, 036 (September, 2020):
Variation in health care prices across public and private payers Toren L. Fronsdal, Jay Bhattacharya, Suzanne Tamang
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2020
-
no. 20, 042 (October, 2020):
The effect of course shutouts on community college students evidence from waitlist cutoffs Silvia Robles (Mathematica), Max Gross (Mathematica), Robert W. Fairlie (University of California, Santa Cruz & NBER)
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2020
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no. 20, 037 (October, 2020):
Gender and the COVID-19 labor market downturn Kenneth A. Couch, Robert W. Fairlie, and Huanan Xu
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2020
-
no. 20, 043 (October, 2020):
The effects of large group meetings on the spread of COVID-19 the case of Trump rallies B. Douglas Bernheim (Stanford University), Nina Buchmann (Stanford University), Zach Freitas-Groff (Stanford University), Sebastián Otero (Stanford University)
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2020
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no. 20, 035 (August, 2020):
Permanent income shocks, target wealth, and the wealth gap Tullio Jappelli, Luigi Pistaferri
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2020
-
no. 20, 038 (October, 2020):
Elections, political polarization, and economic uncertainty Scott R. Baker, Aniket Baksy, Nicholas Bloom, Steven J. Davis, and Jonathan A. Rodden
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2020
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no. 20, 040 (October, 2020):
What explains temporal and geographic variation in the early US coronavirus pandemic? Hunt Allcott, Levi Boxell, Jacob C. Conway, Billy A. Ferguson, Matthew Gentzkow, Benny Goldman
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2020
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no. 20, 041 (October, 2020):
Affective polarization did not increase during the coronavirus pandemic Levi Boxell (Stanford University), Jacob Conway (Stanford University), James N. Druckman (Northwestern University), Matthew Gentzkow (Stanford University & NBER)
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2020
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no. 20, 026 (June, 2020):
Trading off consumption and COVID-19 deaths Robert E. Hall, Charles I. Jones, Peter J. Klenow
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2020
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no. 20, 028 (July, 2020):
Automated linking of historical data Ran Abramitzky (Stanford University & NBER), Leah Boustan (Princeton University & NBER), Katherine Eriksson (UC Davis & NBER), James Feigenbaum (Boston University & NBER), Santiago Pérez (UC Davis & NBER)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2020
-
no. 20, 032 (July, 2020):
Intergenerational mobility of immigrants in the US over two centuries Ran Abramitzky (Stanford University & NBER), Leah Boustan (Princeton University & NBER), Elisa Jácome (Princeton University), Santiago Pérez (UC Davis & NBER)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2020
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no. 20, 025 (June, 2020):
Socioeconomic network heterogeneity and pandemic policy response Mohammad Akbarpour (Stanford University), Cody Cook (Stanford University), Aude Marzuoli (Replica), Simon Mongey (University of Chicago & NBER), Abhishek Nagaraj (UC Berkeley), Matteo Saccarola (University of Chicago), Pietro Tebaldi (University of Chicago & NBER), Shoshana Vasserman (Stanford University), Hanbin Yang (Harvard Business School)
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2020
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no. 20, 030 (July, 2020):
The effects of immigration on the economy lessons from the 1920s border closure Ran Abramitzky (Stanford University & NBER), Philipp Ager (SDU & CEPR), Leah Boustan (Princeton & NBER), Elior Cohen (UCLA), Casper W. Hansen (University of Copenhagen)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2020
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no. 20, 033 (July, 2020):
The long-term spillover effects of changes in the return to schooling Ran Abramitzky, Victor Lavy, Santiago Pérez
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2020
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no. 20, 034 (July, 2020):
Experienced segregation Susan Athey, Billy A. Ferguson, Matthew Gentzkow, Tobias Schmidt
Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), 2020
-
no. 20, 023 (June, 2020):
The effect of foreclosures on homeowners, tenants, and landlords Rebecca Diamond (Stanford University & NBER), Adam Guren (Boston University & NBER), Rose Tan (Stanford University)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2020
-
no. 20, 031 (July, 2020):
Leaving the enclave historical evidence on immigrant mobility from the industrial removal office Ran Abramitzky (Stanford University & NBER), Leah Boustan (Princeton University & NBER), Dylan Connor (Arizona State University)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2020
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no. 20, 024 (June, 2020):
The impact of COVID-19 on small business owners continued losses and the partial rebound in May 2020 Robert Fairlie
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2020
-
no. 20, 027 (June, 2020):
Estimating and simulating a SIRD model of COVID-19 for many countries, states, and cities Jesús Fernández-Villaverde, Charles I. Jones
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2020
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no. 20, 029 (July, 2020):
Were Jews in interwar Poland more educated? Ran Abramitzky, Hanna Halaburda
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2020
-
no. 20, 016 (April, 2020):
Innovative growth accounting Peter J. Klenow (Stanford University & NBER), Huiyu Li (Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2020
-
no. 20, 018 (April, 2020):
Polarization and public health partisan differences in social distancing during the coronavirus pandemic Hunt Allcott, Levi Boxell, Jacob C. Conway, Matthew Gentzkow, Michael Thaler, David Y. Yang
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, April 2020
-
no. 20, 011 (April, 2020):
Scalable optimal online auctions Dominic Coey, Bradley J. Larsen, Kane Sweeney, Caio Waisman
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, March 7, 2020
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no. 20, 014 (April, 2020):
COVID-induced economic uncertainty Scott Baker, Nick Bloom, Steven J. Davis, Stephen J. Terry
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2020
-
no. 20, 017 (April, 2020):
Wage differentials, bargaining protocols, and trade unionism in mid-twentieth century American labor markets John Pencavel (Stanford University)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2020
-
no. 20, 009 (March, 2020):
Isolating the "Tech" from EdTech experimental evidence on computer assisted learning in China Yue Ma, Robert Fairlie, Prashant Loyalka, Scott Rozelle
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2020
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no. 20, 010 (March, 2020):
Does EdTech substitute for traditional learning? experimental estimates of the educational production function Eric Bettinger, Robert Fairlie, Anastasia Kapuza, Elena Kardanova, Prashant Loyalka, Andrey Zakharov
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2020
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no. 20, 012 (April, 2020):
Identification in ascending auctions, with an application to digital rights management Joachim Freyberger (University of Wisconsin), Bradley J. Larsen (Stanford University & NBER)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2020
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no. 20, 002 (January, 2020):
Micro jumps, macro humps: monetary policy and business cycles in an estimated HANK model Adrien Auclert (Stanford University, CEPR, & NBER), Matthew Rognlie (Northwestern University & NBER), Ludwig Straub (Harvard University & NBER)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2020
-
no. 20, 007 (January, 2020):
Disability insurance error rates and gender differences Hamish Low (University of Oxford & Institute for Fiscal Studies), Luigi Pistaferri (Stanford University, SIEPR, NBER & CEPR)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2020
-
no. 20, 006 (January, 2020):
The allocation of decision authority to human and artificial intelligence Susan C. Athey, Kevin A. Bryan, Joshua S. Gans
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2020
-
no. 20, 008 (February, 2020):
Advance market commitments insights from theory and experience Michael Kremer (Harvard University & NBER), Jonathan Levin (Stanford University & NBER), Christopher M. Snyder (Dartmouth College & NBER)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2020
-
no. 20, 001 (January, 2020):
Increasing low-income broadband adoption through private incentives Gregory L. Rosston (Stanford University, SIEPR), Scott J. Wallsten (Technology Policy Institute)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2020
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no. 20, 003 (January, 2020):
Consumer protection in an online world an analysis of occupational licensing Chiara Farronato, Andrey Fradkin, Bradley J. Larsen, Erik Brynjolfsson
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2020
-
no. 20, 004 (January, 2020):
Cross-country trends in affective polarization Levi Boxell (Stanford University), Matthew Gentzkow (Stanford University & NBER), Jesse M. Shapiro (Brown University & NBER)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2020
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no. 20, 005 (January, 2020):
The employment effects of the social security earnings test Alexander Gelber (UC San Diego and NBER), Damon Jones (University of Chicago Harris School of Public Policy and NBER), Daniel Sacks (Indiana University Kelley School of Business), Jae Song (Social Security Administration)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2020
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no. 19, 014 (June, 2019):
The impact of car pollution on infant and child health evidence from emissions cheating Diane Alexander (Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago), Hannes Schwandt (Northwestern University and SIEPR)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, June 17, 2019
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no. 19, 030 (November, 2019):
Did restaurant hygiene grading in Los Angeles immediately reduce foodborne illness by 20 % across all of Southern California? a response to Jin & Leslie Daniel E. Ho (Stanford University), Cassandra Handan-Nader (Stanford University)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2019
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no. 19, 031 (November, 2019):
How would AI regulation change firms' behavior? evidence from thousands of managers Yong Suk Lee (Stanford University), Benjamin Larsen (Copenhagen Business School), Michael Webb (Stanford University), Mariano-Florentino Cuéllar (California Supreme Court & Stanford University)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2019
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no. 19, 029 (October, 2019):
What to expect when it gets hotter the impacts of prenatal exposure to extreme heat on maternal and infant health Jiyoon Kim (Elon University), Ajin Lee (Michigan State University), Maya Rossin-Slater (Stanford University, NBER, & IZA)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2019
-
no. 19, 015 (June, 2019):
Counterfactual inference for consumer choice across many product categories Rob Donnelly (Stanford University), Francisco R. Ruiz (Colombia University), David Blei (Colombia University), Susan Athey (Stanford University)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, June 7, 2019
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no. 19, 016 (June, 2019):
How do humans interact with algorithms? experimental evidence from health insurance Kate Bundorf (Stanford University & NBER), Maria Polyakova (Stanford University & NBER), Ming Tai-Seale (University of San Diego)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, June 13, 2019
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no. 19, 008 (March, 2019):
Macroeconomic effects of debt relief consumer bankruptcy protections in the Great Recession Adrien Auclert (Stanford University, CEPR, and NBER), Will Dobbie (Princeton University and NBER), Paul Goldsmith-Pinkham (Yale School of Management)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, March 15, 2019
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no. 19, 012 (May, 2019):
When dad can stay home fathers' workplace flexibility and maternal health Petra Persson (Department of Economics, Stanford University & NBER), Maya Rossin-Slater (Department of Health Research & Policy, Stanford University & NBER)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, May 22, 2019
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no. 19, 032 (November, 2019):
How did quantitative easing really work? a new methodology for measuring the Fed's impact on financial markets Ramin Toloui (Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2019
-
19, 020:
Place-based drivers of mortality evidence from migration Amy Finkelstein (MIT and NBER), Matthew Gentzkow (Stanford and NBER), Heidi Williams (MIT and NBER)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2019
-
19, 021:
Screening and selection the case of mammograms Liran Einav, Amy Finkelstein, Tamar Oostrom, Abigail Ostriker, and Heidi Williams
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2019
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19, 022:
Potential outcome and directed acyclic graph approaches to causality relevance for empirical practice in economics Guido W. Imbens
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2019
-
19, 026:
The short rate disconnect in a monetary economy Moritz Lenel, Monika Piazzesi, Martin Schneider
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2019
-
no. 19, 027 (May, 2019):
The world uncertainty index Hites Ahir (IMF), Nicholas Bloom (Stanford University), Davide Furceri (IMF)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2019
-
no. 19, 028 (September, 2019):
Quality regulation and competition evidence from pharmaceutical markets Juan Pablo Atal (University of Pennsylvania), Jose Ignacio Cuesta (Stanford University), Morten Sæthre (Norwegian School of Economics)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2019
-
no. 19, 018 (July, 2019):
Deterrence and the adjustment of sentences during imprisonment A. Mitchell Polinsky (Stanford Law School), Steven Shavell (Harvard Law School)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, July 2019
-
19, 025:
Granular search, market structure, and wages Gregor Jarosch, Jan Sebastian Nimczik, Isaac Sorkin
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2019
-
no. 19, 019 (August, 2019):
The impact of Brexit on UK firms Nicholas Bloom (Stanford University), Philip Bunn (Bank of England), Scarlet Chen (Stanford University), Paul Mizen (University of Nottingham), Pawel Smietanka (Bank of England), Gregory Thwaites (LSE Centre for Microeconomics)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2019
-
19, 023:
The fiscal roots of inflation John H. Cochrane
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2019
-
19, 024:
The value of government debt John H. Cochrane
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2019
-
no. 19, 017 (June, 2019):
Who is a passive saver under opt-in and auto-enrollment? Gopi Shah Goda (Stanford University), Matthew R. Levy (London School of Economics), Colleen Flaherty Manchester (University of Minnesota), Aaron Sojourner (University of Minnesota), Joshua Tasoff (Claremont Graduate University)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2019
-
no. 19, 033 (November, 2019):
High-frequency trading and market performance Markus Baldauf, Joshua Mollner
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2019
-
no. 19, 001 (December, 2018):
Measuring opportunity in U.S. higher education Caroline M. Hoxby (Stanford University and NBER), Sarah Turner (University of Virginia & NBER)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2019
-
no. 19, 004 (February, 2019):
Assessing the gains from e-commerce Paul Dolfen (Stanford), Liran Einav (Stanford and NBER), Peter J. Klenow (Stanford and NBER), Benjamin Klopack (Stanford), Jonathan D. Levin (Stanford and NBER), Larry Levin (Visa, Inc.), Wayne Best (Visa, Inc.)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, February 2019
-
no. 19, 002 (January, 2019):
The welfare effects of social media Hunt Allcott (New York University, NBER, and JPAL), Luca Braghieri (Stanford University), Sarah Eichmeyer (Stanford University), Matthew Gentzkow (Stanford University and NBER)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, January 27, 2019
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no. 19, 007 (February, 2019):
Technological progress and health convergence the case of penicillin in post-war Italy Marcella Alsan (Stanford Medical School Center for Health Policy), Vincenzo Atella (University of Rome Tor Vergata), Jay Bhattacharya (Stanford University), Valentina Conti (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations), Ivan Mejia-Guevara (Center for Population Health Services, Stanford University), Grant Miller (Stanford Center for Global Poverty and Development)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, February 2019
-
no. 19, 036 (December, 2019):
Local exposure to school shootings and youth antidepressant use Maya Rossin-Slater (Stanford University, NBER & IZA), Molly Schnell (Northwestern University & NBER), Hannes Schwandt (Northwestern University, CEPR & NBER), Sam Trejo (Stanford University), Lindsey Uniat (Yale University)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2019
-
no. 19, 006 (February, 2019):
Different strokes for different folks experimental evidence on the effectiveness of input and output incentive contracts for health care providers Manoj Mohanan (Stanford School of Public Policy), Katherine Donato (Boston Consulting Group), Grant Miller (Stanford Center for Global Poverty and Development), Yulya Truskinovsky (Wayne State University), Marcos Vera-Hernandez (University College London Department of Economics)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, January 2019
-
no. 19, 034 (November, 2019):
Trading in fragmented markets Markus Baldauf, Joshua Mollner
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2019
-
no. 19, 035 (November, 2019):
Unfair disruption Mark A. Lemley, Mark P. McKenna
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2019
-
no. 19, 003 (February, 2019):
When labor's lost health, family life, incarceration, and education in a time of declining economic opportunity for low-skilled men Courtney Coile (Department of Economics, Wellesley College), Mark Duggan (Department of Economics, Stanford University and NBER)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, February 2019
-
no. 19, 011 (April, 2019):
Discounts and deadlines in consumer search Dominic Coey (Facebook, Core Data Science), Bradley J. Larsen (Stanford University & NBER), Brennan C. Platt (Brigham Young University, Department of Economics)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, March 27, 2019
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no. 17, 045:
Rules versus discretion assessing the debate over the conduct of monetary policy John B. Taylor
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, January, 2018
-
no. 17, 047:
The power of working longer Gila Bronshtein (Cornerstone Research), Jason Scott, John B. Shoven (Stanford University and NBER, Sita N. Slavov (George Mason University and NBER)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, January, 2018
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no. 19, 009 (March, 2019):
Policy news and stock market volatility Scott R. Baker (Kellogg School of Management), Nick Bloom (Stanford University), Steven J. Davis (Booth School of Business, University of Chicago), Kyle Kost (University of Chicago)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 26 October 2018
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no. 19, 010 (April, 2019):
The micro and macro of managerial beliefs Jose Maria Barrero (Stanford University)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, December 18, 2018
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no. 19, 013 (May, 2019):
Information externalities, free riding, and optimal exploration in the UK oil industry Charles Hodgson (Stanford University)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, December 6, 2018
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no. 19, 005 (August, 2018):
Quality review of mass adjudication a randomized natural experiment at the Board of Veterans Appeals, 2003-16 Daniel E. Ho (William Benjamin Scott and Luna M. Scott Professor of Law, Stanford University), Cassandra Handan-Nader (Research Fellow, Stanford Law School), David Ames (Director, Appellate Operations at Bergmann and Moore, LLC), David Marcus (Professor of Law, UCLA School of Law)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, August 2, 2018
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no. 18, 042 (December, 2018):
Deleting misconduct the expungement of BrokerCheck records Colleen Honigsberg (Stanford Law School), Matthew Jacob (Harvard University)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, December 2018
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no. 18, 043 (December, 2018):
International integration and social identity Boaz Abramson (Department of Economics, Stanford University), Moses Shayo (Department of Economics, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, December 2018
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no. 18, 044 (December, 2018):
Moral hazard, wildfires, and the economic incidence of natural disasters Patrick Baylis (Vancouver School of Economics, University of British Colombia), Judson Boomhower (University of California, San Diego)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, December 26, 2018
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no. 18, 016 (June, 2018):
Banker my neighbour: matching and financial intermediation in savings groups Rachel Cassidy (Institute for Fiscal Studies, London), Marcel Fafchamps (Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies, Stanford University)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, February 2, 2018
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no. 18, 020 (May, 2018):
The finance uncertainty multiplier Iván Alfaro, Nicholas Bloom, and Xiaoji Lin
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, May, 2018
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no. 18, 023 (July, 2018):
Some facts of high-tech patenting Michael Webb, Nick Short, Nicholas Bloom, Josh Lerner
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, July 2018
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no. 18, 040 (November, 2018):
Feasible policy evaluation by design a randomized synthetic stepped-wedge trial in King County Cassandra Handan-Nader (Department of Political Science, Stanford University), Daniel E. Ho (Senior Fellow, SIEPR), Becky Elias (Public Health, Seattle & King County)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, November 16, 2018
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no. 18, 014 (June, 2018):
Do CEOs know best? evidence from China Nicholas Bloom, Hong Cheng, Mark Duggan, Hongbin Li, Franklin Qian
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, June 2018
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no. 18, 021 (June, 2018):
Firm performance and macro forecast accuracy Mari Tanaka, Nicholas Bloom, Joel M. David, Maiko Koga
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, June 2018
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no. 18, 022 (June, 2018):
Managing trade evidence from China and the US Nicholas Bloom, Kalina Manova, John Van Reenen, Stephen Teng Sun, Zhihong Yu
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, June 2018
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no. 18, 024 (July, 2018):
Learning by trading Saumitra Jha (Graduate School of Business, Stanford University), Moses Shayo (Department of Economics, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, July 26, 2018
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no. 18, 012 (June, 2018):
Using non-linear budget sets to estimate extensive margin responses method and evidence from the Social Security Earnings Test Alexander M. Gelber (UC Berkeley Goldman School of Public Policy and NBER), Damon Jones (University of Chicago, Harris School of Public Policy and NBER), Daniel W. Sacks (Indiana University, Kelley School of Business), Jae Song (Social Security Administration)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, June 2018
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no. 18, 013 (June, 2018):
The gender earnings gap in the gig economy evidence from over a million rideshare drivers Cody Cook, Rebecca Diamond, Jonathan Hall, John A. List, Paul Oyer
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, June 7, 2018
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no. 18, 025 (August, 2018):
Long-term care hospitals a case study in waste Liran Einav (Stanford University and NBER), Amy Finkelstein (MIT and NBER), Neale Mahoney (Chicago Booth and NBER)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, August 20, 2018
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no. 18, 026 (May, 2018):
The impact of the affordable care act evidence from California's hospital sector Mark Duggan (Stanford University and NBER), Atul Gupta (University of Pennsylvania, The Wharton School), Emilie Jackson (Stanford University)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, May 2018
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no. 18, 027 (July, 2018):
The impact of industry consolidation on government procurement evidence from DoD contracting Mark Duggan (Stanford University and NBER), Rodrigo Carril (Stanford University)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, July 2018
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no. 18, 028 (August, 2018):
What drives prescription opioid abuse? evidence from migration Amy Finkelstein (MIT and NBER), Matthew Gentzkow (Stanford and NBER), Heidi Williams (MIT and NBER)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, August 2018
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no. 18, 031 (September, 2018):
Modern management and the demand for technical skill Yong Suk Lee
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, September 18, 2018
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no. 18, 032 (September, 2018):
Economists (and economics) in tech companies Susan Athey, Michael Luca
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2018
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no. 18, 033 (August, 2018):
The impacts of paid family leave benefits regression kink evidence from California administrative data Sarah Bana, Kelly Bedard, Maya Rossin-Slater
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, August 3, 2018
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no. 18, 034 (October, 2018):
Unequal use of social insurance benefits the role of employers Sarah Bana, Kelly Bedard, Maya Rossin-Slater, Jenna Stearns
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, October 6, 2018
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no. 18, 037 (November, 2018):
Border walls Treb Allen (Dartmouth and NBER), Caue Dobbin (Stanford), Melanie Morten (Stanford and NBER)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, November 2018
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no. 18, 038 (November, 2018):
The roots of health inequality and the value of intra-family expertise Yiquan Chen (School of Medicine, Stanford University), Petra Persson (Department of Economics, Stanford University and NBER), Maria Polyakova (School of Medicine, Stanford University and NBER)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, November 9, 2018
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no. 18, 039 (September, 2018):
Vanished classmates the effects of local immigration enforcement on student enrollment Thomas Dee, Mark Murphy
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, September 2018
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no. 18, 041 (November, 2018):
Bank leverage, welfare, and regulation Anat R. Admati (Graduate School of Business, Stanford University), Martin F. Hellwig (Max Planck Institute for Research on Collective Goods, Bonn)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, November 19, 2018
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no. 18, 009 (February, 2018):
Marriage, labor supply and the dynamics of the social safety net Hamish Low (University of Cambridge, IFS and Cambridge-INET), Costas Meghir (Yale University, NBER and IFS), Luigi Pistaferri (Stanford University, NBER, CEPR and SIEPR), Alessandra Voena (University of Chicago, CEPR, NBER and BREAD)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, February, 2018
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no. 18, 015 (June, 2018):
Fear and the safety net evidence from secure communities Marcella Alsan (Stanford Medical School, BREAD and NBER), Crystal S. Yang (Harvard Law School and NBER)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, June 2018
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no. 18, 017 (June, 2018):
Mortgage guaranties, housing choice, and borrower riskiness evidence from the VA Home Loan program Ian L. Hoffman (Department of Economics, Stanford University)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, June 7, 2018
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no. 18, 018 (May, 2018):
Have R&D spillovers changed? Nicholas Bloom (Department of Economics, Stanford University), John Van Reenen (Department of Economics, MIT), Brian Lucking (Department of Economics, Stanford University)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, May 2018
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no. 18, 019 (May, 2018):
Come together: firm boundaries and delegation Laura Alfaro, Nicholas Bloom, Paola Conconi, Harald Fadinger, Patrick Legros, Andrew Newman, Raffaella Sadun, John Van Reenen
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, May 2018
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no. 18, 029 (September, 2018):
Trends in the diffusion of misinformation on social media Hunt Allcott, Matthew Gentzkow, Chuan Yu
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, September 2018
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no. 18, 030 (September, 2018):
Does diversity matter for health? experimental evidence from Oakland Marcella Alsan,Owen Garrick, Grant Graziani
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, September 2018
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no. 18, 035 (September, 2018):
Childhood health shocks, comparative advantage, and long-term outcomes evidence from the last Danish polio epidemic Miriam Gensowski, Torben Heien Nielsen, Nete Munk Nielsen, Maya Rossin-Slater, Miriam Wüst
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, September 18, 2018
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no. 18, 036 (September, 2018):
Compression auctions with an application to LIBOR-SOFR swap conversion Darrell Duffie
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, September 10, 2018
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no. 18, 006 (March, 2018):
Bias in online classes evidence from a field experiment Rachel Baker (University of California, Irvine), Thomas Dee (Stanford University), Brent Evans (Vanderbilt University), June John (Stanford University)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, March 2018
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no. 18, 007 (March, 2018):
Collusion in college sports: Edward C. O'Bannon, et al., v. NCAA, et al. (2015) Roger G. Noll
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, March 2018
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no. 18, 002 (February, 2018):
People management skills, employee attrition, and manager rewards an empirical analysis Mitchell Hoffman (U. Toronto Rotman and NBER), Steven Tadelis (UC Berkeley Haas and NBER)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, February 2018
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no. 18, 001 (March, 2018):
How are SNAP benefits spent? evidence from a retail panel Justine Hastings (Brown University and NBER), Jesse M. Shapiro (Brown University and NBER)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, March 2018
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no. 18, 008 (April, 2018):
Online privacy and information disclosure by consumers Shota Ichihashi
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, April 13, 2018
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no. 18, 003 (March, 2018):
Bartik instruments what, when, why, and how Paul Goldsmith-Pinkham, Isaac Sorkin, Henry Swift
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, March 2018
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no. 18, 005 (March, 2018):
Disability insurance income saves lives Alexander Gelber (UC Berkeley Goldman School of Public Policy and NBER), Timothy Moore (University of Melbourne), Alexander Strand (Social Security Administration)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, March 2018
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no. 17, 018:
The "California rule" and public pensions by Jeremy Bulow
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, September, 2017
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no. 17, 019:
Are ideas getting harder to find? Nicholas Bloom (Stanford University and NBER), Charles I. Jones (Stanford University and NBER), John Van Reenen (MIT and NBER), Michael Webb (Stanford University)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, September 6, 2017
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no. 17, 023:
Pension math: public pension spending and service crowd out in California, 2003-2030 Joe Nation, Ph.D
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, October 2, 2017
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no. 17, 026:
"Nash-in-Nash" tariff bargaining with and without MFN Kyle Bagwell, Robert W. Staiger, Ali Yurukoglu
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, September, 2017
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no. 17, 038:
The social value of financial expertise Pablo Kurlat (Stanford University)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, November, 2017
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no. 17, 041:
Who becomes an inventor in America? the importance of exposure to innovation Alex Bell (Harvard University), Raj Chetty (Stanford University and NBER), Xavier Jaravel (London School of Economics), Neviana Petkova (Office of Tax Analysis, US Treasury), John Van Reenen (MIT and Center for Economic Performance)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, December, 2017
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no. 17, 042:
Uniform pricing in US retail chains Stefano Della Vigna (UC Berkeley and NBER), Matthew Gentzkow (Stanford University and NBER)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, November 14, 2017
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no. 17, 043:
The false promise of simple information disclosure new evidence on restaurant hygiene grading Daniel E. Ho, Zoe C. Ashwood, Cassandra Handan-Nader
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, December 20, 2017
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no. 17, 024:
Attention manipulation and information overload Petra Persson
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, September, 2017
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no. 17, 025:
Ranking firms using revealed preference Isaac Sorkin (Stanford and NBER)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, October, 2017
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no. 17, 027:
Artificial intelligence and economic growth Charles I. Jones (Stanford GSB and NBER), Philippe Aghion (College de France and LSE), Benjamin F. Jones (Northwestern University and NBER)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, October 10, 2017
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no. 17, 028:
Redesigning spectrum licenses to encourage innovation and investment Paul Milgrom, E. Glen Weyl, Anthony Lee Zhang
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, October, 2017
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no. 17, 030:
When should you adjust standard errors for clustering? Alberto Abadie, Susan Athey, Guido W. Imbens, Jeffrey Wooldridge
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, October, 2017
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no. 17, 031:
Efficient policy learning Susan Athey, Stefan Wager
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, October, 2017
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no. 17, 037:
Generalized random forests Susan Athey, Julie Tibshirani, Stefan Wager
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, July, 2017
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no. 17, 039:
Analysis of city of San Jose retirement plans investment portfolios Joe Nation, Ph.D., Olympia Nguyen Tulloch, Clive Lipshitz
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, November 20, 2017
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no. 17, 040:
Reconsidering the consequences of worker displacements firm versus worker perspective Aaron Flaaen (Federal Reserve Board of Governors), Matthew D. Shapiro (University of Michigan and NBER), Isaac Sorkin (Stanford University and NBER)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, November, 2017
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no. 17, 048:
Corporate credit risk premia Antje Berndt, Rohan Douglas, Darrell Duffie, Mark Ferguson
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, December 24th, 2017
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no. 17, 016:
On the formation of capital and wealth IT, monopoly power and rising inequality Mordecai Kurz (Stanford University)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, June 25th, 2017
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no. 17, 020:
Short and long run uncertainty Jose Maria Barrero, Nicholas Bloom, Ian Wright
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, August 16, 2017
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no. 17, 021:
Private equity and financial fragility during the crisis Shai Bernstein, Josh Lerner, Filippo Mezzanotti
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, July 18, 2017
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no. 17, 032:
The digital privacy paradox small money, small costs, small talk Susan Athey, Christian Catalini, Catherine Tucker
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, September 27, 2017
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no. 17, 034:
The impact of aggregators on internet news consumption Susan Athey (Stanford University and NBER), Markus Mobius (Microsoft Research, University of Michigan and NBER), Jeno Pal (Central European University)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, January 11, 2017
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no. 17, 046:
Dinner table human capital and entrepreneurship Hans K. Hvide, Paul Oyer
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, December 14, 2017
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no. 17, 044:
RBC LiONS TM [Trade Mark] S&P 500 Buffered Protection Securities (USD) Series 4 Analysis option pricing analysis, issuing company riskhedging analysis, and recommended investment strategy Zekuang Tan
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, January, 2018
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no. 17, 022:
The effects of the Affordable Care Act on health insurance coverage and labor market outcomes Mark Duggan, (Stanford University and NBER),Gopi Shah Goda (Stanford University and NBER), Emilie Jackson (Stanford University)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, July, 2017
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no. 17, 029:
Approximate residual balancing de-biased inference of average treatment effects in high dimensions Susan Athey, Guido W. Imbens, Stefan Wager
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, August, 2017
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no. 17, 049:
Augmenting markets with mechanisms Samuel Antill (Graduate School of Business, Stanford University), Darrell Duffie (Graduate School of Business, Stanford University)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, December 13th, 2017
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no. 18, 011 (November, 2017):
Corruption and firms: evidence from randomized audits in Brazil Emanuele Colonnelli (Department of Economics, Stanford University), Mounu Prem (Department of Economics, Universidad del Rosario)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, November 2017
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no. 18, 010 (October, 2017):
Children, time allocation and consumption insurance Richard Blundell (Department of Economics, University College London), Luigi Pistaferri (Department of Economics, Stanford University), Itay Saporta-Eksten (Department of Economics, University College London)
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, October 2017
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no. 18, 004 (November, 2017):
Estimating earnings adjustment frictions method and evidence from the social security earnings test Alexander M. Gelber, Damon Jones, Daniel W. Sacks
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, November 2017
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no. 17, 035:
Estimating treatment effects using multiple surrogates the role of the surrogate score and the surrogate index Susan Athey, Raj Chetty, Guido W. Imbens, Hyunseung Kang
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, June, 2016
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no. 17, 033:
Bitcoin pricing, adoption, and usage theory and evidence Susan Athey, Ivo Parashkevov, Vishnu Sarukkai, Jing Xia
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, August, 2016
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no. 17, 036:
Finite population causal standard errors Alberto Abadie, Susan Athey, Guido W. Imbens, Jeffrey M. Wooldridge
Stanford, CA: SIEPR, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, July, 2014