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No.
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Author(s)
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Title
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JEL Class.
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10813
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Christina
Gathmann
Björn
Sass
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Taxing Childcare: Effects on Childcare Choices, Family Labor Supply and Children
Previous studies report a range of estimates for the response of female labor supply and childcare attendance to childcare prices. We shed new light on these questions using a policy reform that ...
(published in: Journal of Labor Economics, 2018, 36 (3), 665-709)
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J13, J22, J18
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10812
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Natalia
Danzer
Martin
Halla
Nicole
Schneeweis
Martina
Zweimüller
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Parental Leave, (In)formal Childcare and Long-term Child Outcomes
We provide a novel interpretation of the estimated treatment effects from evaluations of parental leave reforms. Accounting for the counterfactual mode of care is crucial in the analysis of child ...
(revised version published in: Journal of Human Resources, 2022, 57 (6) 1826-1884;)
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J13, H52, J22, J12, I38
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10811
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Jorge
Luis
García
James
J.
Heckman
Duncan
Ermini
Leaf
Maria
José
Prados
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Quantifying the Life-Cycle Benefits of a Prototypical Early Childhood Program
This paper quantifies the experimentally evaluated life-cycle benefits of a widely implemented early childhood program targeting disadvantaged families. We join experimental data with ...
(revised version available as NBER Working Paper No. 23479)
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J13, I28, C93
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10810
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Rob
Alessie
Viola
Angelini
Gerard
J.
van den Berg
Jochen
O.
Mierau
Laura
Viluma
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Economic Conditions at Birth and Cardiovascular Disease Risk in Adulthood: Evidence from New Cohorts
Most of the literature that exploits business cycle variation at birth to study long-run effects of economic conditions on health later in life is based on pre-1940 birth cohorts. They were born in ...
(published in: Social Science and Medicine, 2019, 224, 77-84)
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I10, I15, J11
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10808
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Chenggang
Wang
Huixia
Wang
Timothy
J.
Halliday
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Health and Health Inequality during the Great Recession: Evidence from the PSID
We estimate the impact of the Great Recession of 2007–2009 on health outcomes in the United States. We show that a one percentage point increase in the unemployment rate resulted in a 7.8–8.8 percent ...
(published in: Economics & Human Biology, 2018, 29, 17 - 30)
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I0, I12, I14
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10807
|
Mevlude
Akbulut-Yuksel
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War during Childhood: The Long Run Effects of Warfare on Health
This paper estimates the causal long-term consequences of an exposure to war in utero and during childhood on the risk of obesity and the probability of having a chronic health condition in ...
(published in: Journal of Health Economics, 2017, 53, 117–130.)
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I10, I12, J13
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10806
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Michael
A.
Clemens
Jennifer
Hunt
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The Labor Market Effects of Refugee Waves: Reconciling Conflicting Results
An influential strand of research has tested for the effects of immigration on natives' wages and employment using exogenous refugee supply shocks as natural experiments. Several studies have reached ...
(published in: ILR Review, 2019, 72 (4), 818-857)
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J61, O15, R23
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10801
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Laurent
Davezies
Thomas
Le Barbanchon
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Regression Discontinuity Design with Continuous Measurement Error in the Running Variable
Since the late 90s, Regression Discontinuity (RD) designs have been widely used to estimate Local Average Treatment Effects (LATE). When the running variable is observed with continuous measurement ...
(published in: Journal of Econometrics, 2017, 200 (2), 260 - 281)
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C21, C14, C51
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10799
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Tomi
Kyyrä
Hanna
Onerva
Pesola
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Estimating the Effects of Potential Benefit Duration without Variation in the Maximum Duration of Unemployment Benefits
This paper examines the effects of unemployment benefit duration in Finland. To overcome the problem that the maximum duration of benefits is the same for all unemployed we exploit two observations. ...
(published as 'The effects of unemployment benefit duration: Evidence from residual benefit duration' in: Labour Economics, 2020, 65, 101859)
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J64, J65
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10798
|
Tomi
Kyyrä
Hanna
Onerva
Pesola
Jouko
Kullervo
Verho
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The Spike at Benefit Exhaustion in the Finnish Labor Market
Many studies have found that the exit rate from unemployment increases in the vicinity of the exhaustion day of unemployment insurance benefits. The extent to which this "spike" is driven by job ...
(published as "The Spike at Benefit Exhaustion: The Role of Measurement Error in Benefit Eligibility" in: Labour Economics, 2019, 60, 75-83)
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C41, J64, J65
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13081Result(s) returned for "All accepted Discussion Papers"
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