IZA - All published DPs

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No. Author(s) Title JEL Class.
7699 Alois Kneip
Monika Merz
Lidia Storjohann
Aggregation and Labor Supply Elasticities
The aggregate Frisch elasticity of labor supply has played a key role in business cycle analysis. This paper develops a statistical aggregation procedure which allows for worker heterogeneity in ...
(published in: Journal of the European Economic Association, 2020, 18, 2315-2358)
C51, E10, J22
7698 Olivier B. Bargain
Andreas Peichl
Steady-State Labor Supply Elasticities: A Survey
Previous reviews of static labor supply estimations concentrate mainly on the evidence from the 1980s and 1990s, Anglo-Saxon countries and early generations of labor supply modeling. This paper ...
(published as 'Own-wage labor supply elasticities: variation across time and estimation methods' in: IZA Journal of Labor Economics, 2016, 5, 10 (2016) )
C25, C52, H31, J22
7697 Guido Cozzi
Noemi Mantovan
Robert M. Sauer
Does It Pay to Work for Free? Wage Returns and Gender Differences in the Market for Volunteers
Working as a volunteer is a widespread phenomenon that has both individual and societal benefits. In this paper, we identify the wage returns to working for free by exploiting exogenous variation in ...
(published in: Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics, 2017, 79(6), 1018-1045)
C26, D64, H41, J16, J31, J71
7696 Jacques Poot
Matthew Roskruge
Internationalisation of Education and Returns in the Labour Market
The education services provided in any given country increasingly contribute to human capital that is employed in another country. On the one hand, graduates may seek to obtain the highest return to ...
(published in: Studies in Regional Science, 2013, 43(1), 61-78)
F22, I24, J24, J31
7695 Junghee Han
Almas Heshmati
Determinants of Financial Rewards from Industry-University Collaboration in South Korea
The external circumstances for universities have been changing rapidly. In order to be competitive, survive, and flourish, universities have shown a growing enthusiasm to generate financial revenues ...
(published in: International Journal of Innovation Management, 2016, 20(7), 235-257. )
A20, D45, I22, L24, P12
7694 Heather Antecol
Ozkan Eren
Serkan Ozbeklik
Peer Effects in Disadvantaged Primary Schools: Evidence from a Randomized Experiment
We examine the effect of peer achievement on students' own achievement and teacher performance in primary schools in disadvantaged neighborhoods using data from a well-executed randomized experiment ...
(published in: Journal of Human Resources, 2016, 51 (1), 95 - 132)
I21, J24
7692 Rey Hernández-Julián
Hani Mansour
Christina Peters
The Effects of Intrauterine Malnutrition on Birth and Fertility Outcomes: Evidence from the 1974 Bangladesh Famine
This paper uses the Bangladesh famine of 1974 as a natural experiment to estimate the impact of intrauterine malnutrition on sex of the child and infant mortality. In addition, we estimate the impact ...
(published in: Demography, 2014, 51(5), 1775-1796)
I15, J13
7691 Jan Goebel
Christian Krekel
Tim Tiefenbach
Nicolas R. Ziebarth
Natural Disaster, Policy Action, and Mental Well-Being: The Case of Fukushima
We study the impact of the Fukushima disaster on people's mental well-being in another industrialized country, more than 5000 miles distant. The meltdown significantly increased environmental ...
(published as 'How Natural Disasters Can Affect Environmental Concerns, Risk Aversion, and Even Politics: Evidence from Fukushima and Three European Countries' in: Journal of Population Economics, 2015, 28(4), 1137-1180 )
I18, I31, Z13, Q54
7690 Michael Lechner
Paul Downward
Heterogeneous Sports Participation and Labour Market Outcomes in England
Based on a unique composite dataset measuring heterogeneous sports participation, labour market outcomes and local facilities provision, this paper examines for the first time the association between ...
(published in: Applied Economics, 2016, 49 (4), 335–348. )
I12, I18, J24, L83, C21
7689 Stefan Boes
Michael Gerfin
Does Full Insurance Increase the Demand for Health Care?
We estimate the causal effect of having full health insurance on health care expenditures. We take advantage of a unique quasi-experimental setup in which deductibles and co-payments were zero in a ...
(published in: Health Economics, 2016, 25 (11), 1483-1496)
I11, C14
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