IZA - All published DPs

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No. Author(s) Title JEL Class.
16067 Alessandro Cigno
Can a Ban on Child Labour Be Self-Enforcing?
A series of articles beginning with Basu and Van (1989) argue that a ban on child labour may be self-enforcing in the sense that, once an equilibrium where only adults work is established, parents ...
(published in: Journal of Population Economics, 2024, 37, 62)
J13, O12
16066 Werner Eichhorst
Annabelle Krause-Pilatus
Paul Marx
Mathias Dolls
Max Lay
Minimum Income Support Systems as Elements of Crisis Resilience in Europe
This paper studies the role of social policies in different European welfare states regarding minimum income protection and active inclusion. The core focus lies on crisis resilience, i.e. the ...
(updated version available as DP 17463)
J64, J65, J68
16062 Christina Gathmann
Christian Kagerl
Laura Pohlan
Duncan H.W. Roth
The Pandemic Push: Digital Technologies and Workforce Adjustments
Based on a unique survey and administrative employer-employee data, we show that the COVID-19 pandemic acted as a push factor for the diffusion of digital technologies in Germany. About two in three ...
(revised version published in: Labour Economics, 2024, 89, 102541)
D22, E22, J23, J63
16061 Marco Caliendo
Deborah A. Cobb-Clark
Juliana Silva Goncalves
Arne Uhlendorff
Locus of Control and the Preference for Agency
We conduct a laboratory experiment to study how locus of control operates through people's preferences and beliefs to influence their decisions. Using the principal-agent setting of the delegation ...
(published in: European Economic Review, 2024, 165, 104737)
D83, D87, D91
16060 Maryam Naghsh Nejad
Serena Yu
Philip Haywood
Provider Responses to the Expansion of Public Subsidies in Healthcare: The Case of Oral Chemotherapy Treatment in Australia
We examine provider responses to the expansion of public subsidies in 2015 for oral chemotherapy treatment, in a health system where providers were free to determine their own prices. Oral ...
(published in: Social Science & Medicine, 2023, 330, 116041)
I11, I13, D04
16058 Anjali Adukia
Alex Eble
Emileigh Harrison
Hakizumwami Birali Runesha
Teodora Szasz
What We Teach about Race and Gender: Representation in Images and Text of Children's Books
Books shape how children learn about society and norms, in part through representation of different characters. We use computational tools to characterize representation in children’s books widely ...
(published in: Quarterly Journal of Economics, 2023, 138 (4), 2225 - 2285)
I24, I21, Z1, J15, J16
16057 Axana Dalle
Philippe Sterkens
Stijn Baert
A Poisoned Gift? The Hireability Signals of an Income-Support Program for the Senior Unemployed
Many OECD countries invest heavily in labour-market programs to prolong careers. Although active labour-market programs designed for this purpose have frequently been evaluated, less is known about ...
(published in: JODE Journal of Demographic Economics, 2024, 90 (4), 553-588)
J71, J32, J14
16056 Sebastian Link
Manuel Menkhoff
Andreas Peichl
Paul Schüle
Downward Revision of Investment Decisions after Corporate Tax Hikes
This paper estimates the causal effect of corporate tax hikes on firm investment based on more than 1,400 local tax changes. By observing planned and realized investment volumes in a representative ...
(published in: American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, 2024, 16 (4), 194 - 222)
G11, H25, H32, H71, O16
16053 Jisoo Hwang
Seung-sik Hwang
Hyuncheol Bryant Kim
Jungmin Lee
Junseok Lee
Risk Compensation after COVID-19 Vaccination
This paper studies the causal impacts of vaccine eligibility on social distancing behaviors (risk compensation). We apply a regression discontinuity design around the birth date cutoff of vaccine ...
(updated version published as 'Risk compensation after COVID-19 vaccination: Evidence from vaccine rollout by exact birth date in South Korea' in: Health Economics, 2024, 33 (8), 1811 - 1830)
I12, I18
16052 Adele Whelan
Anne Devlin
Seamus McGuinness
Social Inclusion and Levels of Urbanisation: Does It Matter Where You Live?
Are individuals living in distinct urban or rural settings more likely to experience barriers to social inclusion? If so, what are the nature of the barriers that they face? Using a unique ...
(revised version published as 'Barriers to social inclusion and levels of urbanisation: Does it matter where you live?' in: Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society, 2024, 17 (1), 59 - 74)
R10, R58, P25, J15
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