IZA - All published DPs

Logo
No. Author(s) Title JEL Class.
14632 Jeffrey R. Bloem
Andrew J. Oswald
The Analysis of Human Feelings: A Practical Suggestion for a Robustness Test
Governments, multinational companies, and researchers today collect unprecedented amounts of data on human feelings. These data provide information on citizens' happiness, levels of customer ...
(published in: Review of Income and Wealth, 2022, 68 (3), 689 - 710)
C18, C25, I31, I39
14631 Hai-Anh H Dang
Peter F. Lanjouw
Data Scarcity and Poverty Measurement
Measuring poverty trends and dynamics is an important undertaking for poverty reduction policies, which is further highlighted by the SDG goal 1 on eradicating poverty by 2030. We provide a broad ...
(published as 'Regression-based imputation for poverty measurement in data-scarce settings' in: Jacques Silber (ed.), Research Handbook on Measuring Poverty and Deprivation, Edward Elgar Press, 2023, chapter 13)
C15, I32, O15
14630 Maksim Belitski
Christina Guenther
Alexander S. Kritikos
Roy Thurik
Economic Effects of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Entrepreneurship and Small Businesses
The existential threat to small businesses, based on their crucial role in the economy, is behind the plethora of scholarly studies in 2020, the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic. Examining the 14 ...
(published in: Small Business Economics, 2022, 58 (2), 593-609)
L26, J38, I18
14628 Andrew Seltzer
Jonathan Wadsworth
The Impact of Public Transportation and Commuting on Urban Labour Markets: Evidence from the New Survey of London Life and Labour, 1929-32
This paper examines the consequences of the commuter transport revolution on working class labour markets in 1930s London. The ability to commute alleviated urban crowding and increased workers’ ...
(published in: Explorations in Economic History, 2024, 91, 101553.)
N94, J39, N34
14621 Alessandro Cigno
Rules, Preferences and Evolution from the Family Angle
This paper reviews the literature concerning the evolution of cultural traits in general and preferences in particular, and the emergence and persistence of rules or norms, from a family perspective. ...
(published in: Klaus F. Zimmermann (ed.), Handbook fo Labor, Human Resources and Population Economics, 2022)
Z1, C78, D01, D02, D13, J13
14619 Jing Liu
Michael S. Hayes
Seth Gershenson
From Referrals to Suspensions: New Evidence on Racial Disparities in Exclusionary Discipline
We use novel data on disciplinary referrals, including those that do not lead to suspensions, to better understand the origins of racial disparities in exclusionary discipline. We find significant ...
(published in: Journal of Urban Economics, 2024, 141, 103453)
I2, J7
14618 Peter J. Kuhn
Kailing Shen
What Happens When Employers Can No Longer Discriminate in Job Ads?
When employers' explicit gender requests were unexpectedly removed from a Chinese job board overnight, pools of successful applicants became more integrated: women's (men's) share of call-backs to ...
(published in: American Economic Review, 2023, 113 (4), 1013 - 1048)
J16, J63, J71
14617 Daron Acemoglu
Tuomas Pekkarinen
Kjell G. Salvanes
Matti Sarvimäki
The Making of Social Democracy: The Economic and Electoral Consequences of Norway's 1936 Folk School Reform
Upon assuming power for the first time in 1935, the Norwegian Labour Party delivered on its promise for a major schooling reform. The reform raised minimum instruction time in less developed rural ...
(published online in: Journal of the European Economic Association, 24 June 2024)
P16, I28, J26
14616 Sam Parsons
Alex Bryson
Alice Sullivan
Teenage Conduct Problems: A Lifetime of Disadvantage in the Labour Market?
Using data from two British birth cohorts born in 1958 and 1970 we investigate the impact of teenage conduct problems on subsequent employment prospects through to age 42. We find teenagers with ...
(published in: Oxford Economic Papers, 2024, 78 (1), 60 - 80)
I12, J20, J64
14615 Attila Gyetvai
Maria Zhu
Coworker Networks and the Role of Occupations in Job Finding
Which former coworkers help displaced workers find jobs? We answer this question by studying occupational similarity in job finding networks. Using matched employer-employee data from Hungary, this ...
(forthcoming in: Labour Economics)
J64, D85, J24
14614 Philippe Sterkens
Ralf Caers
Marijke De Couck
Michael Geamanu
Victor Van Driessche
Stijn Baert
Costly Mistakes: Why and When Spelling Errors in Resumes Jeopardise Interview Chances
Earlier research has associated spelling errors in resumes with reduced hiring chances. However, the analysis of hiring penalties due to spelling errors has thus far been restricted to white-collar ...
(published in: PLoS ONE, 2022, 18 (4), e0283280)
C91, I21, J24
14613 Chiara Ardito
Fabio Berton
Lia Pacelli
Filippo Passerini
Employment Protection, Workforce Mix and Firm Performance
We measure the impact of employment protection reduction in an uncertain framework on firms' hires and performance, exploiting the Italian 2015 Jobs Act. Results indicate that firms (1) stabilize ...
(published in: B.E. Journal of Economic Analysis and Policy, 2022, 22 (3), 611-621)
J08, J21, J24
14612 Gabriella Conti
Elena Pizzo
Stephen Morris
Mariya Melnychuk
The Economic Costs of Child Maltreatment in UK
Child maltreatment is a major public health problem with significant consequences for individual victims and for society. In this paper we quantify for the first time the economic costs of fatal and ...
(published in: Health Economics, 2021, 30 (12), 3087 - 3105)
I18, J17, D61
14611 Hiromi Hara
Núria Rodríguez-Planas
Long-Term Consequences of Teaching Gender Roles: Evidence from Desegregating Industrial Arts and Home Economics in Japan
We explore whether a 1990 Japanese educational reform that eliminated gender-segregated and gender-stereotyped industrial arts and home economics classes in junior high schools led to behavioral ...
(forthcoming in: Journal of Labor Economics)
J22, J24, I2
14610 Alexander S. Kritikos
Alexander Schiersch
Caroline Stiel
The Productivity Puzzle in Business Services
In Germany, the productivity of professional services, a sector dominated by micro and small firms, declined by 40 percent between 1995 and 2014. This productivity decline also holds true for ...
(published as 'The productivity shock in business services' in: Small Business Economics, 2022, 59 (3), 1273 - 1299)
L84, O47, D24, L11
14609 Deborah A. Cobb-Clark
Sarah C. Dahmann
Daniel A. Kamhöfer
Hannah Schildberg-Hörisch
Sophistication about Self-Control
We propose a broadly applicable empirical approach to classify individuals as time-consistent versus naïve or sophisticated regarding their self-control limitations. Operationalizing our approach ...
(published in: Journal of Public Economics, 2024, 238, 105196)
D91, D01
14608 Michal Bauer
Jana Cahlíková
Julie Chytilová
Gerald Roland
Shifting Punishment on Minorities: Experimental Evidence of Scapegoating
This paper provides experimental evidence showing that members of a majority group systematically shift punishment on innocent members of an ethnic minority. We develop a new incentivized task, the ...
(published in: Economic Journal, 2023, 133 (652), 1626–1640)
C93, D74, D91, J15
14607 Vojtech Bartos
Michal Bauer
Julie Chytilová
Ian Levely
Psychological Effects of Poverty on Time Preferences
We test whether an environment of poverty affects time preferences through purely psychological channels. We measured discount rates among farmers in Uganda who made decisions about when to enjoy ...
(published in: Economic Journal, 2021, 131 (638), 2357 - 2382)
C93, D91, O12
14606 Theresa Beltramo
Hai-Anh H Dang
Ibrahima Sarr
Paolo Verme
Estimating Poverty among Refugee Populations: A Cross-Survey Imputation Exercise for Chad
Household consumption surveys do not typically cover refugee populations, and poverty estimates for refugees are rare. This paper tests the performance of a recently developed cross-survey imputation ...
(published in: Oxford Development Studies, 2024, 52 (1), 94-113)
C15, F22, I32, O15, O20
14605 Esther Mirjam Girsberger
Lena Hassani Nezhad
Kalaivani Karunanethy
Rafael Lalive
Mothers at Work: How Mandating Paid Maternity Leave Affects Employment, Earnings and Fertility
In July 2005, Switzerland introduced the first federal paid maternity leave mandate, offering 14 weeks of leave with 80% of pre-birth earnings. We study the mandate's impact on women's employment and ...
(published in: Labour Economics, 2023, 84, 102364)
J1, J2
14604 Jonathan Colmer
Temperature, Labor Reallocation, and Industrial Production: Evidence from India
To what degree can labor reallocation mitigate the economic consequences of weather-driven agricultural productivity shocks? I estimate that temperature-driven reductions in the demand for ...
(published in: American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, 2021, 13 (4), 101 - 124)
Q56, O13, J21, F16
14603 Antonin Bergeaud
Clément Mazet-Sonilhac
Clément Malgouyres
Sara Signorelli
Technological Change and Domestic Outsourcing
Domestic outsourcing has grown substantially in developed countries over the past two decades. This paper addresses the question of the technological drivers of this phenomenon by studying the impact ...
(published in: Journal of Labor Economics, 2025, 43 (4), 1135–1168)
G14, G21, O33
14602 Mattia Filomena
Matteo Picchio
Retirement and Health Outcomes in a Meta-Analytical Framework
This paper presents a meta-analysis on the effects of retirement on health. We select academic papers published between 2000 and 2021 studying the impact of retirement on physical and mental health, ...
(published in: Journal of Economic Surveys, 2023, 37 (4), 1120-1155)
I10, J14, J26
14601 Hannah Liepmann
Clemente Pignatti
Welfare Effects of Unemployment Benefits When Informality Is High
We analyze for the first time the welfare effects of unemployment benefits (UBs) in a context of high informality, exploiting matched administrative and survey data with individual-level information ...
(published in: Journal of Public Economics, 2024, 229, 105032.)
J46, J65, J68
14600 Peter A. Savelyev
Benjamin C. Ward
Robert F. Krueger
Matt McGue
Health Endowments, Schooling Allocation in the Family, and Longevity: Evidence from US Twins
We analyze data from the Minnesota Twin Registry (MTR), combined with the Socioeconomic Survey of Twins (SST), and new mortality data, and contribute to two bodies of literature. First, we ...
(published in: Journal of Health Economics, 2022, 81, 102554)
I12, I140, I240, J130, J24
14599 Evangelina Dardati
Ramiro de Elejalde
Eugenio Giolito
On the Short-Term Impact of Pollution: The Effect of PM 2.5 on Emergency Room Visits
In this paper, we study the effect of fine particulate matter (PM 2.5) exposure on Emergency Room (ER) visits in Chile. Our identification strategy exploits daily PM 2.5 variation within a ...
(revised version published in: Health Economics, 2024, 33 (3), 482 - 508)
I12, I18, Q51, Q53
14598 Lara Lebedinski
Giuseppe Migali
Miloš Popović
Suncica Vujic
Operation Allied Force: Unintended Consequences of the NATO Bombing on Children's Outcomes
This is the first paper that estimates the causal effect of the NATO's Operation Allied Force in Serbia in 1999, on children who were in the womb during the bombing. We investigate the in utero ...
(published online in: Journal of the Royal Statistical Society Series A: Statistics in Society, 28 March 2025)
I15, J13, 15
14596 Jose Garcia-Louzao
Laura Hospido
Alessandro Ruggieri
Dual Returns to Experience
In this paper we study human capital accumulation and wage trajectories of young workers in a dual labor market. Using rich administrative data for Spain, we follow workers since labor market entry ...
(published in: Labour Economics, 2023, 80, 102290)
J30, J41, J63
14589 Stephen Drinkwater
Colin Jennings
The Brexit Referendum and Three Types of Regret
In this paper we examine three forms of regret in relation to the UK’s hugely significant referendum on EU membership that was held in June 2016. These are, (i) whether leave voters at the ...
(published in: Public Choice, 2022, 193, 275-291)
D70, D72, F60
14587 Jaap Nieuwenhuis
Matt Best
Matt Vogel
Maarten van Ham
Susan Branje
Wim Meeus
Exposure to Neighborhood Violence and Child-Parent Conflict among a Longitudinal Sample of Dutch Adolescents
An extensive body of research has documented the deleterious effects of community violence on adolescent development and behavior. Much of this research focuses on how exposure violence structures ...
(published in: Cities, 2023, 136, 104258)
I30, R23
14586 Zhiming Cheng
Massimiliano Tani
Haining Wang
Energy Poverty and Entrepreneurship
We use the 2012-2018 China Family Panel Studies data to examine the relationship between household energy poverty and an individual’s probability of becoming an entrepreneur. Consistent with the ...
(published in: Energy Economics, 2021, 102, 105469)
I32, L26, Q41
14585 Chris Riddell
W. Craig Riddell
Welfare versus Work under a Negative Income Tax: Evidence from the Gary, Seattle, Denver and Manitoba Income Maintenance Experiments
The Income Maintenance Experiments have received renewed attention due to growing international interest in a Basic Income. Proponents viewed a Negative Income Tax as a replacement for traditional ...
(published in: Journal of Labor Economics, 2024, 42 (2), 427 - 467)
C9, I38, J2
14583 Anthony Fakhoury
Ali Fakih
Government Intervention and Business Response as Determinants of Business Continuity amid COVID-19: The Case of Jordan and Morocco
This paper provides new insights into the role of governments and businesses in responding to pandemics in the Arab region. It uses the COVID-19 World Bank Enterprise Survey Follow-up dataset to ...
(published in: International Journal of Economic Policy in Emerging Economies, 2023, 17 (2), 196-219)
H11, H12, O53
14582 Carlos Carrillo-Tudela
Camila Comunello
Alex Clymo
Annette Jäckle
Ludo Visschers
David Zentler-Munro
Search and Reallocation in the COVID-19 Pandemic: Evidence from the UK
The impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on the UK labour market has been extremely heterogeneous, with strong variation both by occupation and industrial sector. The extent to which workers adjust their ...
(published in: Labour Economics, 2023, 81, 102328)
E24, J23, J63
14580 Anna Adamecz
Morag Henderson
Nikki Shure
Intergenerational Educational Mobility – The Role of Non-cognitive Skills
While it has been shown that university attendance is strongly predicted by parental education, we know very little about why some potential 'first in family' or first-generation students make it to ...
(published in: Education Economcis, 2024, 32 (1), 59 - 78)
I24, J24
14579 John Chiwuzulum Odozi
Ruth Uwaifo Oyelere
Does Violent Conflict Affect Labor Supply of Farm Households? The Nigerian Experience
Nigeria has experienced bouts of violent conflict in different regions since its independence leading to significant loss of life. In this paper, we explore the average effect of exposure to violent ...
(published in: Agricultural and Resource Economics Review, 2021, 50 (3), 401 - 435. )
Q10, Q12, O1, D74
14578 José Ignacio Gimenez-Nadal
José Alberto Molina
Almudena Sevilla
Temporal Flexibility, Breaks at Work, and the Motherhood Wage Gap
We analyze the relationship between temporal flexibility at work (i.e., the ability to vary or change the time of beginning or ending work) and the motherhood wage gap of working parents, in the US. ...
(published in: J.A. Molina (ed.), Mothers in the Labor Market, Springer, 2022, 83-105)
D63, J16, J22, J24, J31
14577 Lucía Echeverría
José Ignacio Gimenez-Nadal
José Alberto Molina
Who Uses Green Mobility? Exploring Profiles in Developed Countries
Mobility gives individuals access to different daily activities, facilities, and places, but at the cost of imposing environmental burdens. The sustainable growth of society is linked to green ...
(published in: Transportation Research Part A: Policy and Practice, 2022, 163, 247 - 265)
R40, J22, O57
14576 Victor Lavy
Analia Schlosser
Adi Shany
Immigration and the Short- and Long-Term Impact of Improved Prenatal Conditions
This paper investigates the effects of immigration from a developing country to a developed country during pregnancy on offspring's outcomes. We focus on intermediate and long-term outcomes, using ...
(published in: Economic Journal, 2024, 134 (662), 2494 - 2529)
I24, I25, I15, J15
14575 Jorge Luis García
James J. Heckman
Victor Ronda
The Lasting Effects of Early Childhood Education on Promoting the Skills and Social Mobility of Disadvantaged African Americans
This paper demonstrates multiple beneficial impacts of a program promoting inter-generational mobility for disadvantaged African-American children and their children. The program improves outcomes of ...
(published in: Journal of Political Economy, 2023, 131 (6), 1477 - 1506)
J13, I28, C93, H43
14573 Solmaz Moslehi
Jaai Parasnis
Massimiliano Tani
Josephina Vejayaratnam
Assaults during Lockdown in NSW and Victoria
We study the relationship between Covid-19 lockdowns and domestic assaults in New South Wales and Victoria using police data on crime by Local Government Area over the period 2019-2020. We apply both ...
(published in: Australian Journal of Labour Economics, 2021, 24, 199 - 212)
I10, K42
14572 Maria Laura Di Tommaso
Dalit Contini
Dalila De Rosa
Francesca Ferrara
Daniela Piazzalunga
Ornella Robutti
Tackling the Gender Gap in Mathematics with Active Learning Methodologies
We implement a teaching methodology aimed at improving primary school children's mathematical skills. The methodology, grounded in active and cooperative learning, focuses on peer interaction, ...
(published in: Economics of Education Review, 2024, 100, 102538)
I21, I24, J16, C93
14571 Sonia Oreffice
Dario Sansone
Sissy That Walk: Transportation to Work by Sexual Orientation
We analyze differences in mode of transportation to work by sexual orientation, using the American Community Survey 2008-2019. Individuals in same-sex couples are significantly less likely to drive ...
(revised version published as 'Transportation to work by sexual orientation' in: PLoS ONE , 2022, 17(2), e0263687 )
D10, J15, Q50, R40
14570 Joan Costa-Font
Sarah Flèche
Ricardo Pagan
The Welfare Effects of Time Reallocation: Evidence from Daylight Saving Time
Daylight Saving Time (DST) is currently implemented by more than seventy countries, yet we do not have a clear knowledge of how it affects individuals' welfare. Using a regression discontinuity ...
(published in: Economica, 2024, 91 (362), 547 - 568)
I18, K2, I31
14569 Clément Malgouyres
Thierry Mayer
Clément Mazet-Sonilhac
Who Benefits from State Corporate Tax Cuts? A Local Labor Markets Approach with Heterogeneous Firms: Comment
Suárez Serrato and Zidar (2016) identify state corporate tax incidence in a spatial equilibrium model with imperfectly mobile firms. Their identification argument rests on comparative-statics ...
(published in: American Economic Review, 2023, 113 (8), 2270 - 2286)
H22, H25, H32, H71, R23, R51
14568 Farzana Afridi
Kanika Mahajan
Nikita Sangwan
The Gendered Effects of Climate Change: Production Shocks and Labor Response in Agriculture
Climate change has increased rainfall uncertainty, leading to greater production risks in agriculture. We examine the gender-differentiated labor impacts of droughts resulting from lower ...
(published as 'The Gendered Effects of Droughts: Production Shocks and Labor Response in Agriculture' in: Labour Economics, 2022, 78, 102227)
Q54, J16, J43, J60
14566 Anustup Kundu
Kunal Sen
Multigenerational Mobility in India
Most studies of intergenerational mobility focus on adjacent generations, and there is limited knowledge about multigenerational mobility that is, status transmission across three generations. We ...
(published as 'Multigenerational Mobility Among Males in India' in: Review of Income and Wealth, 2023, 69 (2), 395 - 418)
J62, J15, O12
14565 Arezou Zaresani
Miguel Olivo-Villabrille
Return-to-Work Policies' Clawback Regime and Labor Supply in Disability Insurance Programs
Exploiting a quasi-natural experiment and using administrative data, we examine the effects of the return-to-work policies' clawback regime in Disability Insurance (DI) programs on beneficiaries' ...
(published in: Labour Economics, 2022, 78, 102215)
D3, H3, I3, J3
14561 Lídia Farré
Francesc Ortega
Family Ties, Geographic Mobility and the Gender Gap in Academic Aspirations
This paper provides new evidence supporting that gender differences in post-graduate educational choices contribute to the glass ceiling in the labor market. We study the decision to pursue an ...
(published as 'Geographic mobility of college students and the gender gap in academic aspirations' in: Labour Economics, 2024, 90, 102550)
J3, J7
14559 Sofoklis Goulas
Silvia Griselda
Rigissa Megalokonomou
Compulsory Class Attendance versus Autonomy
Understanding the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on education requires a solid grasp of the impact of student autonomy on learning. In this paper, we estimate the effect of an increased autonomy ...
(published in: Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 2023, 212: 935-981)
I26
 12991Result(s) returned for "All accepted Discussion Papers" 
(Previous 50 papers)  (Previous 10 papers)  | (Next 10 papers)  (Next 50 papers) 
 

© IZA  Impressum  Last updated: 2025-10-23  webmaster@iza.org    |   Bookmark this page    |   Print View