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No. Author(s) Title JEL Class.
12403 Francesca Barigozzi
Helmuth Cremer
Chiara Monfardini
The Gender Gap in Informal Child Care: Theory and Some Evidence from Italy
Our model studies couples. time allocation and career choices, which are a¤ected by a social norm on gender roles in the family. Parents can provide two types of informal child care: basic care ...
(published in: Economia Italiana, 2019, 3, 66-98.)
D13, H23, J16, J22
12402 William Cochrane
Jacques Poot
Did the Post-1986 Decline in the Homeownership Rate Benefit the New Zealand Labour Market? A Spatial-Econometric Exploration
The proportion of New Zealand households living in owner-occupied dwellings has declined steadily since the early 1990s. The unemployment rate declined steadily as well, except for upward shifts due ...
(published in: Asia-Pacific Journal of Regional Science, 2020, 4 (1), 261-284)
J61, J64, R23, R31
12401 Fredrik W. Andersson
Henrik Jordahl
Jens Josephson
Outsourcing Public Services: Contractibility, Cost, and Quality
We review the literature on public sector outsourcing to explore if the theoretical predictions from the incomplete contracts literature hold up to recent empirical evidence. Guided by theory, we ...
(published in: CESifo Economic Studies, 2019, 65 (4), 349–372, )
D23, H11, L33
12400 Daniel Kühnle
How Effective Are Pictorial Warnings on Tobacco Products? New Evidence on Smoking Behaviour Using Australian Panel Data
Studies examining the introduction of pictorial warnings on cigarette packages provide inconclusive evidence due to small samples and methodological issues. We use individual-level panel data from ...
(published in: Journal of Health Economics, 2019, 67, 102215)
I12, I14, I18
12399 Alois Stutzer
Michael Baltensperger
Armando N. Meier
Overstrained Citizens? The Number of Ballot Propositions and the Quality of the Decision Process in Direct Democracy
We study how the number of ballot propositions affects the quality of decision making in direct democracy, as reflected in citizens' knowledge, voting behavior, and attitudes toward democracy. Using ...
(published in: European Journal of Political Economy, 2019, 59, 483-500)
D03, D72, D78, H00
12397 Karen A. Mumford
Cristina Sechel
Pay and Job Rank Amongst Academic Economists in the UK: Is Gender Relevant?
This article presents and explores a rich new data source to analyse the determinants of pay and job rank amongst academic Economists in the UK. Characteristics associated with individual ...
(published in: British Journal of Industrial Relations, 2020, 58 (1), 82-113)
A1, A11, A2, I3, J01, J31, J7
12395 Gary Charness
Thomas Garcia
Theo Offerman
Marie Claire Villeval
Do Measures of Risk Attitude in the Laboratory Predict Behavior under Risk in and outside of the Laboratory?
We consider the external validity of laboratory measures of risk attitude. Based on a large-scale experiment using a representative panel of the Dutch population, we test if these measures can ...
(revised version published in: Journal of Risk and Uncertainty, 2020, 60, 99-123)
C91, C93, D81
12393 Orkun Saka
Nauro F. Campos
Paul De Grauwe
Yuemei Ji
Angelo Martelli
Financial Crises and Liberalization: Progress or Reversals?
Financial crisis can trigger policy reversals, i.e. they can lead to a process of re- regulation of financial markets. Using a recent comprehensive dataset on financial liberalization across 94 ...
(published in: Campos, N., P. De Grauwe and Y. Ji (eds), Economic Growth and Structural Reforms in Europe, Cambridge University Press, 2020, 177 - 213 )
G01, G28, P11, P16
12392 Stephanie Prümer
Claus Schnabel
Questioning the Stereotype of the "Malingering Bureaucrat": Absence from Work in the Public and Private Sector in Germany
Public sector employees are often said to have excessive rates of absence from work. Using representative survey data for Germany, we indeed find absenteeism of employees to be higher in the public ...
(published in: Kyklos, 2019, 72 (4), 570-603)
I19, J22, H8
12391 Andrea Ichino
Martin Olsson
Barbara Petrongolo
Peter Skogman Thoursie
Economic Incentives, Home Production and Gender Identity Norms
We infer the role of gender identity norms from the reallocation of childcare across parents, following changes in their relative wages. By exploiting variation from a Swedish tax reform, we estimate ...
(forthcoming in: Journal of Labor Economics, 2024)
D13, H24, J22
12390 Joan Costa-Font
Frank A. Cowell
The Measurement of Health Inequalities: Does Status Matter?
Approaches to measuring health inequalities are often problematic in that they use methods that are inappropriate for categorical data. The approach here focuses on "pure" or univariate health ...
(published in: Journal of Economic Inequality, 2022, 20, 299–325)
D63, H23, I18
12389 Alberto Batinti
Joan Costa-Font
Timothy J. Hatton
Voting Up? The Effects of Democracy and Franchise Extension on Human Stature
We study the health effects of the spread of democratic institutions and the extension of voting rights in 15 European countries since the middle of the nineteenth century. We employ both cross ...
(published in: Economica, 2022, 89, 161-190 )
H1, J18
12386 Petra Persson
Maya Rossin-Slater
When Dad Can Stay Home: Fathers' Workplace Flexibility and Maternal Health
While workplace flexibility is perceived to be a key determinant of maternal labor supply, less is known about fathers' demand for flexibility or about intra-household spillover effects of ...
(published in: American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, 2024, 16 (4), 186–219)
I12, I18, I31, J12, J13, J38
12383 Ayako Kondo
Impact of Increased Long-Term Care Insurance Payments on Employment and Wages in Formal Long-Term Care
This paper examines the effect of raising Long-term Care Insurance (LTCI) payments on employment and wages of workers in the long-term care (LTC) industry. Specifically, I use the change in the ...
(published in: Journal of the Japanese and International Economies, 2019, 53, 101034)
I11, J30, J48
12382 Dany Bahar
Prithwiraj Choudhury
Hillel Rapoport
Migrant Inventors and the Technological Advantage of Nations
We investigate the relationship between the presence of migrant inventors and the dynamics of innovation in the migrants' receiving countries. We find that countries are 25 to 50 percent more likely ...
(published in: Research Policy, 2020, 49 (9), 103947)
O31, O33, F22
12381 Mutlu Yuksel
Mevlude Akbulut-Yuksel
Cahit Guven
Do English Skills Affect Muslim Immigrants' Economic and Social Integration Differentially?
This paper estimates the returns to English-speaking fluency on the socioeconomic outcomes of childhood immigrants. We further investigate whether Muslim childhood immigrants face additional hurdles ...
(published in: Economic Record, 2019, 95 (310), 279-300)
J12, J13, J24, J31, J61, J62
12380 Rui Costa
Swati Dhingra
Stephen Machin
Trade and Worker Deskilling
This paper presents new evidence on international trade and worker outcomes. It examines a big world event that produced an unprecedentedly large shock to the UK exchange rate. In the 24 hours in ...
(published as 'New Dawn Fades: Trade, Labour and the Brexit Exchange Rate Depreciation' in: Journal of International Economics, 2024,152, 103993 )
F14, F31, F66, J24, J31
12377 José Ignacio Gimenez-Nadal
José Alberto Molina
Green Commuting and Gasoline Taxes in the United States
This paper analyzes how gasoline tax rates are related to the time workers in the United States spend commuting by private car, public transport, or with other physical modes of transport. Our ...
(published in: Energy Policy, 2019, 132, 324-331)
D1, Q4, R4
12376 Brian A. Bourquard
Steven Y. Wu
An Analysis of Beverage Size Restrictions
Due to high levels of obesity, various government interventions have been proposed to curb the consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs). The New York City "soda-ban," which proposed to limit ...
(published in: American Journal of Agricultural Economics, 2020, 102 (1), 169-185)
D82, I18, I31
12374 Can Tang
Liqiu Zhao
Zhong Zhao
Free Education Helps Combat Child Labor? The Effect of a Free Compulsory Education Reform in Rural China
This paper evaluates the effect of a free compulsory education reform in rural China on the incidence of child labor. We exploit the cross-province variation in the roll-out of the reform and apply a ...
(published in:[Journal of Population Economics, 2020, 33, 601–631 )
I28, I38, O20
12373 Alessandro Cigno
Alessandro Gioffré
Annalisa Luporini
Evolution of Individual Preferences and Persistence of Family Rules
How does the distribution of individual preferences evolve as a result of marriage between individuals with different preferences? Could a family rule be self-enforcing given individual preferences, ...
(published in: Review of Economics of the Household, 2021, 19, 935-958)
C78, D13, J12
12372 Teevrat Garg
Matthew Gibson
Fanglin Sun
Extreme Temperatures and Time-Use in China
How do people in developing countries respond to extreme temperatures? Using individual-level panel data over two decades and relying on plausibly exogenous variation in weather, we estimate how ...
(published as 'Extreme temperatures and time use in China' in: Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, 2020, 180, 309 - 324.)
Q54, O13, H53
12371 Brindusa Anghel
Núria Rodríguez-Planas
Anna Sanz-de-Galdeano
Culture, Gender, and Math: A Revisitation
Using five waves of PISA data spanning the period 2003-2015 and exploiting variation both across- and within-countries, we find that the positive association between the female-male gender gap in ...
(significantly revised version published as 'Gender Equality and the Math Gender Gap' in: Economics of Education Review. 2020, 79, 102064 )
I1, Z1
12367 Markus Poschke
Wage Employment, Unemployment and Self-Employment across Countries
Poor countries have low rates of wage employment and high rates of self-employment. This paper shows that they also have high rates of unemployment relative to wage employment, and that ...
(published online in: Journal of Monetary Economics, 12 September 2024, 103684)
O40, L26, J64, J23
12365 Kurt Mitman
Stanislav Rabinovich
Do Unemployment Benefit Extensions Explain the Emergence of Jobless Recoveries?
Countercyclical unemployment benefit extensions in the United States act as a propagation mechanism, contributing to both the high persistence of unemployment and its weak correlation with ...
(published online in: Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control , 05 September 2024, 104964)
E24, E32, J65
12364 Barbara M. Fraumeni
Michael S. Christian
Accumulation of Human and Market Capital in the United States, 1975-2012: An Analysis by Gender
This paper covers a continuous and longer time period than previously possible to examine human and market capital because of research by Christian (2017). This paper focuses on the presentation and ...
(published in: Barbara M. Fraumeni (ed.), Measuring Economic Growth and Productivity: Foundations, KLEMS Production Models, and Extensions, Academic Press, 2020, 509-529)
J24, J16, O47, J22, I26
12361 Oded Stark
Wiktor Budzinski
Grzegorz Kosiorowski
Switching Queues, Cultural Conventions, and Social Welfare
We use queuing-related behavior as an instrument for assessing the social appeal of alternative cultural norms. Specifically, we study the behavior of rational and sophisticated individuals who stand ...
(published in: European Journal of Operational Research, 2019, 278 (3), 837 - 844)
C72, D60, Z13
12360 Raquel Fernández
Sahar Parsa
Martina Viarengo
Coming Out in America: AIDS, Politics, and Cultural Change
The last few decades witnessed a dramatic change in public opinion towards gay people. This paper studies the hypothesis that the AIDS epidemic was a shock that changed the incentive to "come out" ...
(published online as 'Coming out in America: thirty years of cultural change' in: Journal of Law, Economics, & Organization, 18 April 2024)
J15, P16, Z13
12358 Kai Ingwersen
Stephan L. Thomsen
The Immigrant-Native Wage Gap in Germany Revisited
This study provides new evidence on the levels of economic integration experienced by foreigners and naturalised immigrants relative to native Germans from 1994 to 2015. We decompose the wage gap ...
(published in: Journal of Economic Inequality, 2021, 19, 825-854.)
J61, J31, J15
12357 Tatiana Garanina
Alexander Muravyev
The Gender Composition of Corporate Boards and Firm Performance: Evidence from Russia
This paper studies economic effects of the gender composition of corporate boards, employing a new and unique longitudinal dataset of virtually all Russian companies whose shares were traded on the ...
(revised version published in: Emerging Markets Review, 2021, 48, 100772)
G34, J16
12356 Pavel Jelnov
The Marriage Age U-Shape
In this paper, I address the U-shaped dynamics (a decrease followed by an increase) in the age at first marriage during the twentieth century. First, I show that the U-shaped dynamics have been ...
(published in: Journal of Demographic Economics, 2023, 89 (2), 211-252)
J12, N32, N34
12355 Pavel Jelnov
Comparison Dimensions and Similarity: Addressing Individual Heterogeneity
How many comparison dimensions individuals consider when they are asked to judge how similar two different objects are? I address individual heterogeneity in the number of comparison dimensions with ...
(published in: Journal of Neuroscience, Psychology, and Economics, 2020, 13(3), 141–149.)
D12
12354 Artyom Jelnov
Pavel Jelnov
Voting Power and Survival: The Case of a Ruling Party
In this article, we empirically study the survival of the ruling party in parliamentary democracies using a hazard rate model. We define survival of a crisis as being successful in a critical vote in ...
(pablished as "Success, Survival and Probabilistic Voting: The Case of a ruling Party" in: Journal Homo Oeconomicus, 2019, 36(3), 209-226)
D72
12352 Ria Ivandic
Tom Kirchmaier
Stephen Machin
Jihadi Attacks, Media and Local Hate Crime
Empirical connections between local anti-Muslim hate crimes and international jihadi terror attacks are studied. Based upon rich administrative data from Greater Manchester Police, event studies of ...
(published as 'International Terror Attacks and Local Out-Group Hate Crimes' in: Journal of Law and Economics, 2024, 67 (3), 589–610)
K42
12351 Marco de Pinto
Laszlo Goerke
Efficiency Wages in Cournot-Oligopoly
In a Cournot-oligopoly with free but costly entry and business stealing, output per firm is too low and the number of competitors excessive, assuming labor productivity to depend on the number of ...
(published in: B.E.Journal of Economic Analysis and Policy, 2019, 19 (4), 20180236)
D43, J31, L13
12349 Zhengyu Cai
Karen Maguire
John V. Winters
Who Benefits from Local Oil and Gas Employment? Labor Market Composition in the Oil and Gas Industry in Texas
This paper examines local labor market outcomes from an oil and gas boom in Texas. We examine two main outcomes across gender, race, and ethnicity: the probability of employment in the oil and gas ...
(published in: Energy Economics, 2019, 84, 104515)
J20, Q33, Q40, R10
12348 Loukas Balafoutas
Matthias Sutter
How Uncertainty and Ambiguity in Tournaments Affect Gender Differences in Competitive Behavior
Tournament incentives prevail in labor markets. Yet, the number of tournament winners is often unclear to competitors. While it is hard to measure how this uncertainty affects work performance and ...
(published in: European Economic Review, 2019, 118, 1-13.)
C91, D03, D09
12347 Gary Charness
Francesco Feri
Miguel A. Meléndez-Jiménez
Matthias Sutter
An Experimental Study on the Effects of Communication, Credibility, and Clustering in Network Games
The effectiveness of social interaction depends strongly on an ability to coordinate actions efficiently. In large networks, such coordination may be very difficult to achieve and may depend on the ...
(revised version published in: Review of Economics and Statistics, 2023, 105 (6), 1630 - 1543)
C71, C91, D03, D85
12346 Giorgio Brunello
Patricia Wruuck
Skill Shortages and Skill Mismatch in Europe: A Review of the Literature
Labour markets are currently in a phase of cyclical recovery and undergoing structural transformation due to globalisation, demographic trends, advancing digital technologies and automation and ...
(published in: Journal of Economic Surveys, 2021, 35 (4), 1145-1167)
J24
12345 Björn Anders Gustafsson
Xiuna Yang
Terry Sicular
Catching up with the West: Chinese Pathways to the Global Middle Class
We investigate whether Chinese household incomes have caught up to those of the middle class in the developed world. Using nationwide survey data for 2002 and 2013, we find considerable catch up. ...
(published in: China Journal, 2020, 84, 102-127)
D31, P36
12344 Uwe Jirjahn
Jens Mohrenweiser
Works Councils and Organizational Gender Policies in Germany
While education and labor force participation of women have been increased, there is still a substantial gender gap in labor market opportunities. This gives rise to the question of what factors lead ...
(revised version published in: British Journal of Industrial Relations, 2021, 59 (4), 1020-1048)
J13, J16, J52, J53
12342 Paul Marx
Anti-Elite Politics and Emotional Reactions to Socio-Economic Problems. Experimental Evidence on 'Pocketbook Anger' from France, Germany, and the United States
Many observers have noticed the importance of anger in contemporary politics, particularly with reference to populism. This article addresses the question under which conditions people become angry ...
(published in: British Journal of Sociology, 2020, 71 (4), 608-624.)
D72, D74, P16
12341 Petri Böckerman
Andrew Conlin
Rauli Svento
Early Health, Risk Aversion and Stock Market Participation
To examine the relationship between early health status and financial decisions in adulthood, we link information on birth weight in 1966 from the Northern Finland Birth Cohort to data from the ...
(published in: Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Finance, 2021, 32, 100568)
I100, G110
12340 Sergi Jimenez-Martin
Catia Nicodemo
Stuart Redding
Modelling the Dynamic Effects of Elective Hospital Admissions on Emergency Levels in England
In England as elsewhere, policy makers are trying to reduce the pressure on costs due to rising hospital admissions by encouraging GPs to refer fewer patients to hospital specialists. This could have ...
(published in: Empirical Economics, 2020, 59, 1933-1957)
I10, I14, C10, B12
12339 Piotr Lewandowski
Albert Park
Wojciech Hardy
Yang Du
Technology, Skills, and Globalization: Explaining International Differences in Routine and Nonroutine Work Using Survey Data
The shift away from manual and routine cognitive work, and towards non-routine cognitive work is a key feature of labor markets. There is no evidence, however, if the relative importance of various ...
(published in: The World Bank Economic Review, 2022, 36(3), 687-708)
J21, J23, J24
12338 Giorgio Brunello
David Kiss
Math Scores in High Stakes Grades
We investigate whether tests taken during a high stakes grade by German primary and secondary students produce higher math scores than in lower stakes grades. We identify a high stakes grade with the ...
(published in: Economics of Education Review, 2022, 82, 102219)
I26, J24, D91
12337 Steffen Altmann
Andreas Grunewald
Jonas Radbruch
Passive Choices and Cognitive Spillovers
Passive behavior is ubiquitous - even when facing various alternatives to choose from, people commonly fail to take decisions. This paper provides evidence on the cognitive foundations of such ...
(published as 'Interventions and Cognitive Spillovers' in: Review of Economic Studies, 2022, 89 (5), 2293-2328)
D91, D01, D04, C91
12336 Michael Fritsch
Alina Sorgner
Michael Wyrwich
Types of Institutions and Well-Being of Self-Employed and Paid Employees in Europe
This paper analyzes the role of different types of institutions, such as entrepreneurship-facilitating entry conditions, labor market regulations, quality of government, and perception of corruption ...
(revised version published in: Small Business Economics, 2021, 56, 877–901)
L26, I31, D01, D91, P51
12335 Marcelo Bergolo
Rodrigo Ceni
Guillermo Cruces
Matias Giaccobasso
Ricardo Perez-Truglia
Tax Audits as Scarecrows. Evidence from a Large-Scale Field Experiment
The canonical model of Allingham and Sandmo (1972) predicts that firms evade taxes by optimally trading off between the costs and benefits of evasion. However, there is no direct evidence that firms ...
(published in: American Economic Journal, 2023, 15 (1), 110 - 153)
C93, H26, K34, K42, Z13
12333 Boris Hirsch
Elke J. Jahn
Thomas Zwick
Birds, Birds, Birds: Co-Worker Similarity, Workplace Diversity, and Voluntary Turnover
We investigate how the demographic composition of the workforce along the sex, nationality, education, age, and tenure dimension affects voluntary turnover. Fitting duration models for workers' ...
(revised version published as 'Birds, Birds, Birds: Co-Worker Similarity, Workplace Diversity and Job Switches' in: British Journal of Industrial Relations, 2020, 58 (3), 690-718)
J63, J62, J21, J19
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