IZA - All published DPs

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No. Author(s) Title JEL Class.
12271 Gizem Koşar
Tyler Ransom
Wilbert van der Klaauw
Understanding Migration Aversion Using Elicited Counterfactual Choice Probabilities
Residential mobility rates in the U.S. have fallen considerably over the past three decades. The cause of the long-term decline remains largely unexplained. In this paper we investigate the relative ...
(published in: Journal of Econometrics, 2022, 231 (1), 123-147)
J61, R23, D84
12270 Albrecht Glitz
Rune Majlund Vejlin
Learning through Coworker Referrals
In this paper, we study the role of coworker referrals for labor market outcomes. Using comprehensive Danish administrative data covering the period 1980 to 2005, we first document a strong tendency ...
(published in: Review of Economic Dynamics, 2021, 42, 37-71)
J31, J63, J64
12268 William G. Morrison
Robert J. Oxoby
Asset Integration, Risk Taking and Loss Aversion in the Laboratory
We report on a laboratory experiment testing for the presence of loss aversion, as separate from risk aversion, utilizing an asset integration protocol designed to ensure that a loss of cash provided ...
(published in: Canadian Journal of Economics, 2022, 55 (3), 1460 - 1479)
C91, D81
12267 Anastasia Danilov
Bernd Irlenbusch
Christine Harbring
Helping under a Combination of Team and Tournament Incentives
We study how help can be fostered by means of a team bonus in the presence of rank-order tournaments. In a simple model we combine elements of relative rewards and a team bonus and study their effect ...
(published in: in: Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization 2019, 162, 120-135)
M52, J33, J41, L23, C72, C91
12266 Bruce D. Meyer
Nikolas Mittag
Combining Administrative and Survey Data to Improve Income Measurement
We describe methods of combining administrative and survey data to improve the measurement of income. We begin by decomposing the total survey error in the mean of survey reports of dollars received ...
(published in: A. Y. Chun, M. Larson, J. Reiter and G. Durrant (eds.), Administrative Records for Survey Methodology, Wiley, 2021, 297 - 322)
C18, C81, C83, D31, I32
12265 Patrick Button
Population Aging, Age Discrimination, and Age Discrimination Protections at the 50th Anniversary of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act
This paper discusses population aging, increased participation of seniors in the labor force in the United States (and reasons for this), and how these trends are making the struggles of older ...
(published in: Czaja, S. J.; Sharit, J. and J. James (eds.), Current and Emerging Trends in Aging and Work, Springer: New York, 2020)
J71, J78, J14, K31, J16, J26
12264 Anders Frederiksen
Colleen Flaherty Manchester
Responding to Regulation: The Effects of Changes in Mandatory Retirement Laws on Firm-Provided Incentives
The Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1978 expanded employee age protections to age 70, making the widespread practice by U.S. firms of mandating retirement at age 65 illegal. Building on the ...
(published as 'Personnel Practices and Regulation: How Firm-Provided Incentives Respond to Changes in Mandatory Retirement Law' in: Journal of Labor Economics, 2021, 39 (4), 1011-1042 )
M51, M52
12263 Jeffrey R. Brown
Arie Kapteyn
Erzo F.P. Luttmer
Olivia S. Mitchell
Anya Samek
Behavioral Impediments to Valuing Annuities: Complexity and Choice Bracketing
This paper examines two behavioral factors that diminish people's ability to value a life-time income stream or annuity, drawing on a survey of about 4,000 adults in a U.S. nationally representative ...
(published in: Review of Economics and Statistics, 2021, 103 (3), 533–546.)
D14, D91, G11, H55
12262 Tony Fang
Derek Messacar
Voluntary Job Separations and Traditional versus Flexible Workplace Saving Plans: Evidence from Canada
This paper provides new insights into the longstanding empirical issue of whether the type of workplace saving plan (a "traditional" registered pension plan or RPP, a "flexible" group registered ...
(published in: Canadian Public Policy, 2019, 45 (2), 239-261.)
J26, J32, J63
12261 Marco Caliendo
Stefan Tübbicke
New Evidence on Long-Term Effects of Start-Up Subsidies: Matching Estimates and Their Robustness
The German start-up subsidy (SUS) program for the unemployed has recently undergone a major make-over, altering its institutional setup, adding an additional layer of selection and leading to ...
(published in: Empirical Economics, 2020, 59 (4), 1605-1631)
J68, H43, C14, C26, L26
12260 Brigitte Hochmuth
Britta Kohlbrecher
Christian Merkl
Hermann Gartner
Hartz IV and the Decline of German Unemployment: A Macroeconomic Evaluation
This paper proposes a new approach to evaluate the macroeconomic effects of the Hartz IV reform in Germany, which reduced the generosity of long-term unemployment benefits. We use a model with ...
(published in: Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control, 127, 2021, 104114)
E24, E00, E60
12257 Oliver Krebs
Michael P. Pflüger
On the Road (Again): Commuting and Local Employment Elasticities in Germany
This paper uses the quantitative spatial model with heterogeneous locations linked by costly goods trade, migration and commuting developed in Monte et al. (2018) to address the workings of local ...
(published in: Regional Science and Urban Economics 2023, 99, 103874)
F12, F14, R13, R23
12255 Michael Nesbitt
Robert J. Oxoby
Meagan Potier
An Empirical and Qualitative Assessment of Terrorism Sentencing Decisions in Canada since 2001: Shifting Away from the Fundamental Principle and Towards Cognitive Biases
In this paper, we take a comprehensive and multidisciplinary look at terrorism sentencing decisions over a 17-year period, between September 2001 when the ATA was first conceived of and September ...
(published as 'Terrorism Sentencing Decisions in Canada Since 2001: Shifting away from the Fundamental Principle and towards Cognitive Biases' in: UBC Law Review, 2019, 52 (2), Article 5)
K14, K15
12254 Artjoms Ivlevs
Roswitha M. King
To Europe or Not to Europe? Migration and Public Support for Joining the European Union in the Western Balkans
For decades, countries aspiring to join the European Union (EU) have been linked to it through migration. Yet little is known about how migration affects individual support for joining the EU in ...
(published in: International Migration Review, 2020, 54(2), 559–584)
F22, F24, J61, O52
12251 Varun Gauri
Julian C. Jamison
Nina Mazar
Owen Ozier
Motivating Bureaucrats through Social Recognition: External Validity — A Tale of Two States
Bureaucratic performance is a crucial determinant of economic growth, but little real-world evidence exists on how to improve it, especially in resource-constrained settings. We conducted a field ...
(published in: Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 2021, 163, 117-131)
C93, D73, D91, I18, L38, O35
12250 Luigino Bruni
Vittorio Pelligra
Tommaso G. Reggiani
Matteo Rizzolli
The Pied Piper: Prizes, Incentives, and Motivation Crowding-In
In mainstream business and economics, prizes such as the Presidential Medal of Freedom are understood as special types of incentives, with the peculiar features of being awarded in public, and of ...
(revised version published in: Journal of Business Ethics, 2020, 166(3), 643-658 )
B1, D03, J33
12249 Elisabeth Grewenig
Philipp Lergetporer
Katharina Werner
Ludger Woessmann
Do Party Positions Affect the Public's Policy Preferences?
The standard assumption of exogenous policy preferences implies that parties set their positions according to their voters' preferences. We investigate the reverse effect: Are the electorates' policy ...
(published in: Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 2020, 179, 523-543)
D72, D83, H52, J13, I28, P16
12248 Xiahai Wei
Tony Fang
Yang Jiao
Jiahui Li
Language Premium Myth or Fact: Evidence from Migrant Workers of Guangdong, China
Using unique matched employer-employee data from China, we discover that migrant workers in the manufacturing industry who are proficient in the local dialect earn lower wages than those who are not. ...
(published in: Journal of Labor Research, 2019, 40, 356–386.)
J32, J61, R23
12246 Ying Ge
Tony Fang
Yeheng Jiang
Access to Imported Intermediates and Intra-Firm Wage Inequality
We use Chinese firm-level data from the World Bank Investment Climate Survey to examine the link between importing intermediates and intra-firm wage inequality. Our results show that intermediate ...
(published in: World Economy, 2019, 42 (8), 2364-2384.)
F16, F63, F66
12244 Giam Pietro Cipriani
Tamara Fioroni
Endogenous Demographic Change, Retirement and Social Security
In this paper, we analyse the effects of demographic change on a PAYG pension system, financed with a defined contribution scheme. In particular we examine the relationship between retirement, ...
(published in: Macroeconomic Dynamics, 2021, 25 (3), 609-631)
J13, H2, H8, H55
12243 Michael Johannes Böhm
Christian Siegel
Make Yourselves Scarce: The Effect of Demographic Change on the Relative Wages and Employment Rates of Experienced Workers
We argue that rising supply of experience not only reduces experienced workers' relative wages but also their relative labor market participation. From a theoretical model we derive predictions which ...
(published in: International Economic Review, 2021, 62 (4), 1537 - 1568)
J11, J21, J31
12242 Frank M. Fossen
Alina Sorgner
New Digital Technologies and Heterogeneous Employment and Wage Dynamics in the United States: Evidence from Individual-Level Data
We investigate heterogeneous effects of new digital technologies on the individual-level employment- and wage dynamics in the U.S. labor market in the period from 2011-2018. We employ three measures ...
(revised version published in: Technological Forecasting and Social Change, 2022, 175, 121381)
J22, J23, O33
12241 Emma Gorman
Colm P. Harmon
Silvia Mendolia
Anita Staneva
Ian Walker
The Causal Effects of Adolescent School Bullying Victimisation on Later Life Outcomes
We use rich data on a cohort of English adolescents to analyse the long-term effects of experiencing bullying victimisation in junior high school. The data contain self-reports of five types of ...
(published as 'Adolescent School Bullying Victimization and Later Life Outcomes' in: Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics, 2021, 83 (4), 1048 - 1076)
I21, I24, I26, J24
12240 Martin Foureaux Koppensteiner
Livia Menezes
Violence and Human Capital Investments
In this paper, we investigate the effect of student exposure to homicides on their educational performance and human capital investments. Combining a number of large georeferenced administrative ...
(published in: Journal of Labor Economics, 2021, 39 (3), 787 - 823.)
I25, K42, O12
12239 Jeffrey T. Denning
Todd R. Jones
Maxed Out? The Effect of Larger Student Loan Limits on Borrowing and Education Outcomes
Despite large and growing student loan balances, there is relatively little evidence on the effects of access to student loans on borrowing and educational outcomes. We examine the effect of access ...
(published in: Journal of Human Resources, 2021, 56 (4), 1113-1140)
I22, D14
12238 Harry Anthony Patrinos
George Psacharopoulos
Aysit Tansel
Returns to Investment in Education: The Case of Turkey
This paper estimates private and social returns to investment in education in Turkey, using the 2017 Household Labor Force Survey and alternative methodologies. The analysis uses the 1997 education ...
(substantially revised version published as 'Private and Social Returns to Investment in Education: The Case of Turkey with Alternative Methods' in: Applied Economics, 2021, 53 (14), 1638-1658.)
I21, I26, J24
12237 José António Cabral Vieira
Carolina Constância
João Teixeira
Education and Risk Compensation in Wages: A Quantile Regression Approach
This paper examines the effect of wage variation on individual wages. The results reveal that wage variation by educational classifications positively affects wages, while the skewness has a negative ...
(published in: Applied Economics Letters, 2020, 27 (3), 194 - 198.)
J31, J33
12236 Martin Biewen
Jakob Schwerter
Does More Math in High School Increase the Share of Female STEM Workers? Evidence from a Curriculum Reform
This paper studies the consequences of a curriculum reform of the last two years of high school in one of the German federal states on the share of male and female students who complete degrees in ...
(published in: Applied Economics, 2021, 54 (16), 1889–1911)
I23, J16, J24
12235 Semih Tumen
Refugees and 'Native Flight' from Public to Private Schools
Native children switch from public to private primary schools in response to increased refugee concentration in the Turkish public education system. 10 percentage-point increase in ...
(published in: Economics Letters, 2019, 181, 154-159)
I21, I24, H52
12234 Uwe Jirjahn
Cornelia Struewing
Out-Of-Partnership Births in East and West Germany
Using data from the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP), we show that single women in East Germany are significantly more likely to give birth to a child than single women in West Germany. This ...
(revised version by Uwe Jirjahn and Cornelia Chadi published in: Review of Economics of the Household, 2020, 18 (3), 853-881)
J12, J13, P20
12233 Anuj Gangopadhyaya
Fredric Blavin
Jason Gates
Breno Braga
Credit Where It's Due: Investigating Pathways from EITC Expansion to Maternal Mental Health
While Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) expansions are typically associated with improvements in maternal mental health, little is known about the mechanisms through which the program affects this ...
(published in: Health Economics 29, no. 9, 2020)
H24, I12, I14
12232 D. Mark Anderson
Daniel I. Rees
Tianyi Wang
The Phenomenon of Summer Diarrhea and Its Waning, 1910-1930
During the first two decades of the 20th century, diarrheal deaths among American infants and children surged every summer. Although we still do not know what pathogen (or pathogens) caused this ...
(published in: Explorations in Economic History, 2020, 78, 101341.)
I10, I18, N3, Q54
12231 Armando N. Meier
Reto Odermatt
Alois Stutzer
Tobacco Sales Prohibition and Teen Smoking
We evaluate one of the most prevalent prohibitory policies: banning the sales of tobacco to teens. We exploit the staggered introduction of sales bans across Switzerland and the European Union from ...
(revised version published in: Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 2021, 188, 998-1014)
D12, I12, I18, K42
12229 Horst Entorf
Martin Lange
Refugees Welcome? Understanding the Regional Heterogeneity of Anti-Foreigner Hate Crimes in Germany
In this article, we examine anti-foreigner hate crime in the wake of the large influx of asylum seekers to Germany in 2014 and 2015. By exploiting the quasi-experimental assignment of asylum seekers ...
(published in: Regional Science and Urban Economics, 2023, 101, 103913)
J15, R23, K42
12226 Giorgio Brunello
Elisabetta Lodigiani
Lorenzo Rocco
Does Low Skilled Immigration Increase Profits? Evidence from Italian Local Labour Markets
We estimate the (causal) effects of low skill immigration on the performance of Italian manufacturing firms. We find that an increase of the local supply of low skilled immigrants by one thousand ...
(published in: Regional Science and Urban Economics, 2020, 85, 103582)
J61
12225 Patrick Button
Do Tax Incentives Affect Business Location and Economic Development? Evidence from State Film Incentives
I estimate the impacts of recently-popular U.S. state film incentives on filming location, film industry employment, wages, and establishments, and spillover impacts on related industries. I compile ...
(published in: Regional Science and Urban Economics, 2019, 77, 315-339. )
H25, H71, R38, L82, Z11
12223 Benjamin Davies
David C. Maré
Relatedness, Complexity and Local Growth
We derive a measure of the relatedness between economic activities based on weighted correlations of local employment shares, and use this measure to estimate city and activity complexity. Our ...
(published in: Regional Studies, 2021, 55 (3), 479-494)
R11, R12
12222 Michal Myck
Mateusz Najsztub
Implications of the Polish 1999 Administrative Reform for Regional Socio-Economic Development
On 1 January 1999, four major reforms took effect in Poland in the areas of health, education, pensions and local administration. After 20 years, only in the last case does the original structural ...
(published in: Economics of Transition and Institutional Change, 2020, 28 (4), 559–579)
P30, R11, R50
12221 Marek Góra
Edward Palmer
NDC: The Generic Old-Age Pension Scheme
This chapter defines a universal public pension scheme (UPPS) as a government-mandated lifecycle longevity insurance scheme that transfers individual consumption from the working years to the ...
(published in: Robert Holzmann, Edward Palmer, Robert Palacios, and Stefano Sacchi (eds.), Progress and Challenges of Nonfinancial Defined Pension, Vol. 1, International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank, Washington DC, 2020, 167 - 188)
D6, D62, D81, E62, G22, G28, H23, H55, J14, J18
12218 Wim Naudé
The Race against the Robots and the Fallacy of the Giant Cheesecake: Immediate and Imagined Impacts of Artificial Intelligence
After a number of AI-winters, AI is back with a boom. There are concerns that it will disrupt society. The immediate concern is whether labor can win a 'race against the robots' and the longer-term ...
(published as 'Artificial intelligence: neither Utopian nor apocalyptic impacts soon' in: Economics of Innovation and New Technology, 2021, 30 (1), 1-23.)
O47, O33, J24, E21, E25
12217 Elisabeth Grewenig
Katharina Werner
Ludger Woessmann
Philipp Lergetporer
Incentives, Search Engines, and the Elicitation of Subjective Beliefs: Evidence from Representative Online Survey Experiments
A large literature studies subjective beliefs about economic facts using unincentivized survey questions. We devise randomized experiments in a representative online survey to investigate whether ...
(published in: Journal of Econometrics, 2022, 231 (1), 304-326)
D83, C83, C90
12216 John T. Addison
Paulino Teixeira
Trust and Workplace Performance
This study explores the relationship between trust and establishment performance. The outcome indicators are management's assessment of the economic or financial situation of the workplace and its ...
(revised version published in: British Journal of Industrial Relations, 2020, 58 (4), 874-903.)
J50
12214 Iga Magda
Jan Gromadzki
Simone Moriconi
Firms and Wage Inequality in Central and Eastern Europe
Recent studies show that firms are playing an increasingly important role in shaping wage inequality in advanced economies. We contribute to this literature by analysing wage inequality patterns and ...
(published in: Journal of Comparative Economics, 2021, 49 (2), 499 - 552 )
D22, J31, J40
12213 Max Nathan
Anna Rosso
Innovative Events
We take a fresh look at firms' innovation-productivity linkages, using novel data capturing new aspects of innovative activity. We combine UK administrative microdata, media and website content to ...
(published in: Research Policy, 2022, 51 (1), 104373)
C55, L86, O81
12212 Quentin Lippmann
Alexandre Georgieff
Claudia Senik
Undoing Gender with Institutions: Lessons from the German Division and Reunification
Using the 41-year division of Germany as a natural experiment, we show that the GDR's gender-equal institutions created a culture that has undone the male breadwinner norm and its consequences. Since ...
(published in: Economic Journal, 2020, 130 (629), 1445 - 1470)
D13, I31, J16, P51, Z1
12211 Danula K. Gamage
Almudena Sevilla
Gender Equality and Positive Action: Evidence from UK Universities
This paper examines the impact of the Athena Scientific Women's Academic Network (SWAN) Charter on the wages and employment trajectories of female faculty. The Athena SWAN Charter is a gender ...
(published in: AEA Papers and Proceedings, 2019, 109, 105–109)
I23, J16, J31, J44
12209 Michele Di Maio
Roberto Nistico
The Effect of Parental Job Loss on Child School Dropout: Evidence from the Occupied Palestinian Territories
We study the effect of parental job loss on child school dropout in developing countries. We focus on Palestinian households living in the Occupied Palestinian Territories and having the household ...
(published in: Journal of Development Economics, 2019, 141, 102375)
H56, I20, J63
12205 Atila Abdulkadiroglu
Joshua Angrist
Yusuke Narita
Parag A. Pathak
Breaking Ties: Regression Discontinuity Design Meets Market Design
Centralized school assignment algorithms must distinguish between applicants with the same preferences and priorities. This is done with randomly assigned lottery numbers, nonlottery tie-breakers ...
(published in: Econometrica, 2022, 90 (1), 117–151)
I21, C78, C13, C18, C21, C26
12204 Paul N. Thompson
Effects of Four-Day School Weeks on Student Achievement: Evidence from Oregon
Due to increased financial pressures following the Great Recession, a growing number of school districts have switched from a traditional five-day school week to a four-day week schedule. While these ...
(published as 'Is four less than five? Effects of four-day school weeks on student achievement in Oregon' in: Journal of Public Economics, 2021, 193, 104308)
I21
12203 Adam M. Lavecchia
Philip Oreopoulos
Robert S. Brown
Long-Run Effects from Comprehensive Student Support: Evidence from Pathways to Education
We estimate long-run impacts to the Pathways to Education program, a comprehensive set of coaching, tutoring, group activities and financial incentives offered to disadvantaged students beginning in ...
(published in: American Economic Review: Insights, 2020, 2 (2), 209–224)
I2, I26, I28, J18
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