IZA - All published DPs

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No. Author(s) Title JEL Class.
11966 Anna Sokolova
Todd A. Sorensen
Monopsony in Labor Markets: A Meta-Analysis
When jobs offered by different employers are not perfect substitutes in the minds of workers, employers gain wage-setting power; the extent of this power can be captured by the elasticity of labor ...
(published in: ILR Review, 2021, 72 (1), 27-55 )
J42, C83
11965 Michael White
Alex Bryson
HPWS in the Public Sector: Are There Mutual Gains?
Few studies investigate the links between high-performance work systems (HPWS) on public sector organizational performance and worker job attitudes. We fill this gap with analyses of these links ...
(published in: F. Origio and S. Tomelleri (eds.), Rethinking entrepreneurial human capital, Springer, 2018, 43-62)
J28, L23, M50, M54
11964 David Card
Thomas Lemieux
W. Craig Riddell
Unions and Wage Inequality: The Roles of Gender, Skill and Public Sector Employment
We examine the changing relationship between unionization and wage inequality in Canada and the United States. Our study is motivated by profound recent changes in the composition of the unionized ...
(published in: Canadian Journal of Economics, 2020, 53 (1), 140 - 173)
J31, J45, J51
11963 Gerard J. van den Berg
Christine Dauth
Pia Homrighausen
Gesine Stephan
Informing Employees in Small and Medium Sized Firms about Training: Results of a Randomized Field Experiment
We analyze a German labor market program that subsidizes skill-upgrading occupational training for workers employed in small and medium sized enterprises. This WeGebAU program reimburses training ...
(revised version published in: Economic Inquiry, 2023, 61, 162-178.)
J24, J65
11959 Omoniyi Alimi
David C. Maré
Jacques Poot
International Migration and the Distribution of Income in New Zealand Metropolitan and Non-Metropolitan Areas
Since the 1980s, income inequality in New Zealand has been a growing concern - particularly in metropolitan areas. At the same time, the encouragement of permanent and temporary immigration has led ...
(published in: New Zealand Economic Papers, 2022, 56 (3), 272-295)
D63, F22, J15, R23
11958 Carina Neisser
The Elasticity of Taxable Income: A Meta-Regression Analysis
The elasticities of taxable and broad income are key parameters in tax policy analysis. To examine the large variation in estimates found in the literature, I conduct a comprehensive meta-regression ...
(published in: Economic Journal, 2021, 131 (640), 3365- 3391)
C81, H24, H26
11957 Abel Brodeur
Joanne Haddad
Institutions, Attitudes and LGBT: Evidence from the Gold Rush
This paper analyzes the determinants behind the spatial distribution of the LGBT population in the U.S. We relate the size of the present-day LGBT population to the discovery of gold mines during the ...
(published in: Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 2021, 187, 92-110)
O13, O18, J10, R23
11956 Giuseppe Attanasi
Claire Rimbaud
Marie Claire Villeval
Embezzlement and Guilt Aversion
Psychological game theory can contribute to renew the analysis of unethical behavior by providing insights on the nature of the moral costs of dishonesty. We investigate the moral costs of ...
(revised version published in: Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 167, 409-429)
C91
11955 Marco Casari
Andrea Ichino
Moti Michaeli
Maria De Paola
Ginevra Marandola
Vincenzo Scoppa
Civicness Drain
Migration may cause not only a brain drain but also a civicness drain, leading to an uncivicness trap. We study this possibility using college choices of southern-Italian students classified as Civic ...
(published in: Economic Journal, 2023, 133, 649, 323–354.)
H, J6
11954 Murat Iyigun
Jared Rubin
Avner Seror
A Theory of Conservative Revivals
Why do some societies fail to adopt more efficient political and economic institutions in response to changing economic conditions? And why do such conditions sometimes generate conservative ...
(published as 'A Theory of Cultural Revivals' in: European Economic Review, 2021, 135, 103-134.)
D02, N40, N70, O33, O38, O43, Z10
11953 Christian Dustmann
Bernd Fitzenberger
Markus Zimmermann
Housing Expenditures and Income Inequality
In this paper, we show that, in terms of real disposable income, changes in housing expenditures dramatically exacerbate the trend of income inequality that has risen sharply in Germany since the ...
(published in: Economic Journal, 2022, 132 (645), 1709 - 1736)
D31, R21
11952 Thierry Kamionka
Guy Lacroix
Homeownership, Labour Market Transitions and Earnings
The paper investigates the links between homeownership, employment and earnings for which no consensus exists in the literature. Our analysis is cast within a dynamic setting and the endogeneity of ...
(published online in: Applied Economics, 28 February 2024)
J21, J64, J31, C33, C35
11951 Rui Du
Junfu Zhang
Walled Cities and Urban Density in China
Throughout the imperial era, defensive walls surrounded Chinese cities. Although most city walls have vanished, the cities have survived. We analyze a sample of nearly 300 prefectural-level cities in ...
(published in: Papers in Regional Science, 2019, 98, 1517-1539.)
R11, R12, N95
11950 Winfried Koeniger
Marc-Antoine Ramelet
Home Ownership and Monetary Policy Transmission
We present empirical evidence on the heterogeneity in monetary policy transmission across countries with different home ownership rates. We use household-level data together with shocks to the policy ...
(revised version published as 'On the Transmission of Monetary Policy to the Housing Market' in: European Economic Review, 2022, 145, 104107 (with Benedikt Lennartz and Marc-Antoine Ramelet))
E21, E52, R21
11949 Lena Detlefsen
Andreas Friedl
Katharina Lima de Miranda
Ulrich Schmidt
Matthias Sutter
Are Economic Preferences Shaped by the Family Context? The Impact of Birth Order and Siblings' Sex Composition on Economic Preferences
The formation of economic preferences in childhood and adolescence has long-term consequences for life-time outcomes. We study in an experiment with 525 teenagers how both birth order and siblings’ ...
(published in: Journal of Risk and Uncertainty, 2024, 69, 1-31)
C93, D10, D90, J12
11948 Carly Will Sloan
George S Naufal
Heather Caspers
The Effect of Risk Assessment Scores on Judicial Behavior and Defendant Outcomes
The use of risk assessment scores as a means of decreasing pretrial detention for low-risk, primarily poor defendants is increasing rapidly across the United States. Despite this, there is little ...
(published online in: Journal of Human Resources, 08 May 2023)
D81, K14, K42, L88
11947 Matthias Sutter
Claudia Zoller
Daniela Glätzle-Rützler
Economic Behavior of Children and Adolescents - A First Survey of Experimental Economics Results
About 15 years ago, economic experiments with children and adolescents were considered as an extravagant niche of economic research. Since then, this type of research has exploded in scope and ...
(published in: European Economic Review, 2019, 111, 98-121)
C91, D01
11946 John Ifcher
Homa Zarghamee
Behavioral Economic Phenomena in Decision-Making for Others
We examine whether biases identified in the behavioral-economics literature apply in decision-making for others (DMfO). We conduct a laboratory experiment in which subjects make decision on behalf of ...
(published in: Journal of Economic Psychology, 2020, 77, 102180)
D90
11945 Patrick Balles
Ulrich Matter
Alois Stutzer
Special Interest Groups versus Voters and the Political Economics of Attention
Asymmetric information between voters and legislative representatives poses a major challenge to the functioning of representative democracy. We examine whether representatives are more likely to ...
(published in: Economic Journal, 2024, 134 (662), 2290 - 2320)
D72, L82, L86
11944 Michal Bauer
Jana Cahlíková
Dagmara Celik Katreniak
Julie Chytilová
Lubomir Cingl
Tomáš Želinský
Anti-Social Behavior in Groups
This paper provides strong evidence supporting the long-standing speculation that decision-making in groups has a dark side, by magnifying the prevalence of anti-social behavior towards outsiders. A ...
(revised version published as 'Nastiness in Groups' in: Journal of the European Economic Association, 2024, 22 (5), 2075–2107)
C92, C93, D01, D64, D74, D91
11943 Daniel Dench
Michael Grossman
Health and the Wage Rate: Cause, Effect, Both, or Neither? New Evidence on an Old Question
We investigate two-way causality between health and the hourly wage by employing insights from the human capital and compensating wage differential models, a panel formed from the National ...
(published in: Health and Labor Markets, Research in Labor Economics, 2019, 27, 1-47)
I10, J24
11942 Jessica Goldberg
Mario Macis
Pradeep Chintagunta
Leveraging Patients' Social Networks to Overcome Tuberculosis Underdetection: A Field Experiment in India
Peer referrals are a common strategy for addressing asymmetric information in contexts such as the labor market. They could be especially valuable for increasing testing and treatment of infectious ...
(published as 'Incentivized Peer Referrals for Tuberculosis Screening: Evidence from India' in: American Economic Review: Applied Economics, 2023, 15 (1), 259 - 291)
O1, I1
11941 Wim Naudé
Brilliant Technologies and Brave Entrepreneurs: A New Narrative for African Manufacturing
In this paper I argue that the manufacturing sector still has an important role to play in Africa's development. Despite failing to industrialize in the past, there may be a new window of ...
(published in: Journal of International Affairs, 2019, 72 (1), 143 - 158)
O33, O14, O55, L52, L26
11940 David E. Bloom
David Canning
Rainer Kotschy
Klaus Prettner
Johannes Schünemann
Health and Economic Growth: Reconciling the Micro and Macro Evidence
Micro-based and macro-based approaches have been used to assess the effects of health on economic growth. Micro-based approaches aggregate the return on individual health from Mincerian wage ...
(published in: World Development, 2024, 178, 106575)
I15, I25, J11, O11, O15
11938 Gigi Foster
Leslie S. Stratton
Does Female Breadwinning Make Partnerships Less Healthy or Less Stable?
Economists increasingly accept that social norms have powerful effects on human behavior and outcomes. In recent history, one norm widely adhered to in most developed nations has been for men to be ...
(published in: Journal of Population Economics, 2021, 34 (1), 63-96.)
J12, J16, I31, Z13
11934 Tarun Jain
Abhiroop Mukhopadhyay
Nishith Prakash
Raghav Rakesh
Labor Market Effects of High School Science Majors in a High STEM Economy
This paper explores the association between studying science at the higher secondary stage and labor market earnings using nationally representative data on high school subject choices and adult ...
(published as 'Science Education and Labor Market Outcomes in a Developing Economy' in: Economic Inquiry, 2022, 60 (2), 741-763)
I23, I26, J24
11933 Brecht Neyt
Sarah Vandenbulcke
Stijn Baert
Education Level and Mating Success: Undercover on Tinder
In this study, we examine the impact of an individual’s education level on her/his mating success by means of a field experiment on the mobile dating app Tinder, using a sample of 3,600 profile ...
(revised version published as 'Are Men Intimidated by Highly Educated Women? Undercover on Tinder' in: Economics of Education Review, 2019, 73, 101914 )
C93, I26, J12
11931 Regina T. Riphahn
Rebecca Schrader
Institutional Reforms and an Incredible Rise in Old Age Employment
We investigate whether a cut in unemployment benefit payout periods affected older workers' labor market transitions. We apply rich administrative data and exploit a difference-in-differences ...
(published as 'Institutional Reforms of 2006 and the Dramatic Rise in Old-Age Employment in Germany' in: ILR Review, 2020, 73 (5), 1185-1225.)
J14, J26
11930 Carl Lin
Yan Sun
Chunbing Xing
Son Preference and Human Capital Investment among China's Rural-Urban Migrant Households
We use several datasets to study whether son preference prevails in the human capital investment among Chinese rural-urban migrant households. We find that son preference exists among the rural ...
(published in: Journal of Development Studies, 2021, 57 (12), 2077-2094)
J13, J17, J61, J24
11929 Michael Grimm
Renate Hartwig
Unblurring the Market for Vision Correction: A Willingness to Pay Experiment in Rural Burkina Faso
We assess the willingness to pay (WTP) for eyeglasses in an adult population in rural Burkina Faso using a variant of the Becker-DeGroot-Marschak (BDM) method. We combine the BDM approach with video ...
(published as 'All Eyes on the Price: An Assessment of the Willingness-to-Pay for Eyeglasses in Rural Burkina Faso' in: Health Economics, 2022, 31 (7), 1347 - 1367)
D11, D12, D83, I15
11928 Olukorede Abiona
Martin Foureaux Koppensteiner
Financial Inclusion, Shocks and Poverty: Evidence from the Expansion of Mobile Money in Tanzania
We estimate the effect of mobile money adoption on consumption smoothing, poverty and human capital investments in Tanzania. We exploit the rapid expansion of the mobile money agent network between ...
(published in: Journal of Human Resources, 2020,18, 435-464)
G23, H31, I31, I32
11927 Robert Dur
Max van Lent
Socially Useless Jobs
It has been claimed that many workers in modern economies think that their job is socially useless, i.e. that it makes no or a negative contribution to society. However, the evidence so far is mainly ...
(published in: Industrial Relations, 2019, 58 (1), 3-16)
J2, J3, J4, J8, M5
11926 Hannes Schwandt
Till von Wachter
Unlucky Cohorts: Estimating the Long-term Effects of Entering the Labor Market in a Recession in Large Cross-sectional Data Sets
This paper studies the differential persistent effects of initial economic conditions for labor market entrants in the United States from 1976 to 2015 by education, gender, and race using labor force ...
(published in: Journal of Labor Economics, 2019, 37 (S1), S161–S198)
J2, J3, J6
11925 Nicole Maestas
Kathleen Mullen
David Powell
Till von Wachter
Jeffrey Wenger
The Value of Working Conditions in the United States and Implications for the Structure of Wages
This paper documents variation in working conditions among workers in the United States, presents new estimates of how workers value these conditions, and assesses the impact of working conditions on ...
(published in: American Economic Review, 2023, 113 (7), 2007 - 2047)
J13
11923 Francois Gerard
Lorenzo Lagos
Edson Severnini
David Card
Assortative Matching or Exclusionary Hiring? The Impact of Firm Policies on Racial Wage Differences in Brazil
A growing body of research shows that firms' employment and wage-setting policies contribute to wage inequality and pay disparities between groups. We measure the effects of these policies on racial ...
(published in: American Economic Review, 2021, 111 (10), 3418 -3457)
E24, J15, J31
11922 Redzo Mujcic
Andrew J. Oswald
Is Envy Harmful to a Society's Psychological Health and Wellbeing? A Longitudinal Study of 18,000 Adults
Nearly 100 years ago, the philosopher and mathematician Bertrand Russell warned of the social dangers of widespread envy. One view of modern society is that it is systematically developing a set of ...
(published in: Social Science & Medicine, 2018, 198, 103 - 111)
I18, I31
11921 Xi Chen
Smog, Cognition and Real-World Decision Making
Cognitive functioning is critical as in our daily life a host of real-world complex decisions in high-stakes markets have to be made. The decision-making process can be vulnerable to environmental ...
(published in: International Journal of Health Policy and Management, 2019, 8 (2), 76 - 80)
I24, Q53, Q51, G11, G41, J24
11920 David B. Huffman
Michael L. Bognanno
High-Powered Performance Pay and Crowding out of Non-Monetary Motives
A previous literature cautions that paying workers for performance might crowd out non-monetary motives to work hard. Empirical evidence from the field, however, has been based on between-subjects ...
(published in: Management Science, 2018, 64 (10), 4669-4680.)
D03, J22, J33
11919 Frederik Graff
Christian Grund
Christine Harbring
Competing on the Holodeck: The Effect of Virtual Peers and Heterogeneity in Dynamic Tournaments
We propose experiments in virtual reality (VR) as a new approach to examining behavior in an economic context, e.g., heterogeneity in dynamic tournaments. We simulate a realistic working situation in ...
(published in: Journal of Behavioral & Experimental Economics 2021, 90, 101596)
C91, D9, J33, M52
11918 Carlos Alós-Ferrer
Ernst Fehr
Nick Netzer
Time Will Tell: Recovering Preferences When Choices Are Noisy
The ability to uncover preferences from choices is fundamental for both positive economics and welfare analysis. Overwhelming evidence shows that choice is stochastic, which has given rise to random ...
(published in: Journal of Political Economy, 2021, 129 (6), 1828–1877)
D11, D81, D83, D87
11914 Daniel J. Henderson
Anne-Charlotte Souto
An Introduction to Nonparametric Regression for Labor Economists
In this article we overview nonparametric (spline and kernel) regression methods and illustrate how they may be used in labor economic applications. We focus our attention on issues commonly found in ...
(published in: Journal of Labor Research, 2018, 39, 355-382 )
C14, C26, I24, J24, J31
11913 Mette Gřrtz
Eva Rye Johansen
Marianne Simonsen
Academic Achievement and the Gender Composition of Preschool Staff
This paper uses register based data covering the entire population of Danish children enrolled in preschool in 2006-2007 to investigate whether the gender composition of preschool staff members ...
(published in: Labour Economics, 2018, 55, 241 - 258)
J13
11912 Seth Gershenson
Jessica Rae McBean
Long Tran
Quantile Regression Estimates of the Effect of Student Absences on Academic Achievement
Credible evidence from a variety of contexts suggests that student absences harm academic achievement. However, extant studies focus entirely on the average effects of student absences, and how those ...
(published in: M. Gottfried; E. Hutt (eds.): Addressing Absenteeism, Cambridge, MA, 2019, 67-82)
I2
11911 Long Tran
Seth Gershenson
Experimental Estimates of the Student Attendance Production Function
Student attendance is both a critical input and intermediate output of the education production function. However, the malleable classroom-level determinants of student attendance are poorly ...
(published in: Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 2021, 43 (2), 183-199.)
I2
11909 Jason B. Cook
Race-Blind Admissions, School Segregation, and Student Outcomes: Evidence from Race-Blind Magnet School Lotteries
We know surprisingly little about the influence of race-blind school admissions on student outcomes. This paper studies a unique reform where a large, urban school district was federally mandated to ...
(published as 'Race-blind admissions, school segregation, and student outcomes' in: Journal of Public Economics, 2024, 239, 105237)
I24, I26, I28, J15, J48
11908 Tarun Jain
Abhiroop Mukhopadhyay
Nishith Prakash
Raghav Rakesh
Labor Market Effects of High School Science Majors in a High STEM Economy
This paper explores the association between studying science at the higher secondary stage and labor market earnings using nationally representative data on high school subject choices and adult ...
(updated version published as 'Science education and labor market outcomes in a developing economy' in: Economic Inquiry, 2022, 60 (2), 741 - 763)
I23, I26, J24
11907 Ainoa Aparicio Fenoll
Zoë Kuehn
Immigrants Move Where Their Skills Are Scarce: Evidence from English Proficiency
This paper studies whether individuals tend to migrate to countries where their skills are scarce or abundant. Focusing on English language skills, we test whether immigrants who are proficient in ...
(published in: Labour Economics, 2019, 61, 101748)
F22, I20, J24, J61
11906 Dries Lens
Ive Marx
Suncica Vujic
Does Migration Motive Matter for Migrants' Employment Outcomes? The Case of Belgium
Despite being one of the most prolific spenders on active labour market policies, and investing heavily in civic integration programmes, family policies and career and diversity plans, the ...
(published in: Christiane Timmerman, Noel Clycq, François Levrau, Lore Van Praag, and Dirk Vanheule (eds.), Migration and Integration in Flanders: Multidisciplinary PerspectivesLeuven University Press, 2018, 245–272)
F22, J15, J61
11905 Dries Lens
Ive Marx
Suncica Vujic
Is Quick Formal Access to the Labor Market Enough? Refugees' Labor Market Integration in Belgium
This paper examines the labor market trajectories of refugees who arrived in Belgium between 2003 and 2009. Belgium has offered relatively easy formal labor market access to refugees but they face ...
(revised version published as 'Double Jeopardy: How Refugees Fare in One European Labor Market' in: IZA Journal of Development and Migration, 2019, 10 (1))
F22, J15, J61, J68
11904 Maria F. Hoen
Simen Markussen
Knut Rřed
Immigration and Social Mobility
Using Norwegian administrative data, we examine how exposure to immigration over the past decades has affected natives' relative prime age labor market outcomes by social class background. Social ...
(published as 'Immigration and economic mobility' in: Journal of Population Economics, 2022, 35, 1589 -1630 )
J62, J15, J24
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