IZA - All published DPs

Logo
No. Author(s) Title JEL Class.
11023 Brecht Neyt
Eddy Omey
Dieter Verhaest
Stijn Baert
Does Student Work Really Affect Educational Outcomes? A Review of the Literature
We review the theories put forward, methodological approaches used, and empirical conclusions found in the multidisciplinary literature on the relationship between student employment and educational ...
(revised version published in: Journal of Economic Surveys, 2019, 33 (3), 896 - 921)
I21, J22, J24
11022 Ernest Boffy-Ramirez
Soojae Moon
The Role of China's Household Registration System in the Urban-Rural Income Differential
Together with the rapid growth of the Chinese economy, there has been a growing divide in the earnings of urban and rural residents. In this paper we focus on China's household registration system, ...
(published in: China Economic Journal, 2018, 11 (2), 108-125)
J30, J80, O15, R23
11021 Gregory Clark
Andrew Leigh
Mike Pottenger
Immobile Australia: Surnames Show Strong Status Persistence, 1870 - 2017
The paper estimates long run social mobility in Australia 1870 - 2017 tracking the status of rare surnames. The status information includes occupations from electoral rolls 1903-1980, and records of ...
(published as 'Frontiers of mobility: Was Australia 1870 - 2017 a more socially mobile society than England?' in: Explorations in Economic History, 2020, 76 (C), 101327 )
J62
11020 Chelsea Murray
Robert Clark
Silvia Mendolia
Peter Siminski
Direct Measures of Intergenerational Income Mobility for Australia
We present the first Australian estimates of intergenerational mobility that draw on direct observations of income from two generations. Using panel data for three birth cohorts of young adults from ...
(published in: Economic Record, 2018, 94 (307), 445-68)
J62
11019 Laurence Jacquet
Etienne Lehmann
Optimal Income Taxation with Composition Effects
We study the optimal nonlinear income tax problem with multidimensional individual characteristics on which taxes cannot be conditioned. We obtain an optimal tax formula that generalizes the standard ...
(revised version published in: Journal of the European Economic Association, 2021, 19 (2), 1299-1341)
H21
11016 Rita K. Almeida
Ana Margarida Fernandes
Mariana Viollaz
Does the Adoption of Complex Software Impact Employment Composition and the Skill Content of Occupations? Evidence from Chilean Firms
A major concern with the rapid spread of technology is that it replaces some jobs, displacing workers. However, technology may raise firm productivity, generating more jobs. The paper contributes to ...
(published in: Journal of Development Studies, 2020, 56 (1), 169-185)
J23, J24, J31, O33
11014 Shaimaa Yassin
François Langot
Informality, Public Employment and Employment Protection in Developing Countries
This paper proposes an equilibrium matching model for developing countries' labor markets where the interaction between public, formal private and informal private sectors are taken into account. ...
(publisehd in: Journal of Comparative Economics, 2018, 46 (1), 326-348)
E24, E26, J60, J64, O17
11011 Andrea Bassanini
Federico Cingano
Before It Gets Better: The Short-Term Employment Costs of Regulatory Reforms
We exploit long time series of industry-level data in a group of OECD countries to analyze the short-term labor market effects of reforms lowering barriers to entry and dismissal costs. Our estimates ...
(published in: Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 2019, 72 (1), 127-157)
J23, L51, L11
11009 Gianni Betti
Lucia Mangiavacchi
Luca Piccoli
Individual Poverty Measurement Using a Fuzzy Intrahousehold Approach
This work studies the impact of accounting for intrahousehold inequality in the distribution of resources for the measurement of poverty. For the estimation of intrahousehold distribution of ...
(published as 'Women and poverty: insights from individual consumption in Albania' in: Review of Economics of the Household, 2020, 18, 69 - 91)
I32, J16, D13
11007 Jeroen Horemans
Ive Marx
Poverty and Material Deprivation among the Self-Employed in Europe: An Exploration of a Relatively Uncharted Landscape
In work-poverty has become a pressing social issue in Europe. The self-employed remain relatively uncharted terrain in this context. With about 15 percent of European workers in self-employment this ...
(published in: W. Conen and E. Reuter (eds.), Research Handbook on Self-Employment and Public Policy, 2024, 80–98 )
I32, I38, J21, J22, L26
11006 Eirini Andriopoulou
Alexandros Karakitsios
Panos Tsakloglou
Inequality and Poverty in Greece: Changes in Times of Crisis
The Greek crisis was the deepest and longest ever recorded in an OECD country in the postwar period. Output declined by over a quarter and disposable income by more than 40%, while the unemployment ...
(published in: D. Katsikas, D. A. Sotiropoulos, M. Zafiropoulou (eds.), Socioeconomic Fragmentation and Exclusion in Greece under the Crisis, 2018 )
D31, I31, I32
11005 Miles Corak
'Inequality Is the Root of Social Evil,' or Maybe Not? Two Stories about Inequality and Public Policy
Income inequality is on the rise, and everyone, from President Obama and Pope Francis to Prince Charles and Standard & Poor's, is talking about it. But these conversations about what are arguably the ...
(published in: Canadian Public Policy, 2016, 42 (4), 367-414)
D31, I32, J62, J65
11004 Robert M. Sauer
Christopher Taber
Indirect Inference with Importance Sampling: An Application to Women's Wage Growth
This paper has two main parts. In the first, we describe a method that smooths the objective function in a general class of indirect inference models. Our smoothing procedure makes use of importance ...
(published as 'Understanding women's wage growth using indirect inference with importance sampling' in: Journal of Applied Econometrics, 2021, 36 (4), 453 - 473)
C51, J16
11003 Francine D. Blau
Lawrence M. Kahn
Peter Brummund
Jason B. Cook
Miriam Larson-Koester
Is There Still Son Preference in the United States?
In this paper, we use 2008-2013 American Community Survey data to update and further probe Dahl and Moretti's (2008) son preference results, which found evidence that having a female first child ...
(published: Journal of Population Economics, 2020, 33 (3), 709-750)
J1, J11, J12, J13, J15, J16
11002 Robert Duval Hernández
Lei Fang
L. Rachel Ngai
Taxes and Market Hours: The Role of Gender and Skill
Cross-country differences of market hours in 17 OECD countries are mainly due to the hours of women, especially low-skilled women. This paper develops a model to account for the gender-skill ...
(published as 'Taxes, subsidies and gender gaps in hours and wages' in: Economica, 2023, 90 (358), 373-408. )
E24, E62, J22
11000 Friederike Mengel
Jan Sauermann
Ulf Zölitz
Gender Bias in Teaching Evaluations
This paper provides new evidence on gender bias in teaching evaluations. We exploit a quasi-experimental dataset of 19,952 student evaluations of university faculty in a context where students are ...
(published in: Journal of the European Economic Association, 2019, 17 (2), 535-566)
J16, J71, I23, J45
10997 Peter Bergman
Jeffrey T. Denning
Dayanand Manoli
Broken Tax Breaks? Evidence from a Tax Credit Information Experiment with 1,000,000 Students
There is increasing evidence that tax credits for college do not affect college enrollment. This may be because prospective students do not know about tax benefits for credits or because the design ...
(published in: Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 2019, 38 (3), 706-731)
I22, I23, H2
10996 Shimeng Liu
Weizeng Sun
John V. Winters
Up in STEM, Down in Business: Changing College Major Decisions with the Great Recession
We use the American Community Survey (ACS) to investigate the extent to which college major decisions were affected during and after the Great Recession with special attention to business and STEM ...
(published in: Contemporary Economic Policy, 2019, 37(3), 476-491)
I20, J24
10995 Sarah Cattan
Daniel A. Kamhöfer
Martin Karlsson
Therese Nilsson
The Short- and Long-Term Effects of Student Absence: Evidence from Sweden
Instructional time is seen as an important determinant of school performance, but little is known about the effects of student absence. Combining historical records and administrative data for ...
(updated version published as 'The Long-term Effects of Student Absence: Evidence from Sweden' in: Economic Journal, 2023, 133 (650), 888-903)
C23, I14, I21, I26
10994 Hendrik Jürges
Luca Stella
Sameh Hallaq
Alexandra Schwarz
Cohort at Risk: Long-Term Consequences of Conflict for Child School Achievement
We investigate the long-term effects of households' exposure to violent conflict on children's educational attainment in primary school, studying cognitive and non-cognitive skills as possible causal ...
(published in: Journal of Population Economics, 2022, 35, 1-43)
D10, I20, F51, O12
10993 Cheti Nicoletti
Valentina Tonei
The Response of Parental Time Investments to the Child's Skills and Health
Recent empirical research in family economics has shown the importance of parental investments on child's human capital development, but it is still not clear whether parents respond to changes ...
(published as 'Do parental time investments react to changes in child’s skills and health?' in: European Economic Review, 2020, 127, 103491)
J13, D13, C23, C26
10991 Øystein Hernaes
Activation against Absenteeism: Evidence from a Sickness Insurance Reform in Norway
I evaluate a program aimed at strictly enforcing a requirement that people on long-term sick leave be partly back at work unless explicitly defined as an exception. Employing the synthetic control ...
(revised version published in: Journal of Health Economics, 2018, 62, 60-68)
I18, I38, J48
10989 Lucija Muehlenbachs
Stefan Staubli
Ziyan Chu
The Accident Externality from Trucking
The presence of a heavy truck on the road can impose an externality if accidents occur that would not have otherwise. We find each additional truck on the road increases the risk of a truck accident ...
(revised version published in: Regional Science and Urban Economics, 2021, 88, 10363)
G22, H23, I18, Q58, R41
10988 Bruce Hollingsworth
Asako Ohinata
Matteo Picchio
Ian Walker
Labour Supply and Informal Care Supply: The Impacts of Financial Support for Long-Term Elderly Care
We investigate the impact of a policy reform, which introduced free formal personal care for all those aged 65 and above, on caregiving behaviour. Using a difference-in-differences estimator, we ...
(revised version published as 'The Impacts of Free Universal Elderly Care on the Supply of Informal Care and Labour Supply' in: Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics, 2022, 84 (4), 933 - 960)
C21, D14, I18, J14
10985 David L. Dickinson
Todd McElroy
Bayesian versus Heuristic-Based Choice under Sleep Restriction and Suboptimal Times of Day
This paper examines the impact of a commonly experienced adverse cognitive state on decision making under uncertainty. Specifically, we administer an at-home sleep restriction protocol combined with ...
(revised version published in: Games and Economic Behavior, 2019, 115, 48-59. )
C91, D81, D91
10984 David L. Dickinson
Ananish Chaudhuri
Ryan Greenaway-McGrevy
Trading While Sleepy? Circadian Mismatch and Excess Volatility in a Global Experimental Asset Market
Traders in global markets operate at different local times-of-day. Suboptimal times-of-day may produce sleepiness due to daily variations in sleep/wake patterns and possibly also increased ...
(revised version published as 'Trading while sleepy? Circadian mismatch and mispricing in a global experimental asset market' in: Experimental Economics, 2020, 23, 526 - 533)
C92, G12, G15, D84
10983 Maria De Paola
Francesca Gioia
Fabio Piluso
Does Reminding of Behavioural Biases Increase Returns from Financial Trading? A Field Experiment
We ran a field experiment to investigate whether nudge policies, consisting in behavioural insight messaging, help to improve performance in financial trading. Our experiment involved students ...
(published in:International Journal of Economics and Finance, 2020, 12 (2),1-22)
D14, E21, E22, O16
10982 Sinem H. Ayhan
Kseniia Gatskova
Hartmut Lehmann
The Impact of Non-Cognitive Skills and Risk Preferences on Rural-to-Urban Migration: Evidence from Ukraine
This paper provides evidence on the impacts of non-cognitive skills and attitudes towards risk on the decision to migrate from rural to urban areas. Our analysis is based on a unique four-wave panel ...
(published in: Journal of Comparative Economics, 2020, 48 (1), 144 - 162.)
J61, D03, D81, R23
10981 Nick Drydakis
Measuring Labour Differences between Natives, Non-Natives, and Natives with an Ethnic-Minority Background
Through a field study we measure differences in employment outcomes between natives, non-natives, and natives with an ethnic-minority background. It is suggested that the joint effect of productivity ...
(published in: Economics Letters, 2017, 161, 27 - 30)
J15, J31, J71
10979 Anne Boschini
Kristin Gunnarsson
Jesper Roine
Women in Top Incomes: Evidence from Sweden 1974–2013
Using a large, register-based panel data set we study gender differences in top incomes in Sweden over the period 1974–2013. We find that, while women are still a minority of the top decile group, ...
(updated version published in: Journal of Public Economics, 2020, 181, 104115)
D13, D31, H20, J16, J31
10978 John Hatgioannides
Marika Karanassou
Hector Sala
Should the Rich Be Taxed More? The Fiscal Inequality Coefficient
This paper holistically addresses the effective (relative) income tax contribution of a given in-come (or, wealth) group. The widely acclaimed standard in public policy is the absolute benefaction of ...
(published in: Journal of Economic Issues, 2019, 53 (3), 881-889.)
H23, H30, E64
10977 Nathan R. Adams
Glen R. Waddell
Performance and Risk Taking under Threat of Elimination
We revisit the incentive effects of elimination tournaments with a fresh approach to identification, the results of which strongly support that performance improves under the threat of elimination ...
(published in: Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 2018, 156, 41 - 54)
I21, L83
10976 Thomas Buser
Noemi Peter
Stefan C. Wolter
Gender, Willingness to Compete and Career Choices along the Whole Ability Distribution
Men are generally found to be more willing to compete than women and there is growing evidence that willingness to compete is a predictor of individual and gender differences in career decisions and ...
(revised version published as 'Willingness to compete, gender and career choices along the whole ability distribution' in: Experimental Economics, 2022, 25, 1299 - 1326)
C91, D03, J01, J16
10974 Erling Barth
Sari Pekkala Kerr
Claudia Olivetti
The Dynamics of Gender Earnings Differentials: Evidence from Establishment Data
We use a unique match between the 2000 Decennial Census of the United States and the Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics (LEHD) data to analyze how much of the increase in the gender earnings ...
(published in: European Economic Review, 2021, 134, 103713)
J16, J31
10973 Lucas Ronconi
Rodrigo Zarazaga
The Tragedy of Clientelism: Opting Children Out
Governments in new democracies launch social policies with the purported goal of alleviating the effects of poverty among the most vulnerable households, usually low income families with children. ...
(published in: Studies in Comparative International Development, 2019, 54 (3), 365 - 380 )
K40, H53, I38
10972 Marta Favara
Catherine Porter
Tassew Woldehanna
Smarter through Social Protection? Evaluating the Impact of Ethiopia's Safety-Net on Child Cognitive Abilities
We provide new estimates of the impact of Ethiopia's Productive Safety Net Programme (PSNP) in Ethiopia on child cognitive achievement in the medium term. The programme is the second largest in ...
(published in: Oxford Development Studies, 2019, 7 (1), 79-96)
I38, O22
10971 Farzana Afridi
Bidisha Barooah
Rohini Somanathan
Improving Learning Outcomes through Information Provision: Evidence from Indian Villages
We study whether information provision improves the academic performance of primary school children in a setting where parents have incomplete information about their child's cognitive skills and ...
(edited version published as 'Improving Learning Outcomes through Information Provision: Experimental Evidence from Indian Villages' in: Journal of Development Economics, 2020, 146, 102276)
I20, I25, O15
10969 Christoph Eder
Martin Halla
Economic Origins of Cultural Norms: The Case of Animal Husbandry and Bastardy
This paper explores the historical origins of the cultural norm regarding illegitimacy (formerly known as bastardy). We test the hypothesis that traditional agricultural production structures ...
(revised version published in: European Economic Review, 2020, 125, 103421)
Z1, A13, J12, J13, J43, N33
10968 Achmad Tohari
Christopher Parsons
Anu Rammohan
Targeting Poverty under Complementarities: Evidence from Indonesia's Unified Targeting System
Combining nationally representative administrative and survey data with official proxy means testing models and coefficients, we evaluate Indonesia's three largest social programs. The setting for ...
(published in: Journal of Development Economics, 2019, 140, 127 - 144)
D04, I32, I38, O12
10967 Felipe A. Dunsch
David K. Evans
Ezinne Eze-Ajoku
Mario Macis
Management, Supervision, and Health Care: A Field Experiment
If health service delivery is poorly managed, then increases in inputs or ability may not translate into gains in quality. However, little is known about how to increase managerial capital to ...
(published in: Journal of Economics and Management Strategy, 2023, 32 (3), 583-606)
I15, M10, O15
10965 Maazullah
Arjun S. Bedi
Returns to Islamic Microfinance: Evidence from a Randomized Experiment in Pakistan
The global microfinance movement is driven by the claim that once poor micro-entrepreneurs are provided access to capital, they will be able to generate high returns. The existing evidence on returns ...
(published as 'Returns to Interest-free Microcredit: Evidence from a Randomised Experiment in Pakistan' in: Journal of Development Effectiveness, 2022, 14 (2), 93 - 107)
O17, O16, C93
10964 Petri Böckerman
Pekka Ilmakunnas
Do Good Working Conditions Make You Work Longer? Evidence on Retirement Decisions Using Linked Survey and Register Data
We analyze the potential role of adverse working conditions and management practices in the determination of employees' retirement behavior. Our data contain both comprehensive information regarding ...
(published as 'Do Good Working Conditions Make You Work Longer? Analyzing Retirement Decisions Using Linked Survey and Register Data' in: Journal of the Economics of Ageing, 2020, 17, 100192)
J26, J28, J53
10963 Peng Nie
Alfonso Sousa-Poza
What Chinese Workers Value: An Analysis of Job Satisfaction, Job Expectations, and Labor Turnover in China
This study uses data from the 2012 China Labor Force Dynamics Survey and 2010–2012 China Family Panel Studies to investigate job satisfaction and job expectations, as well as the association ...
(published in: Prague Economic Papers, 2020, 29 (1), 85-104)
J16, J17, J28
10962 Younghwan Song
The Effect of Job Displacement on Subjective Well-being
Using matched data drawn from the 2010 and 2012 Displaced Workers Supplements of the Current Population Surveys and the 2010, 2012, and 2013 American Time Use Survey Well-Being Modules, this paper ...
(published in: Journal for Labour Market Research, 2018, 52 (13), 1-13)
I31, J63, J65
10961 Michael C. Knaus
Michael Lechner
Anthony Strittmatter
Heterogeneous Employment Effects of Job Search Programmes: A Machine Learning Approach
We systematically investigate the effect heterogeneity of job search programmes for unemployed workers. To investigate possibly heterogeneous employment effects, we combine non-experimental causal ...
(published in: Journal of Human Resources, 2022, 57 (2), 597-636)
J68, H43, C21
10960 Jason Faberman
Andreas I. Mueller
Aysegül Sahin
Giorgio Topa
Job Search Behavior among the Employed and Non-Employed
Using a unique new survey, we study the relationship between search effort and outcomes for employed and non-employed workers. We find that the employed fare better than the non-employed in job ...
(published in: Econometrica, 2022, 90 (4),1743-1779)
E24, J29, J60
10959 Aleksandra Katolik
Andrew J. Oswald
Antidepressants for Economists and Business-School Researchers: An Introduction and Review
The antidepressant pill is an important modern commodity. Its growing role in the world has been largely ignored by researchers in economics departments and business schools. Scholars may be unaware ...
(published in: Die Unternehmung, 2017, 71 (4), 448 - 463)
I1, I120, I3, I310
10957 Nick Drydakis
Peter MacDonald
Vasiliki Bozani
Vangelis Chiotis
Inclusive Recruitment? Hiring Discrimination against Older Workers
Addressing population ageing requires a rise in the activity rates of older workers. In this study, a field experiment for the period 2013-2015 in the UK, suggests that age discrimination persists at ...
(published in: Arenas, A., Di Marco, D., Munduate, L., Euwema, M.C. (Eds.), Shaping Inclusive Workplaces through Social Dialogue, New York: Springer Publishing, 2017, 87-102)
C93, C9, J14, J1
10956 Laura Katherine Gee
Michael J. Schreck
Do Beliefs about Peers Matter for Donation Matching? Experiments in the Field and Laboratory
A popular fundraising tool is donation matching, where every dollar is matched by a third party. But field experiments find that matching does not always increase donations. This may occur because ...
(published in: Games and Economic Behavior, 2018, 107, 282 - 297)
C93, D64, H41
10955 Alexander K. Koch
Julia Nafziger
Motivational Goal Bracketing: An Experiment
We study in an online, real-effort experiment how the bracketing of non-binding goals affects performance in a work-leisure self-control problem. We externally induce the goal bracket – daily goals ...
(published in: Journal of Economic Theory, 2020, 185, 104949)
D03, D81, D91
 12990Result(s) returned for "All accepted Discussion Papers" 
(Previous 50 papers)  (Previous 10 papers)  | (Next 10 papers)  (Next 50 papers) 
 

© IZA  Impressum  Last updated: 2025-10-21  webmaster@iza.org    |   Bookmark this page    |   Print View