IZA - All published DPs

Logo
No. Author(s) Title JEL Class.
9773 Osea Giuntella
Fabrizio Mazzonna
If You Don't Snooze You Lose: Evidence on Health and Weight
Most economic models consider sleeping as a pre-determined and homogeneous constraint on individuals' time allocation neglecting its potential effects on health and human capital. Several medical ...
(published in: Journal of Health Economics,2019, 65: 210-226)
I12, J22, C31
9772 Michela Ponzo
Vincenzo Scoppa
Cost-Sharing and Use of Health Services in Italy: Evidence from a Fuzzy Regression Discontinuity Design
We use a Regression Discontinuity Design (RDD) to evaluate the impact of cost-sharing on the use of health services. In the Italian health system, individuals reaching age 65 and earning low incomes ...
(published in: Economic Modelling, 2021, 103, 105599.)
I10, I13, I11, I18, C26
9770 Alex Bryson
Health and Safety Risks in Britain's Workplaces: Where are They and Who Controls Them?
This is the first paper to identify the correlates of workplace managers' perceptions of the health and safety risks faced by workers and the degree to which workers have control over those risks. ...
(published in: Industrial Relations Journal, 2016, 47 (5-6), 547-566)
J81
9766 Nicolas Houy
Jean-Philippe Nicolaï
Marie Claire Villeval
Doing Your Best When Stakes Are High? Theory and Experimental Evidence
Achieving an ambitious goal frequently requires succeeding in a sequence of intermediary tasks, some being critical for the final outcome, and others not. Individuals are not always able to provide a ...
(revised version published as 'Always doing your best? Effort and performance in dynamic settings' in: Theory and Decision, 2020, 89 (3), 249-286)
C72, C92, D81
9765 Utteeyo Dasgupta
Subha Mani
Smriti Sharma
Saurabh Singhal
Eliciting Risk Preferences: Firefighting in the Field
Field constraints often necessitate choosing an elicitation task that is intuitive, easy to explain, and simple to implement. Given that subject behavior often differs dramatically across tasks when ...
(published as 'Internal and external validity: Comparing two simple risk elicitation tasks' in: Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics, 2019, 81, 39 - 46)
C91, C81, D81
9764 Guilherme Hirata
Rodrigo R. Soares
Competition and the Racial Wage Gap: Testing Becker's Model of Employer Discrimination
According to Becker's (1957) theory of taste-based employer discrimination, pure economic rents are necessary for discrimination to be observed in the labor market. Increased competition and reduced ...
(published in: Journal of Development Economics, 2020, 146, Article 102519)
J31, J71, J78, F66
9763 Stijn Baert
Suncica Vujic
Immigrant Volunteering: A Way Out of Labour Market Discrimination?
Many governments encourage migrants to participate in volunteer activities as a stepping stone to labour market integration. In the present study, we investigate whether this prosocial engagement ...
(revised version published in: Economics Letters, 2016, 146, 95 - 98)
J15, J71, D64
9762 Gil S. Epstein
Odelia Heizler (Cohen)
The Formation of Networks in the Diaspora
In this paper, we examine possible types of network formation among immigrants in the diaspora and between those immigrants and the locals in different countries. We present the model by considering ...
(published in: International Journal of Manpower, 2016, 37 (7), 1136-1153)
D85, D74, J61, L14
9756 Margherita Fort
Andrea Ichino
Giulio Zanella
Cognitive and Non-Cognitive Costs of Daycare 0–2 for Girls
Exploiting admission thresholds in a Regression Discontinuity Design, we study the causal effects of daycare at age 0–2 on cognitive and non-cognitive outcomes at age 8–14. One additional month in ...
(revised version published in: Journal of Political Economy, 2020, 128(1), 158-205)
J13, I20, I28, H75
9755 Ainoa Aparicio Fenoll
Zoë Kuehn
Education Policies and Migration across European Countries
This paper tests whether and how two education policies: (i) increasing the length of compulsory education and (ii) introducing foreign languages into compulsory school curricula, affect subsequent ...
(published in: Demography, 2017, 54 (6), 2181-2200)
J61, I20, F22
9754 Julien Champagne
Andre Kurmann
Jay Stewart
Reconciling the Divergence in Aggregate U.S. Wage Series
According to data from the Labor Productivity and Costs (LPC) program, average hourly real compensation in the United States has grown consistently over time and become markedly more volatile since ...
(published in: Labour Economics, 2017, 49, 27-41)
E01, E24, E30, J30
9753 Andrea Garnero
Alexander Hijzen
Sébastien Martin
More Unequal, But More Mobile? Earnings Inequality and Mobility in OECD Countries
This paper provides comprehensive cross-country evidence on the relationship between earnings inequality and intra-generational mobility by simulating individual earnings and employment trajectories ...
(published in: Labour Economics, 2019, 56, 26-35)
E24, J30, J62, O57
9752 Tuomas Pekkarinen
Kjell G. Salvanes
Matti Sarvimäki
The Evolution of Social Mobility: Norway over the 20th Century
This paper documents trends in social mobility in Norway starting from fathers born at the turn of the 20th century and ending with sons born in the 1970s. We measure social mobility with ...
(published in: Scandinavian Journal of Economics, 2017, 119(1): 5–33)
I24, J08
9749 Niaz Asadullah
Jinnat Ara
Evaluating the Long-Run Impact of an Innovative Anti-Poverty Program: Evidence Using Household Panel Data
Using a four-round panel data set from the first phase of the Challenging the Frontiers of Poverty Reduction – Targeting the Ultra Poor (CFPR – TUP) programme of BRAC, we investigate whether a ...
(published in: Applied Economics, 2016, 58 (2), 107-120)
O12, I30, D50
9748 David Autor
David Dorn
Gordon H. Hanson
The China Shock: Learning from Labor Market Adjustment to Large Changes in Trade
China's emergence as a great economic power has induced an epochal shift in patterns of world trade. Simultaneously, it has challenged much of the received empirical wisdom about how labor markets ...
(published in: Annual Review of Economics, 2016, 8, 205-240)
F16, H55, J23, J31, J63
9747 Lisa A. Cameron
Xin Meng
Dandan Zhang
China's Sex Ratio and Crime: Behavioral Change or Financial Necessity?
This paper uses survey and experimental data from prison inmates and comparable non-inmates to examine the drivers of rising criminality in China. Consistent with socio-biological research on other ...
(published in: Economic Journal, 2019, 129 (618), 790–820,)
O12, J12
9746 Fei Wang
Liqiu Zhao
Zhong Zhao
China's Family Planning Policies and Their Labor Market Consequences
China initiated its family planning policy in 1962 and one-child policy in 1980 and allows all couples to have two children as of 1st January, 2016. This paper systematically examines the labor ...
(revised version published in: Journal of Population Economics, 2017, 30 (1), 31-68 )
J13, J11, J21, J61
9745 Shihe Fu
Yu Liao
Junfu Zhang
The Effect of Housing Wealth on Labor Force Participation: Evidence from China
This paper uses the 2011 China Household Finance Survey data to estimate the effect of change in housing value on homeowners' labor force participation. Using the average housing capital gains of ...
(published in: Journal of Housing Economics, 2016, 33, 59-69)
J21, J22, R20, R30
9744 Thomas Gries
Stefan Jungblut
Wim Naudé
The Entrepreneurship Beveridge Curve
We propose that the rate of creation and failure of start-up firms can be modelled as a search and matching process, following labor market matching models. Setting out an endogenous growth model ...
(published in: International Journal of Economic Theory, 2016, 12 (2), 151-165)
L26, M13, O10, O14
9743 Nora Stel
Wim Naudé
Business in Genocide: Understanding and Avoiding Complicity
Genocides and mass atrocities do not arise spontaneously, but tend to be meticulously sourced and managed. As such the concern in this paper is with the role of businesses in these processes, with a ...
(published in: Charles H. Anderton and Jurgen Brauer (eds.), Economic Aspects of Genocides, Other Mass Atrocities, and Their Preventions, Oxford University Press, 2016, 591–612 )
D74, O19, L26, N40, M14
9742 Nynke De Groot
Pierre Koning
Assessing the Effects of Disability Insurance Experience Rating: The Case of the Netherlands
Experience rated Disability Insurance (DI) premiums are often advocated as a means to stimulate firms to reduce DI inflow and increase DI outflow. To assess the size of these intended effects of ...
(published in: Labour Economics, 2016, 41, 304-317)
H22, I12, C23
9741 David Hummels
Jakob R. Munch
Chong Xiang
Offshoring and Labor Markets
In this paper we survey the recent empirical literature on the effects of offshoring on wage, employment and displacement. We start with an overview of the measurement of offshoring, organizing our ...
(published in: Journal of Economic Literature, 2018, 56, 981-1028)
F1, J2, J3, L2
9740 Anna Bottasso
Maurizio Conti
Giovanni Sulis
Firm Dynamics and Employment Protection: Evidence from Sectoral Data
In this paper we analyse the impact of employment protection legislation (EPL) on firms' entry and exit rates for a large sample of industries of thirteen countries selected from the most recent ...
(published in: Labour Economics, 2017, 78, 35-53)
J65, L11, L26
9739 Guido Friebel
Matthias Heinz
Nick Zubanov
The Effect of Announced Downsizing on Workplace Performance: Evidence from a Retail Chain
We estimate the effect of downsizing announcement on workplace performance using data from a German bakery chain of 193 shops. Faced with intensified competition, the firm decided to sell or close ...
(published in: S.W. Polachek, K. Tatsiramos, G. Russo, and G. van Houten (Eds.) Workplace Productivity and Management Practices, Research in Labor Economics, 49, Emerald Publishing Limited, Bingley, 2021, 79-205.)
M12, M54
9738 Robert G. Valletta
Leila Bengali
Catherine van der List
Cyclical and Market Determinants of Involuntary Part-Time Employment
We examine the determinants of involuntary part-time employment, focusing on variation associated with the business cycle and variation attributable to more persistent structural features of the ...
(published in: Journal of Labor Economics, 2020, 38 (1), 67–93)
J22, J23
9735 Michael C. Knaus
Steffen Otterbach
Work Hour Mismatch and Job Mobility: Adjustment Channels and Resolution Rates
This paper analyses the role of job changes in overcoming work hour constraints and the work hour mismatches resulting from these constraints (i.e., differences between actual and desired work ...
(published in: Economic Inquiry, 2019, 57(1), 227-242)
J21, J22
9734 Julian Baumann
Alexander S. Kritikos
The Link between R&D, Innovation and Productivity: Are Micro Firms Different?
We analyze the link between R&D, innovation, and productivity in MSMEs with a special focus on micro firms with fewer than 10 employees; usually constituting the majority of firms in industrialized ...
(published in: Research Policy, 2016, 45 (6), 1263–1274)
L25, L60, O31, O33
9733 Alessandra Colombelli
Jackie Krafft
Marco Vivarelli
To Be Born Is Not Enough: The Key Role of Innovative Startups
This paper investigates the reasons why entry per se is not necessarily good and the evidence showing that innovative startups survive longer than their non-innovative counterparts. In this ...
(published in: Small Business Economics, 2016, 47, 277-291)
L26, O33
9732 Mizuki Komura
Hikaru Ogawa
The Prodigal Son: Does the Younger Brother Always Care for His Parents in Old Age?
Studies have shown that the older sibling often chooses to live away from his elderly parents intending to free ride on the care provided by the younger child. In the presented model, we incorporate ...
(published in: Applied Economics, 2017, 49(22), 2153-2165.)
H41, J17
9731 Dripto Bakshi
Indraneel Dasgupta
Identity Conflict with Cross-Border Spillovers
We model simultaneous inter and within identity-group conflict in two territories connected by cross-territorial spill-overs. Within each territory, two groups contest the division of a ...
(published in: Defence and Peace Economics, 2020, 31 (7), 786-809)
D72, D74, O10, O20
9730 Michael A. Clemens
Lant Pritchett
The New Economic Case for Migration Restrictions: An Assessment
For decades, migration economics has stressed the effects of migration restrictions on income distribution in the host country. Recently the literature has taken a new direction by estimating the ...
(published in: Journal of Development Economics, 2019, 138, 153-164.)
F22, J61, O11
9729 Bernt Bratsberg
Oddbjørn Raaum
Knut Røed
Job Loss and Immigrant Labor Market Performance
While integration policies typically focus on labor market entry, we present evidence showing that immigrants from low-income countries tend to have more precarious jobs, and face more severe ...
(published in: Economica ,2018, 85, 124–151)
F22, H55, J24, J65
9728 Mevlude Akbulut-Yuksel
Adriana Kugler
Intergenerational Persistence of Health in the U.S.: Do Immigrants Get Healthier as They Assimilate?
It is well known that a substantial part of income and education is passed on from parents to children, generating substantial persistence in socio-economic status across generations. In this paper, ...
(revised version published as 'Intergenerational Persistence of Health: Do Immigrants Get Healthier as They Remain in the U.S. for More Generations?' in: Economics and Human Biology, 2016, 23, 136-148.)
J61, J62, I12, I14
9726 Alpaslan Akay
Amelie F. Constant
Corrado Giulietti
Martin Guzi
Ethnic Diversity and Well-Being
This paper investigates how ethnic diversity, measured by the immigrants' countries of origin, influences the well-being of the host country. Using panel data from Germany for the period 1998 to ...
(published in: Journal of Population Economics, 2017, 30 (1), 265-306 )
C90, D63, J61
9722 Farzana Afridi
Taryn Dinkelman
Kanika Mahajan
Why Are Fewer Married Women Joining the Work Force in India? A Decomposition Analysis over Two Decades
Unlike the global trend, India has witnessed a secular decline in women's employment rates over the past few decades. We use parametric and semi-parametric decomposition techniques to show that ...
(published in: Journal of Population Economics, 2018, 31 (3), 783-818)
J21, J22
9720 José Ignacio Gimenez-Nadal
José Alberto Molina
Jorge Velilla
Spatial Distribution of US Employment in an Urban Wage-Efficiency Setting
In this paper, we analyze the spatial distribution of US employment and earnings against an urban wage-efficiency background, where leisure and effort at work are complementary. Using data from the ...
(published in: Journal of Regional Science, 2018, 58, 141-158)
J21, J22, J31, R12, R41
9719 Kory Kroft
Kavan Kucko
Etienne Lehmann
Johannes F. Schmieder
Optimal Income Taxation with Unemployment and Wage Responses: A Sufficient Statistics Approach
We derive a sufficient statistics optimal tax formula in a general model that incorporates unemployment and endogenous wages, to study the shape of the tax and transfer system at the bottom of the ...
(revised version published in: American Economic Journal, Economic Policy, 2020, 12 (1), 254-292.)
H21, J22, J23
9718 Richard V. Burkhauser
Nicolas Herault
Stephen P. Jenkins
Roger Wilkins
What Has Been Happening to UK Income Inequality since the Mid-1990s? Answers from Reconciled and Combined Household Survey and Tax Return Data
Estimates of UK income inequality trends differ substantially according to whether estimates are based on household survey data (used for official statistics) or tax return data (used in the top ...
(published in: Oxford Economic Papers, 2018, 70 (2), 301 - 326)
D31, C81
9717 Felix Koenig
Alan Manning
Barbara Petrongolo
Reservation Wages and the Wage Flexibility Puzzle
Wages are only mildly cyclical, implying that shocks to labour demand have a larger short-run impact on unemployment rather than wages, at odds with the quantitative predictions of the canonical ...
(forthcoming in: Review of Economics and Statistics, 2024)
E24, J31, J64
9716 Christian Dreger
Reinhold Kosfeld
Yanqun Zhang
Determining Minimum Wages in China: Do Economic Factors Dominate?
Minimum wages may be an important instrument to reduce income inequality in a society and to promote socially inclusive economic growth. While higher minimum wages can support the Chinese ...
(published in: Review of Urban & Regional Development Studies, 2019, 31 (1-2), 44 - 59)
J30, R23, C23
9715 Carl Lin
Myeong-Su Yun
The Effects of the Minimum Wage on Earnings Inequality: Evidence from China
The minimum wage has been regarded as an important element of public policy for reducing poverty and inequality. Increasing the minimum wage is supposed to raise earnings for millions of low-wage ...
(published in: Research in Labor Economics (Income Inequality Around the World), 2016, 44, 179-212)
J31, J38, O15, R23
9714 Juan David Robalino
Smoking Peer Effects among Adolescents: Are Popular Teens More Influential?
In this paper I analyze adolescent peer effects on cigarette consumption while considering the 'popularity' of peers. The analysis is based on AddHealth data, a four wave panel survey representative ...
(published in: PLoS One, 2018, 13 (7), e0189360.)
I1
9713 Almas Heshmati
The Economics of Healthy Ageing in China
Healthy ageing is a challenge for many countries with significant shares of elderly people. Literature refers to China's ageing population as a ticking time bomb which paradoxically is both a ...
(published as 'The Social and Economics of Healthy Ageing in China' in: World Health Design, 2016, 64-70)
H75, I15, I18, I38, P36
9709 Philip Susser
Nicolas R. Ziebarth
Profiling the US Sick Leave Landscape
This paper profiles the sick leave landscape in the US – the only industrialized country without universal access to paid sick leave or other forms of paid leave. We exploit the 2011 Leave Supplement ...
(short version published in: Health Services Research, 2016, 51 (6), 2305-2317)
I12, I13, I18, J22, J28, J32
9708 Ayako Kondo
Masahiro Shoji
Peer Effects in Employment Status: Evidence from Housing Lotteries for Forced Evacuees in Fukushima
Does a high peer employment rate increase individual employment probability? We exploit the random assignment of temporary housing to evacuees from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant accident ...
(published in: Journal of Urban Economics, 2019, 113, 103195)
J20, J64
9707 Nicholas Bardsley
Milena Buechs
Sylke V. Schnepf
Something from Nothing: Estimating Consumption Rates Using Propensity Scores, with Application to Emissions Reduction Policies
Consumption surveys often record zero purchases of a good because of a short observation window. Only mean consumption rates can then be inferred. We show that propensity scores can be used to ...
(revised version published in: PLOS ONE, 2017, 12(10), e0185538.)
C13, D04, D12, H23
9706 Hugo Bodory
Lorenzo Camponovo
Martin Huber
Michael Lechner
The Finite Sample Performance of Inference Methods for Propensity Score Matching and Weighting Estimators
This paper investigates the finite sample properties of a range of inference methods for propensity score-based matching and weighting estimators frequently applied to evaluate the average treatment ...
(published in: Journal of Business & Economic Statistics, 2020, 38 (1), 183-200 )
C21
9705 Dennis J. Snower
Steven J. Bosworth
Identity-driven Cooperation versus Competition
This paper seeks to extend the domain of identity economics by exploring motivational foundations of in-group cooperation and out-group competition. On this basis, we explore the reflexive ...
(published in: American Economic Review, 2016, 106 (5), 420–424)
A13, D03, D62, D71, I31, O10
9704 Dietmar Fehr
Matthias Sutter
Gossip and the Efficiency of Interactions
Human communication in organizations often involves a large amount of gossiping about others. Here we study in an experiment whether gossip affects the efficiency of human interactions. We let ...
(published in: Games and Economic Behavior 2019, 113, 448-460.)
C72, C92
9703 Steven J. Bosworth
Tania Singer
Dennis J. Snower
Cooperation, Motivation and Social Balance
This paper examines the reflexive interplay between individual decisions and social forces to analyze the evolution of cooperation in the presence of "multi-directedness," whereby people's ...
(published in: Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 2016, 126 (Part B), 72-94)
A13, C72, D01, D03, D62, D64
 12990Result(s) returned for "All accepted Discussion Papers" 
(Previous 50 papers)  (Previous 10 papers)  | (Next 10 papers)  (Next 50 papers) 
 

© IZA  Impressum  Last updated: 2025-10-22  webmaster@iza.org    |   Bookmark this page    |   Print View