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No. Author(s) Title JEL Class.
9470 Matteo Picchio
Jan C. van Ours
Gender and the Effect of Working Hours on Firm-Sponsored Training
Using employees' longitudinal data, we study the effect of working hours on the propensity of firms to sponsor training of their employees. We show that, whereas male part-time workers are less ...
(published in: Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 2016, 125, 192-211)
C33, C35, J24, M51, M53
9469 Gregory Verdugo
Real Wage Cyclicality in the Eurozone Before and During the Great Recession: Evidence from Micro Data
We study the response of real wages to the business cycle in eight major Eurozone countries before and during the Great Recession. Average real wages are found to be acyclical, but this reflects, in ...
(published in: European Economic Review, 2016, 82, 46-69)
J30, E32
9468 Francisco H. G. Ferreira
Nora Lustig
Daniel Teles
Appraising Cross-National Income Inequality Databases: An Introduction
In response to a growing interest in comparing inequality levels and trends across countries, a number of cross-national inequality databases are now available. These databases differ considerably in ...
(published in: Journal of Economic Inequality, 2015, 13 (4), 497-526.)
D31, I32
9467 Nidhaleddine Ben Cheikh
Christophe Rault
The Pass-Through of Exchange Rate in the Context of the European Sovereign Debt Crisis
This paper investigates whether exchange rate pass-through (ERPT) into import prices is a nonlinear phenomenon for five heavily indebted Euro area countries, namely the so-called GIIPS group (Greece, ...
(published in: International Journal of Finance and Economics, 2016, 21 (2), 154–166)
C22, E31, F31
9466 Artjoms Ivlevs
Michail Veliziotis
What Do Unions Do in Times of Economic Crisis? Evidence from Central and Eastern Europe
Over the last two decades, trade union membership in Central and Eastern Europe has been in continuous decline and there is a common perception that trade unions in the region are weak. However, ...
(published in: European Journal of Industrial Relations, 2017, 23 (1), 81-96)
J51, P2, P3
9465 Henry S Farber
Dan Silverman
Till von Wachter
Factors Determining Callbacks to Job Applications by the Unemployed: An Audit Study
We use an audit study approach to investigate how unemployment duration, age, and holding a low-level "interim" job affect the likelihood that experienced college- educated females applying for an ...
(published in: RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences, 2017, 3 (3), 168-201 )
J64
9464 Hans Bloemen
Collective Labour Supply, Taxes, and Intrahousehold Allocation: An Empirical Approach
Most empirical studies of the impact of labour income taxation on the labour supply behaviour of households use a unitary modelling approach. In this paper we empirically analyze income taxation and ...
(published in: Journal of Business & Economic Statistics, 2019, 37 (3), 471-481)
J22, D1, D13, H24, C51
9463 Francesco Devicienti
Elena Grinza
Davide Vannoni
The Impact of Part-Time Work on Firm Total Factor Productivity: Evidence from Italy
In this paper, we explore the impact of part-time work on firm productivity. Using a large panel data set of Italian corporations' balance sheets for the period 2000-2010, we first estimate the total ...
(published in: Industrial and Corporate Change, 2018, 27 (2), 321 - 347)
L23, L25, J23
9462 Niels Vermeer
Mauro Mastrogiacomo
Arthur van Soest
Demanding Occupations and the Retirement Age
In several countries where pensions are reformed and the retirement age is increased, the issue came up to make an exception for workers with demanding occupations, since health considerations may ...
(published in: Labour Economics, 2016, 43, 159-170)
J26, J81, H55
9460 Joan Monras
Minimum Wages and Spatial Equilibrium: Theory and Evidence
Often, minimum wage laws are decided at the state or regional level, and even when not, federal level increases are only binding in certain states. This has been used in previous literature to ...
(published in: Journal of Labor Economics, 2019, 37 (3), 853–904)
J38
9458 Seokjin Woo
Soohyung Lee
Kyunghee Kim
Carrot and Stick? Impact of a Low-Stakes School Accountability Program on Student Achievement
A key concern in the design of education policies relates to the structure of incentives in accountability systems. This paper examines a school accountability program that provides financial support ...
(published in: Economics Letters, 2015, 137 195 - 199)
C5, I2
9455 Binnur Balkan
Semih Tumen
Firm-Size Wage Gaps along the Formal-Informal Divide: Theory and Evidence
Observationally equivalent workers are paid higher wages in larger firms. This fact is often named as the "firm-size wage gap" and is regarded as a key empirical puzzle. Using micro-level data from ...
(published in: Industrial Relations, 2016, 55(2), 235-266)
C78, J21, J31, L11
9453 Elena Meschi
Erol Taymaz
Marco Vivarelli
Globalization, Technological Change and Labor Demand: A Firm Level Analysis for Turkey
This paper studies the interlinked relationship between globalization and technological upgrading in affecting employment and wages of skilled and unskilled workers in a middle income developing ...
(published in: Review of World Economics, 2016, 152, 655-680)
O33
9452 Timothy M. Diette
David C. Ribar
A Longitudinal Analysis of Violence and Housing Insecurity
Violence and housing insecurity are horrible events that may be intertwined, with violence possibly forcing victims to abandon their accommodations and housing insecurity depriving people of the ...
(published in: Economic Inquiry, 2018, 56(3), 1602-21.)
J1, R2
9451 Massimiliano Tani
Hukou Changes and Subjective Well-Being
The literature on subjective well-being has highlighted the negative effects associated with the restrictions and inequality imposed by the hukou system on China's rural population. However, ...
(published in: Social Indicators Research, 2017, 132 (1), 47-61)
D19, H13, I31, J61, R20
9449 Jan Bietenbeck
The Long-Term Impacts of Low-Achieving Childhood Peers: Evidence from Project STAR
This paper evaluates how sharing a kindergarten classroom with low-achieving repeaters affects the long-term educational performance of regular first-time kindergarten students. Exploiting random ...
(revised version published in: Journal of the European Economic Association, 2020, 18(1), 392-426)
I21, J24
9448 Jan Feld
Ulf Zölitz
Understanding Peer Effects: On the Nature, Estimation and Channels of Peer Effects
This paper estimates peer effects in a university context where students are randomly assigned to sections. While students benefit from better peers on average, low-achieving students are harmed by ...
(published in: Journal of Labor Economics, 2017, 35(2) 387-428)
I21, I24, J24
9447 Julia Debski
Michael Jetter
Gender and Corruption: A Reassessment
This paper analyzes the relationship between gender and corruption, controlling for country-specific heterogeneity in a panel framework. Using annual observations in a pooled setting (no ...
(revised version published as 'Gender and corruption: The neglected role of culture' in: European Journal of Political Economy, 2018, 55, 526 - 537 )
C23, D73, J16
9446 Ernesto Reuben
Paola Sapienza
Luigi Zingales
Competitiveness and the Gender Gap among Young Business Professionals
Important gender differences in earnings and career trajectories persist. Particularly, in professions such as business. Gender differences in competitiveness have been proposed as a potential ...
(published in: Journal of Finance, 2024, 79, 1087-1121)
J16, D81, D84, I21, C93
9445 Zachary Bleemer
Basit Zafar
Intended College Attendance: Evidence from an Experiment on College Returns and Cost
Despite a robust college premium, college attendance rates in the US have remained stagnant and exhibit a substantial socioeconomic gradient. We focus on information gaps – specifically, incomplete ...
(published in: Journal of Public Economics, 2018, 157, 184-211)
D81, D83, D84, I21, I24, I28
9444 Theresa Kuchler
Basit Zafar
Personal Experiences and Expectations about Aggregate Outcomes
We use novel survey data to estimate how personal experiences affect household expectations about aggregate economic outcomes in housing and labor markets. We exploit variation in locally experienced ...
(published in: Journal of Finance, 2019, 74 (5), 2491-2542)
D83, D84
9443 Francesco Drago
Friederike Mengel
Christian Traxler
Compliance Behavior in Networks: Evidence from a Field Experiment
This paper studies the spread of compliance behavior in neighborhood networks involving over 500,000 households in Austria. We exploit random variation from a field experiment which varied the ...
(revised version published in: American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, 2020, 12 (2), 96 - 133)
D8, H26, Z13
9442 Francisco H. G. Ferreira
Shaohua Chen
Andrew Dabalen
Yuri Dikhanov
Nada Hamadeh
Dean Jolliffe
Ambar Narayan
Espen Beer Prydz
Ana Revenga
Prem Sangraula
Umar Serajuddin
Nobuo Yoshida
A Global Count of the Extreme Poor in 2012: Data Issues, Methodology and Initial Results
The 2014 release of a new set of purchasing power parity conversion factors (PPPs) for 2011 has prompted a revision of the international poverty line. In order to preserve the integrity of the ...
(published in: Journal of Economic Inequality, 2016, 14 (2), 141-172)
I3, I32, E31, F01
9441 Amparo Castelló-Climent
Latika Chaudhary
Abhiroop Mukhopadhyay
Tertiary Education and Prosperity: Catholic Missionaries to Luminosity in India
This paper estimates the causal impact of tertiary education on luminosity across Indian districts. We address the potential endogeneity of tertiary education using the location of Catholic ...
(published as 'Higher Education and Prosperity: From Catholic Missionaries to Luminosity in India' in: Economic Journal, 2018, 128, 3039-3075)
I25, N35, O15
9440 Manisha Shah
Bryce Millett Steinberg
Drought of Opportunities: Contemporaneous and Long-Term Impacts of Rainfall Shocks on Human Capital
Higher wages are generally thought to increase human capital production, particularly in the developing world. We introduce a simple model of human capital production in which investments and time ...
(published in: Journal of Political Economy, 2017, 125 (2), 527-561)
O12, I2, J1
9439 Nekeisha Spencer
Solomon Polachek
Hurricane Watch: Battening Down the Effects of the Storm on Local Crop Production
This study utilizes a panel fixed effects model to explore the economic impact of hurricanes on local crop production in Jamaica using quarterly 1999-2008 micro level data. We find, in general, that ...
(published in: Ecological Economics, 2015, 120, 234-240. )
O13, O54, Q1
9438 Tony Fang
Morley Gunderson
Carl Lin
The Use and Impact of Job Search Procedures by Migrant Workers in China
Job search procedures are a form of human capital investment in that they involve current investments to enhance future returns, analogous to human capital investments in areas such as education, ...
(published in: China Economic Review, 2016, 37(0), 154-165)
J31, J61, J64
9437 Martyn J. Andrews
Thorsten Schank
Richard Upward
Do Foreign Workers Reduce Trade Barriers? Microeconomic Evidence
This paper provides evidence that foreign workers reduce firms' trade costs and thus increase the probability that firms export. This informs both the literature on trade costs and the microeconomic ...
(published in World Economy, 2017, 40(9), 1750-1774 )
F16, F22
9435 Eric S. Lin
Yu-Lung Lu
The Educational Achievement of Pupils with Immigrant and Native Mothers: Evidence from Taiwan
This paper takes advantage of the Taiwan Assessment of Student Achievement data set to empirically evaluate whether the test score differentials between pupils with immigrant and native mothers are ...
(published in: Asia Pacific Journal of Education, 2016, 36 (1), 48-72)
A2, I2
9434 George J. Borjas
Ilpo Kauppinen
Panu Poutvaara
Self?Selection of Emigrants: Theory and Evidence on Stochastic Dominance in Observable and Unobservable Characteristics
We show that the Roy model has more precise predictions about the self-selection of migrants than previously realized. The same conditions that have been shown to result in positive or negative ...
(published in: Economic Journal, 2019, 129, 143–171)
F22, J61
9433 Ingo E. Isphording
Marc Piopiunik
Núria Rodríguez-Planas
Speaking in Numbers: The Effect of Reading Performance on Math Performance among Immigrants
This paper is the first to estimate a causal effect of immigrant students' reading performance on their math performance. To overcome endogeneity issues due to unobserved ability, we apply an IV ...
(published in: Economics Letters, 2016, 139, 52-56)
I21, I24, Z13
9431 Lorenzo Cappellari
Antonio Di Paolo
Bilingual Schooling and Earnings: Evidence from a Language-in-Education Reform
We exploit the 1983 language-in-education reform that introduced Catalan alongside Spanish as medium of instruction in Catalan schools to estimate the labour market value of bilingual education. ...
(revised version published in: Economics of Education Review, 2018, 64, 90–101)
J24, J31, I28
9430 Ahmed Elsayed
Andries de Grip
Didier Fouarge
Raymond Montizaan
Gradual Retirement, Financial Incentives, and Labour Supply of Older Workers: Evidence from a Stated Preference Analysis
Using data from a stated preferences experiment in the Netherlands, we find that replacing full-time pension schemes with schemes that offer gradual retirement opportunities induce workers to retire ...
(published in: Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 2018, 150, 277-294)
J14, J26
9429 Giulia Canzian
Samuele Poy
Simone Schüller
Broadband Diffusion and Firm Performance in Rural Areas: Quasi-Experimental Evidence
This article analyzes the causal impact of advanced broadband accessibility on firm performance. We exploit a unique local policy intervention of a staged broadband infrastructure installation across ...
(revised version published in: Regional Science and Urban Economics, 2019, 77, 87–103. )
O33, J24, L24, L26
9428 Hans Fricke
Markus Frölich
Martin Huber
Michael Lechner
Endogeneity and Non-Response Bias in Treatment Evaluation: Nonparametric Identification of Causal Effects by Instruments
This paper proposes a nonparametric method for evaluating treatment effects in the presence of both treatment endogeneity and attrition/non-response bias, using two instrumental variables. Making use ...
(published in: Journal of Applied Econometrics, 2020, 35 (5), 481-504)
C14, C21, C23, C24, C26
9427 Nikos Askitas
Trend-Spotting in the Housing Market
I create a time series of weekly ratios of Google searches, in the US, on buying and selling in the Real Estate Category of Google Trends. I call this ratio the Google US Housing Market BUSE Index or ...
(published in: Cityscape - A Journal of Policy Development and Research, 2016, 18 (3), 185-198)
C81, E65, G21, R31
9426 Nick Drydakis
Brain Types and Wages
We examine the association between brain types and wages using the UK Behavioural Study dataset for the period 2011 to 2013 (four waves). By applying Empathising-Systemising Theory (E-S), the ...
(published in: Manchester School, 2017, 85 (2), 183 - 211)
J24, J31
9425 José Ignacio Gimenez-Nadal
José Alberto Molina
Jorge Velilla
Excess Commuting in the US: Differences between the Self-Employed and Employees
In this paper, we propose a new spatial framework to model excess commuting of workers and we show empirical differences between the self-employed and employees in the US. In a theoretical framework ...
(published as "The commuting behavior of workers in the United States: differences between the employed and the self-employed" in: Journal of Transport Geography, 2018, 66, 19-29)
R20, R41, J64
9424 Michčle Belot
Jonathan James
Patrick J. Nolen
Incentives and Children's Dietary Choices: A Field Experiment in Primary Schools
We conduct a field experiment in 31 primary schools in England to test the effectiveness of different temporary incentive schemes, an individual based incentive scheme and a competitive scheme, on ...
(published in: Journal of Health Economics, 2016, 50, 213-229)
J13, I18, I28, H51, H52
9423 Gilles Saint-Paul
Bobos in Paradise: Urban Politics and the New Economy
This paper provides some elements to explain the observed takeover in some urban areas of a new kind of elite associated with new economy jobs, also known as "bourgeois bohčme" (bobos). This takeover ...
(published in: Economics, 2018, 12 (1), 20180056)
H7, R3, R4, R5
9422 Claudio Fassio
Sona Kalantaryan
Alessandra Venturini
Human Resources and Innovation: Total Factor Productivity and Foreign Human Capital
The objective of this paper is to analyse the role of migrants in innovation in Europe. We use Total Factor Productivity as a measure of innovation and focus on the three largest European countries ...
(published as 'Foreign Human Capital and Total Factor Productivity: A Sectoral Approach' in: Review of Income and Wealth, 2020, 66 (3), 613 - 646)
F22, F66, O31, O32
9421 Daniele Vignoli
Alessandra Venturini
Elena Pirani
Female Migration and Native Marital Stability: Insights from Italy
In this paper, we argue that the size and the composition of the female migrant population in a given area can affect the marital stability of natives. We take Italy as a case-study and we offer ...
(published in :Journal of Family and Economic, 2017, 38 (5), 118-128)
F22, F66, J61, J12, O31, O32
9420 Sarah Bohn
Magnus Lofstrom
Steven Raphael
Do E-Verify Mandates Improve Labor Market Outcomes of Low-Skilled Native and Legal Immigrant Workers?
We examine the impact of state level legislation against the hiring of unauthorized immigrants on employment opportunities among competing low-skilled workers. Our focus is on the role of E-Verify ...
(published in: Southern Economic Journal, 2015, 81 (4), 960–979)
J8, J15, J18, J21, J31, J61
9418 Jesús Fernández-Huertas Moraga
Hillel Rapoport
Tradable Refugee-Admission Quotas (TRAQs), the Syrian Crisis and the New European Agenda on Migration
The Syrian Civil War gave rise to the largest refugee flight reaching Europe since the Yugoslavian wars in the 1990s. The crisis evidenced the deficiencies of the European Union Asylum Policy, which ...
(published in: IZA Journal of European Labor Studies, 2015, 4:23)
F22, F5, H87, I3, K33, O19
9417 Ghazala Azmat
Rosa Ferrer
Gender Gaps in Performance: Evidence from Young Lawyers
This paper documents and studies the gender gap in performance among associate lawyers in the United States. Unlike other high-skilled professions, the legal profession assesses performance using ...
(published in: Journal of Political Economy, 2017, 125 (5), 1306-1355)
M52, J16, K40, J44
9416 John V. Winters
Is Economics a Good Major for Future Lawyers? Evidence from Earnings Data
The current study examines earnings differences for practicing lawyers by undergraduate major with a focus on economics majors. Some majors do much better than others. Economics majors tend to do ...
(published in: Journal of Economic Education, 2016, 47 (2), 187-191)
I20, I26, J24, J31
9415 Volker Grossmann
Aderonke Osikominu
Marius Osterfeld
Are Sociocultural Factors Important for Studying a Science University Major?
This paper examines the role of the sociocultural background of students for choosing STEM fields in university. We combine rich survey data on university graduates in Switzerland with municipality ...
(published in: Oxford Economic Papers, 2020, 72 (2), 374-369)
I20, C81
9414 Tommaso Colussi
Social Ties in Academia: A Friend is a Treasure
This paper employs a unique dataset on articles, authors and editors of the top general interest journals in economics to investigate the role of social connections in the publication process. Ties ...
(published in: Review of Economics and Statistics, 2018, 100 (1), 45-50 )
A1, I23, J24
9411 Cristian Bartolucci
Francesco Devicienti
Ignacio Monzón
Identifying Sorting in Practice
We propose a novel methodology to uncover the sorting pattern in the labor market. Our methodology exploits the additional information contained in profits, which complements the information from ...
(published in. American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, 2018, 10 (4), 408 - 438)
J6, J31, L2
9410 Francesco Devicienti
Paolo Naticchioni
Andrea Ricci
Temporary Employment, Demand Volatility and Unions: Firm-Level Evidence
This paper investigates the effect of workplace unionization and product market volatility on firms' propensity to use temporary employment. Using Italian firm level data, we show that unionization ...
(published in: Industrial and Labor Relation Review, 2018, 71 (1), 174-207 )
J51, J23, J24
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