IZA - All published DPs

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No. Author(s) Title JEL Class.
16256 Erik Hernaes
Simen Markussen
John Piggott
Knut Røed
The Impact of Pension Reform on Employment, Retirement and Disability Insurance Claims
We evaluate a comprehensive reform of Norwegian early retirement institutions in 2011 through the lens of a parsimonious random utility choice model. The reform radically changed work incentives ...
(published in: Journal of Population Economics, 2024, 37, 76)
H55, J22
16255 Björn Anders Gustafsson
Ding Sai
China's Urban Poor – Comparing Twice Poverty between Residents and Migrants in 2013 and 2018
Using data from the China Household Income Project in 2013 and 2018, this paper studies relative poverty among rural hukou holders living in urban China and urban hukou holders. People living in ...
(published in: China Economic Review, 2023, 80, 102012)
I32, P36, R23
16252 Gautam Anand
Aishwarya Atluri
Lee Crawfurd
Todd Pugatch
Ketki Sheth
Improving School Management in Low and Middle Income Countries: A Systematic Review
Improving school quality in low and middle income countries (LMICs) is a global priority. One way to improve quality may be to improve the management skills of school leaders. In this systematic ...
(published in: Economics of Education Review, 2023, 97, 102464)
I21, I25, I28
16251 Martina Celidoni
Joan Costa-Font
Luca Salmasi
Mobility Restrictions and Alcohol Use during Lockdown: 'A Still and Dry Pandemic for the Many'?
Unexpected mobility disruptions during lockdown during the first wave of COVID-19 became 'tipping points' with the potential to alter pre-pandemic routines sensitive to socialisation. This paper ...
(published in: Economics & Human Biology, 2023, 50,101268)
I13, I18
16248 Nathan Kettlewell
Yuting Zhang
Financial Incentives and Private Health Insurance Demand on the Extensive and Intensive Margins
In countries with dual public and private healthcare systems, individuals are often incentivised to purchase private health insurance through subsidies and penalty. We use administrative data from ...
(published in: Journal of Health Economics, 2024, 94, 102863)
I13, I18, I12
16247 Jonathan Colmer
Jennifer Doleac
Access to Guns in the Heat of the Moment: More Restrictive Gun Laws Mitigate the Effect of Temperature on Violence
Gun violence is a major problem in the United States, and extensive prior work has shown that higher temperatures increase violent behavior. In this paper, we consider whether restricting the ...
(published online in: Review of Economics and Statistics, 29 November 2023)
K42, Q51, I18
16245 Francesco Campo
Sara Giunti
Mariapia Mendola
Giulia Tura
Political Backlash to Refugee Settlement: Cultural and Economic Drivers
The 2015 refugee crisis in Europe fueled anti-immigration sentiment in receiving areas, with potential unintended consequences for refugee integration. We investigate the heterogeneity of political ...
(forthcoming in: Journal of Public Economics)
J15, H53, I38
16244 Hélène Périvier
Gregory Verdugo
Where Are the Fathers? The Effects of Earmarking Parental Leave on Fathers in France
Does providing nontransferable months of parental leave earmarked to fathers, as mandated by the European Union to its member countries since 2019, increase their participation? To answer that ...
(published in: Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 2024, 77 (1), 88-118)
J16, D13, J18
16242 Santiago Budría
Alejandro Betancourt-Odio
Eszter Wirth
Does Internal Locus of Control Get You Out of Homelessness?
This paper examines the role of internal locus of control in shaping transitions into homelessness. The data is taken from a longitudinal Australian dataset drawn from a sample of vulnerable ...
(published in: Economic Letters, 2023, 230, 111249)
D31, I32, C23
16239 Rodrigo Oliveira
Alei Santos
Edson Severnini
Bridging the Gap: Mismatch Effects and Catch-up Dynamics in a Brazilian College Affirmative Action
Affirmative action in higher education can lead to mismatch, where students admitted through preferential treatment struggle academically due to inadequate preparation before college. Although some ...
(published in: Economics of Education Review, 2024, 98, 102501)
I23, I24, I28, J15
16238 Elizabeth Brainerd
Olga Malkova
Maternity Benefits and Marital Stability after Birth: Evidence from the Soviet Baltic Republics
Can a policy intervention in the stressful first year after a birth affect marital stability? We examine this question using a large expansion in maternity benefits in 1982 in the Baltic countries of ...
(published in: Journal of Population Economics, 2023, 36 (4), 2309-2345)
J12, J16, J18, P2, P3
16237 Clemente Pignatti
Zachary Parolin
The Effects of an Unconditional Cash Transfer on Mental Health in the United States
Mental health conditions have worsened in many countries in recent decades. The provision of unconditional cash transfers may be one effective policy strategy for improving mental health, but causal ...
(published in: Healthl Economics, 2024, 33 (10), 2253-2287)
H51, I18, J18
16236 Karen Clay
Alex Hollingsworth
Edson Severnini
The Impact of Lead Exposure on Fertility, Infant Mortality, and Infant Birth Outcomes
Lead exposure has detrimental effects on fertility, infants, children, and adults. Despite the success in removing lead from on-road gasoline, industrial and aviation emissions continue to pose a ...
(published in: Review of Environmental Economics and Policy; 2024, 18 (2), 301–320)
I120, Q530, Q580
16230 Maria Zhu
New Evidence on the Underrepresentation of Asian Americans in Leadership Positions
For decades, Asian Americans have been characterized as a "model minority" due to perceived success in educational attainment and labor market outcomes. However, there are concerns that Asians remain ...
(published in: Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 2024, 227, 106679)
J01, J15
16229 Karen Clay
Joshua Lewis
Edson Severnini
The Historical Impact of Coal on Cities
Historically coal has offered both benefits and costs to urban areas. Benefits include coal's role in fueling industry and thus employment. The primary costs are air pollution and its impact on human ...
(published in: Regional Science and Urban Economics, 2024, 107, 103951)
N52, N72, O13, Q53, Q56
16227 Stefania Albanesi
António Dias da Silva
Juan F. Jimeno
Ana Lamo
Alena Wabitsch
New Technologies and Jobs in Europe
We examine the link between labour market developments and new technologies such as artificial intelligence (AI) and software in 16 European countries over the period 2011- 2019. Using data for ...
(published in: Economic Policy, 2025, 40 (121), 71–139)
J23, O33
16225 Luca Flabbi
Mauricio Tejada
Are Informal Self-Employment and Informal Employment as Employee Behaviorally Distinct Labor Force States?
The paper performs both a parametric and non-parametric analysis to address a fundamental question in the growing literature using search models to study labor market informality: should informal ...
(published in: Economics Letters, 2023, 231, 111278, October)
J46, J64, O17
16223 Simen Markussen
Knut Røed
The Rising Influence of Family Background on Early School Performance
We use administrative data from Norway to examine recent trends in the association between parents' prime age earnings rank and offspring's educational performance rank by age 15/16. We show that the ...
(published in: Economics of Education Review, 2023, 97, article 102491)
I24, J62
16219 Tony Fang
Tingting Zhang
John Hartley
Examining the Determinants of Managers' Hiring Attitudes Towards Immigrant Workers: Evidence from an Employer Survey
Using a representative survey of 801 employers across Atlantic Canada, we empirically test various factors associated with employer hiring attitudes towards international migrants. Our results ...
(published online in: Journal of Immigrants and Refugee Studies, 11 June 2023 )
J23, J61, J63, J68
16217 Vegar Bjørnshagen
Dan-Olof Rooth
Elisabeth Ugreninov
Disability, Gender and Hiring Discrimination: A Field Experiment
This article examines disability discrimination in the hiring process and explores variation in how the intersection of disability and gender shapes employers' hiring behavior by occupational context ...
(published online in: European Societies, 01 January 2025)
I14, J14, J23, J64, J71
16216 Zuzanna Kowalik
Piotr Lewandowski
Pawel Kaczmarczyk
Job Quality Gaps between Migrant and Native Gig Workers: Evidence from Poland
The gig economy has grown worldwide, opening labour markets but raising concerns about precariousness. Using a tailored, quantitative survey in Poland, we study taxi and delivery platform drivers' ...
(published in: New Technology, Work and Employment, 2025, 40 (3), 468-482.)
J28, J61, J21
16215 Didier Fouarge
Pascal Heß
Preference-Choice Mismatch and University Dropout
Drawing on data from the German National Educational Panel Study (NEPS), we show that students who select majors that do not match their occupational preferences prior to enrolling in university are ...
(pubished in: Labour Economics, 2023, 83, 102405)
J24, D83
16212 Dave E. Marcotte
Katherine Engel
Baby Bump? Birth Month, Family Income, and Early Childhood Development
Federal and state tax policies in the U.S. are save families with babies born just before the end of the year thousands of dollars in tax liability. Because this income windfall is realized during ...
(published in: Economics & Human, 2024, 54, 101409)
J13, D1
16209 Viola Angelini
Joan Costa-Font
Health and Wellbeing Spillovers of a Partner's Cancer Diagnosis
Major health shocks can have far-reaching consequences on the welfare of an individual's support and emotional network. This paper investigates both long-term and short-term spillovers of a major ...
(published in: Journal of Economic Behaviour and Organisation, 2023, 212, 422 - 437 )
I18, J14
16207 Xin Meng
China's 40 Years Demographic Dividend and Labor Supply: The Quantity Myth
In the past forty years the Chinese economy achieved miracle growth and many attributed a significant part of this to China's favourable labour supply flowing from the "demographic dividend": a ...
(published in: Asian Development Review, 2023, 40 (2), 111-144 )
J10, J11, J21
16205 Jeffrey P. Carpenter
Alex Lyford
Mingfang Zhang
A Behaviorally-Validated Warm Glow Questionnaire
Measuring the social preferences of economic agents using experiments has become common place. This process, while incentive compatible, is costly and time consuming, making it infeasible in many ...
(published in: Journal of the Economic Sciene Association, 2024, 10, 310–329 )
C91, D64, D91, H41
16204 Gökay Demir
Labor Market Frictions and Spillover Effects from Publicly Announced Sectoral Minimum Wages
This paper analyzes the spillover effects of the first sectoral minimum wage in Germany. Using a triple differences estimation, the study examines the impact of public discussion and announcement of ...
(updated version available as DP 17510)
J31, J38, J42, J62
16202 Daniel L. Millimet
Marc Bellemare
Fixed Effects and Causal Inference
Across many disciplines, the fixed effects estimator of linear panel data models is the default method to estimate causal effects with nonexperimental data that are not confounded by time-invariant, ...
(forthcoming as 'On the (Mis)Use of the Fixed Effects Estimator' in: Oxford Bulletin of Economics & Statistics, 2025)
C23, C51, C52
16201 Alina Sorgner
COVID-19 and Entrepreneurship
This chapter presents the results of a systematic review of literature (SLR) on impacts of Covid-19 on entrepreneurship published in the first three years since the outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic, ...
(published in: Zimmermann, K.F. (ed.) Handbook of Labor, Human Resources and Population Economics. Springer, Cham., 2023.)
L26
16200 Ernst Fehr
Gary Charness
Social Preferences: Fundamental Characteristics and Economic Consequences
We review the vast literature on social preferences by assessing what is known about their fundamental properties, their distribution in the broader population, and their consequences for important ...
((this version: March 2024) published in: Journal of Economic Literature, Journal of Economic Literature, 2025, 63 (2), 440–514)
D0, D2, D9, H0, J0, P0
16199 Nicoletta Corrocher
Daniele Moschella
Jacopo Staccioli
Marco Vivarelli
Innovation and the Labor Market: Theory, Evidence and Challenges
This paper deals with the complex relationship between innovation and the labor market, analyzing the impact of new technological advancements on overall employment, skills and wages. After a ...
(published in: Industrial and Corporate Change, 2024, 33 (3), 519–540)
O33
16194 Zachary Parolin
Rafael Pintro Schmitt
Gøsta Esping-Andersen
Peter Fallesen
The Intergenerational Persistence of Poverty in High-Income Countries
Exposure to childhood poverty increases the likelihood of adult poverty. However, past research offers conflicting accounts of cross-national variation in the strength of the intergenerational ...
(published as 'Intergenerational persistence of poverty in five high-income countries' in: Nature Human Behaviour, 2025, 9, 254–267 )
I32, I38
16192 Suzanne Duryea
Rafael Perez Ribas
Breno Sampaio
Gustavo R. Sampaio
Giuseppe Trevisan
Who Benefits from Tuition-Free, Top-Quality Universities? Evidence from Brazil
This paper investigates the long-term impact on earnings of attending a tuition-free, top-quality university in Brazil. We identify the causal effect through a sharp discontinuity in an admission ...
(published in: Economics of Education Review, 2023, 96, 102423)
H52, I23, I26
16191 Wim Naudé
We Already Live in a Degrowth World, and We Do Not like It
The Degrowth Movement calls for "degrowth" – a reduction in GDP in advanced economies – to avert an ecological crisis. This paper argues that the Degrowth Movement misses that the West is already in ...
(published in: W. Naudé (ed.), Economic Growth and Societal Collapse: Beyond Green Growth and Degrowth Fairy Tales, Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke, 2023)
O40, O33, D01, D64
16189 Jan K. Brueckner
Matthew E. Kahn
Jerry Nickelsburg
How Do Airlines Cut Fuel Usage, Reducing Their Carbon Emissions?
Airline fuel consumption is costly for the firms and for society as well due to a climate-change externality. We study how fuel price changes affect cost-minimizing choices by airlines that have ...
(published in: Economics of Transportation, 2024, 38, 100358)
R4, Q54
16188 Ronald L. Oaxaca
Eva Sierminska
Oaxaca-Blinder Meets Kitagawa: What Is the Link?
Recently, papers have started combining the naming of two popular decomposition methods: the Oaxaca-Blinder method and the Kitagawa method, a popular method in demographics and sociology. Although ...
(published in: PLoS One, 2025, 20 (5), e0321874.)
A10, B41, J0
16186 Jan Gromadzki
Labor Supply Effects of a Universal Cash Transfer
I investigate the labor supply effects of the introduction of a large unconditional cash benefit. I exploit the unique design of the child benefit program in Poland to identify the income effects of ...
(published in: Journal of Public Economics, 2024, 239, 105248)
I38, J21, J22
16184 Jason W. Miller
Jonathan Phares
Stephen V. Burks
Job Creation and Job Destruction Dynamics in the U.S. Truck Transportation Industry, 1995-2019
Every year, approximately 27% of all jobs in the U.S. truck transportation sector (NAICS 484) are reshuffled across motor carriers as existing carriers grow or shrink, new entrants begin operations, ...
(revised version published as 'Job Gain and Job Loss Dynamics in the Truck Transportation Industry' in: Journal of Business Logistics, 2024, 45 (3), e123912024)
J21, J63, L92
16181 Marco Alberto De Benedetto
Maria De Paola
Vincenzo Scoppa
Janna Smirnova
Erasmus Program and Labor Market Outcomes: Evidence from a Fuzzy Regression Discontinuity Design
We study the impact that participation in the Erasmus program produces on a number of labor market outcomes. By implementing a Fuzzy Regression Discontinuity Design, we show that participating in the ...
(published in: Labour Economics, 2025, 93, 102675)
C26, D04, I23, I26, J00
16180 Anna Adamecz
John Jerrim
Jean-Baptiste Pingault
Nikki Shure
Overconfident Boys: The Gender Gap in Mathematics Self-Assessment
It is well established that boys perceive themselves to be better in mathematics than girls, even when their ability is the same. We examine the drivers of this male overconfidence in self-assessed ...
(published as 'Peers, parents, and self-perceptions: the gender gap in mathematics self-assessment' in: Journal of Population Economics, 2025, 38, 33 (2025))
I24, J16
16179 Eugene Malthouse
Charlie Pilgrim
Thomas Hills
Daniel Sgroi
When Fairness Is Not Enough: The Disproportionate Contributions of the Poor in a Collective Action Problem
Many of our most pressing challenges, from combating climate change to dealing with pandemics, are collective action problems: situations in which individual and collective interests conflict with ...
(published in: Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2023, 152 (11), 3229–3242)
C92, D91, D63
16178 Karina Doorley
Dora Tuda
Luke Duggan
Will Childcare Subsidies Increase the Labour Supply of Mothers in Ireland?
The cost of childcare has a significant impact on the decision of parents – particularly mothers – to work. Prior to the introduction of subsidies for formal childcare in Ireland in 2019 through the ...
(published in: Fiscal Studies, 2025, 46 (2), 239-259)
J13, J22, C25
16169 Mattia Filomena
Matteo Picchio
Unsafe Temperatures, Unsafe Jobs: The Impact of Weather Conditions on Work-Related Injuries
We estimate the impact of temperatures on work-related accident rates in Italy by using daily data on weather conditions matched to administrative daily data on work-related accidents. The ...
(published in: Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 2024, 224, 851-875)
J28, J81, Q52, Q54
16168 Matteo Bobba
Veronica Frisancho
Marco Pariguana
Perceived Ability and School Choices: Experimental Evidence and Scale-up Effects
This paper studies an information intervention designed and implemented in the context of a school assignment mechanism in Mexico City. We find that providing students from socio-economically ...
(this paper is an updated version of IZA DP No. 10360 (2016).)
D83, I21, I24, J24
16165 Martin B. Hackmann
Vincent Pohl
Nicolas R. Ziebarth
Patient versus Provider Incentives in Long-Term Care
How do patient and provider incentives affect the provision of long-term care? Our analysis of 551 thousand nursing home stays yields three main insights. First, Medicaid-covered residents prolong ...
(published in: American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, 2024, 16 (3), 178–218)
H51, H75, I11, I13, I18, J14
16164 Simone Moriconi
Giovanni Peri
Riccardo Turati
Are Immigrants More Left Wing than Natives?
We analyze whether second-generation immigrants have different political preferences relative to children of citizens. Using data on individual voting behavior in 22 European countries between 2001 ...
(published as 'Analyzing political preferences of second-generation immigrants across the rural–urban divide', in: Journal of Urban Economics, 2025, 146, 103740.)
D72, J61, P16, Z1
16163 Luca Fumarco
S. Michael Gaddis
Francesco Sarracino
I. Snoddy
Sendemails: An Automated Email Package with Multiple Applications
Correspondence audits are a popular method to examine discrimination in a causal framework. However, they often require sending hundreds or thousands of emails to subjects. The sendemails package ...
(revised version published in:Stata Journal, 2024, 24 (1), 130-160 )
C8
16162 Benjamin Harrell
Luca Fumarco
Patrick Button
David J. Schwegman
Kyla Denwood
The Impact of COVID-19 on Access to Mental Healthcare Services
The COVID-19 pandemic increased the rate of mental health disorders, as well as demand for mental health services. It remains unclear, however, the extent to which the pandemic impacted access to ...
(published in: AEA Papers and Proceedings, 2023, 113, 420 - 422)
C93, I14, J16, I11, I18, J15
16161 Grace Lordan
Warn N. Lekfuangfu
Stephen versus Stephanie? Does Gender Matter for Peer-to-Peer Career Advice
Occupational segregation is one of the major causes of the gender pay gap. We probe the possibility that individual beliefs regarding gender stereotypes established in childhood contribute to ...
(forthcoming in: Journal of Human Capital)
J24
16159 Kazuhiro Kumo
Cristiano Perugini
Religion, Ideology and Fertility
In this paper, we investigate how attachment to religion is connected to conservative gender role beliefs and to what extent they, in turn, materialize into fertility decisions. We also test the ...
(published as 'Religion, Gender Norms and Fertility in Muslim Post-Communist Economies' in: Post-Communist Economies, 2024, 36 (8), 1035–1065. )
J13, J16, Z12, P20
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