IZA - All published DPs

Logo
No. Author(s) Title JEL Class.
15656 Lauren Hoehn-Velasco
Michael Pesko
Serena Phillips
The Long-Term Impact of In-Utero Cigarette Taxes on Adult Prenatal Smoking
This study examines the long-term link between in-utero cigarette taxes and adult prenatal smoking. We use U.S. birth certificate records to demonstrate that exposure to higher in-utero cigarette ...
(published in: American Journal of Health Economics, 2023, 9 (4), 605–648)
I12, I18, H71, H75
15655 Rahi Abouk
Charles Courtemanche
Dhaval M. Dave
Bo Feng
Abigail S. Friedman
J. Catherine Maclean
Michael Pesko
Joseph J. Sabia
Samuel Safford
Intended and Unintended Effects of E-cigarette Taxes on Youth Tobacco Use
Over the past decade, rising youth use of e-cigarettes and other electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS) has contributed to aggressive regulation by state and local governments. Between 2010 and ...
(published in: Journal of Health Economics, 2023, 87, 102720)
H2, I1, I18
15654 Andrew E. Clark
Conchita D'Ambrosio
Anthony Lepinteur
Marriage as Insurance: Job Protection and Job Insecurity in France
Job insecurity is one of the risks that workers face on the labour market. As with any risk, individuals can choose to insure against it, and we here consider marriage as one potential source of this ...
(published in: Review of Economics of the Household, 2023, 21 (4), 1157-1190)
I38, J13, J18
15653 Anthony Lepinteur
Andrew E. Clark
Ada Ferrer-i-Carbonell
Alan Piper
Carsten Schröder
Conchita D'Ambrosio
Gender, Loneliness and Happiness during COVID-19
We analyse a measure of loneliness from a representative sample of German individuals interviewed in both 2017 and at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020. Both men and women felt lonelier ...
(published in: Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics, 2022, 101, 101952)
I10, I14, I18, I30
15652 Maria Zumbuehl
Stefanie Hof
Stefan C. Wolter
Private Tutoring and Academic Achievement in a Selective Education System
Decisions about admission to selective schools usually rely on performance measures. To reach a required achievement threshold students may make use of additional resources, such as private tutoring. ...
(published online in: Education Economics, 25 July 2024)
D82, I21, I24
15651 Matthew Fisher-Post
Nicolas Herault
Roger Wilkins
Distributional National Accounts for Australia, 1991-2018
We produce estimates of the full distribution of all national income in Australia for the period 1991 to 2018, by combining household survey with administrative tax microdata and adjusting to match ...
(published online in: Journal of Economic Inequality, 18 July 2024)
D31, I31, C81
15650 Tom Krebs
Martin Scheffel
Optimal Allocations in Growth Models with Private Information
This paper considers a class of growth models with idiosyncratic human capital risk and private information about individual effort choices (moral hazard). Households are infinitely-lived and have ...
(published in: Economic Theory, 2024, 78, 125 - 154)
D51, D82, E20
15649 Henri Bussink
Bas ter Weel
Costs and Benefits of an Individual Learning Account (ILA): A Simulation Analysis for the Netherlands
This study analyses costs and benefits of a public-private funded individual learning account (ILA) for the labour force in the Netherlands. We consider an ILA that is funded by subsidies targeted at ...
(published in: Economic Modelling, 2023, 118, 106085)
J24, J33
15648 Sarah Gust
Eric A. Hanushek
Ludger Woessmann
Global Universal Basic Skills: Current Deficits and Implications for World Development
How far is the world away from ensuring that every child obtains the basic skills needed to be internationally competitive? And what would accomplishing this mean for world development? Based on the ...
(published in: Journal of Development Economics, 2024, 166, 103205)
I25, O15, O47
15645 Petri Böckerman
Mika Haapanen
Edvard Johansson
Lost Mind, Lost Job? Unequal Effects of Corporate Downsizings on Employees
We analyze whether employees with diagnosed mental health disorders have a higher probability of being laid off during corporate downsizing. Our analysis is based on nationwide administrative data on ...
(published in: German Journal of Human Resource Management, 2024, 38 (4), 413—429)
I10, I12, J64
15643 Ellam Kulati
Michal Myck
Giacomo Pasini
Temporal Discounting in Later Life
We explore intertemporal decision-making in later life by looking at temporal preference heterogeneity among older individuals. Using choice tasks responses from Poland collected as part of the ...
(published in: Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, 2023, 213, 87-101)
D12, D15, C83, J14
15641 Satoshi Araki
Andrea Bassanini
Andrew Green
Luca Marcolin
Cristina Volpin
Labor Market Concentration and Competition Policy across the Atlantic
Drawing upon data from the largest cross-country study of labor market concentration to date, this paper analyzes the level of concentration of labor input markets in Europe and North America and ...
(published in: The University of Chicago Law Review, 2023, 90 (2), 339-378)
J31, J41, J42, L40
15640 Alena Bicakova
Klara Kaliskova
Is Longer Maternal Care Always Beneficial? The Impact of a Four-Year Paid Parental Leave
We study the impact of an extension of paid family leave from 3 to 4 years on child long- term outcomes. Using a difference-in-differences design and comparing the first-affected with the ...
(revised version published in: Journal of Population Economics, 2024, 37, 36 )
J13, J18, J21, J24
15639 Sonia R. Bhalotra
Damian Clarke
Selma Walther
Women's Careers and Family Formation
This paper discusses research on the relationship between fertility and women's labour force participation. It surveys methods used to obtain causal identification, and provides an overview of the ...
(published in: Klaus. F. Zimmermann (ed.), Handbook of Labor, Human Resources and Population Economics, Springer Nature, 2023)
J01, J13, O15
15638 Giuseppe Moscelli
Melisa Sayli
Marco Mello
Staff Engagement, Coworkers' Complementarity and Employee Retention: Evidence from English NHS Hospitals
Retention of skilled workers is essential for labour-intensive organisations like hospitals, where an excessive turnover of doctors and nurses can reduce the quality and quantity of services to ...
(published in: Economica, 2025, 92 (365), 42 - 83 (with Alberto Vesperoni))
C33, C36, I11, J22, J28, J63
15637 Oriana Bandiera
Ahmed Elsayed
Anton Heil
Andrea Smurra
Economic Development and the Organisation of Labour: Evidence from the Jobs of the World Project
The Jobs of the World Project is a public resource designed to enable research on jobs and poverty across and within countries over the entire development spectrum. At its core is a new data set ...
(published in: the Journal of the European Economic Association, 2022, 20 (6), 2226 - 2270)
O11, O12, J01, J20
15636 Joan Costa-Font
Cristina Vilaplana-Prieto
Health Shocks and Housing Downsizing: How Persistent Is 'Ageing in Place'?
Individual preferences for 'ageing in place' (AIP) in old age are not well understood. One way to test the strength of AIP preference is to investigate the effect of health shocks on residential ...
(published in: Journal of Economic Behaviour and Organisation, 2022, 204, 490-508 )
I18, G51, J61, R31
15634 Kjell G. Salvanes
Barton Willage
Alexander Willén
The Effect of Labor Market Shocks across the Life Cycle
Adverse economic shocks occur frequently and may cause individuals to reevaluate key life decisions in ways that have lasting consequences for themselves and the economy. These life decisions are ...
(published in: Journal of Labor Economics, 2024, 42 (1), 121–160)
I20, J63
15629 Yarine Fawaz
Pedro Mira
Social Isolation, Health Dynamics, and Mortality: Evidence across 21 European Countries
We provide a comprehensive picture of the health effects of social isolation using longitudinal data over 21 European countries (SHARE). First, using Cox regressions, we find a significant, strong ...
(published in: Journal of Population Economics, 2023, 36, 2483–2518)
I10, C41
15628 Octave De Brouwer
Ilan Tojerow
Old-Age Unemployment and Labor Supply: An Application to Belgium
Over the last two decades, most OECD countries have reformed their social security in order to make early departures from the labor market increasingly difficult. Despite the fiscal gains that are ...
(published in: Empirical Economics, 2024, 67, 253 - 587)
J26, J65
15621 Andreas Kuhn
The Times Have Changed: Tracking the Evolution of Gender Norms over Time
Data on job advertisements from 1950 up to 2020 reveal that there was a significant change among Swiss employers' stated preferences regarding their prospective employees' gender. More specifically, ...
(revised and partially expanded version published in: Research in Labor Economics, 2024, 52B, 131-170)
D91, J16
15620 Ben Lockwood
Nattavudh Powdthavee
Andrew J. Oswald
Are Environmental Concerns Deterring People from Having Children?
Are 'green' environmental concerns -- about climate change, biodiversity, pollution -- deterring today's citizens from having children? This paper, which we believe to be the first of its kind, ...
(published in: Ecological Economics, 2024, 220, 108184)
J1, Q50
15619 Stefan Denzler
Jens Ruhose
Stefan C. Wolter
'The Double Dividend of Training' – Labor Market Effects of Work-Related Continuous Education in Switzerland
This paper presents the first longitudinal estimates of the effect of work-related training on labor market outcomes in Switzerland. Using a novel dataset that links official census data on adult ...
(published as 'Labour market effects of work-related continuous education in Switzerland – evidence from administrative data' in: Economics of Education Review, 2025, 107, 102683)
I21, I26, J24, M53
15618 Felix Poege
Fabian Gaessler
Karin Hoisl
Dietmar Harhoff
Matthias Dorner
Filling the Gap: The Consequences of Collaborator Loss in Corporate R&D
We examine how collaborator loss affects knowledge workers in corporate R&D. We argue that such a loss affects the remaining collaborators not only by reducing their team-specific capital (as argued ...
(heavily revised version published online in: Management Science, 27 June 2025)
J62, O32, J24
15617 Francesco Devicienti
Elena Grinza
Alessandro Manello
Davide Vannoni
Employer Cooperation, Productivity, and Wages: New Evidence from Inter-Firm Formal Network Agreements
Using uniquely rich administrative matched employer-employee data, we investigate the impact of formal network agreements (FNAs) among firms under two perspectives. First, we assess the impact of ...
(published in: Economica, 2025, 92 (365), 1 - 41)
L14, D24, J31
15616 Can Tang
Zhong Zhao
Informal Institution Meets Child Development: Clan Culture and Child Labor in China
Using a national representative sample, the China Family Panel Studies, this paper explores the influences of clan culture, a hallmark of Chinese cultural history, on the prevalence of child labor in ...
(published in: Journal of Comparative Economics 2023, 51 (1), 277-294)
J22, J81, O15
15615 Dean Jolliffe
Samuel Kofi Tetteh-Baah
Identifying the Poor – Accounting for Household Economies of Scale in Global Poverty Estimates
Estimates of the number of people living in extreme poverty, as reported by the World Bank, figure prominently in international development dialogue and policy. An assumption underpinning these ...
(published in: World Development, 2024, 179, 106593)
I32, O10, O20
15614 Tiziano Ropele
Yuriy Gorodnichenko
Olivier Coibion
Inflation Expectations and Corporate Borrowing Decisions: New Causal Evidence
We match survey data of Italian firms that includes a repeated experiment in which information about inflation is randomly provided to firms over time with detailed credit data that covers the ...
(published in: European Journal of Political Economy, 2023, 77, 102316)
E02, E03
15613 Krzysztof Makarski
Joanna Tyrowicz
Preference for Redistribution during Structural Change with Labor Mobility Frictions
Thorough structural change occurs periodically across world economies. In a parsimonious overlapping generation setup with political economy, we present a novel result: structural change not only ...
(published in: European Journal of Political Economy, 2023, 77, 102316)
H10, Z1
15612 Giorgio Brunello
Dimitris Christelis
Anna Sanz-de-Galdeano
Anastasia Terskaya
Does College Selectivity Reduce Obesity? A Partial Identification Approach
We use data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health to investigate whether the quality of tertiary education -measured by college selectivity- causally affects obesity ...
(published in: Health Economics, 2024, 33 (10), 2306-2320)
I14, I12, I26, C14
15609 Sonia R. Bhalotra
Damian Clarke
Analysis of Twins
The occurrence of twin births has been widely used as a natural experiment. With a focus upon the use of twin births for identification of causal effects in economics, this chapter provides a ...
(published in: Klaus. F. Zimmermann (ed.), Handbook of Labor, Human Resources and Population Economics, Springer Nature, 2023)
D10, I26, J13, J24
15608 Irene Bertschek
Jörn Block
Alexander S. Kritikos
Caroline Stiel
German Financial State Aid during COVID-19 Pandemic: Higher Impact among Digitalized Self-Employed
In response to strong revenue and income losses that a large share of the self-employed faced during the COVID-19 pandemic, the German federal government introduced a €50bn emergency aid program. ...
(published in: Entrepreneurship & Regional Development, 2024, 36 (1–2), 76–97)
C14, H43, L25, L26, J68, O33
15606 Luis R. Martinez
Jonas Jessen
Guo Xu
A Glimpse of Freedom: Allied Occupation and Political Resistance in East Germany
This paper exploits the idiosyncratic line of contact separating Allied and Soviet troops within East Germany at the end of WWII to study political resistance in a non-democracy. When Nazi Germany ...
(published in: American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, 2023, 15 (1), 68-106)
F51, H10, N44, P20
15605 Magnus Henrekson
Dan Johansson
Johan Karlsson
To Be or Not to Be: The Entrepreneur in Neo-Schumpeterian Growth Theory
Based on a review of 700+ peer-reviewed articles since 1990, identified using text mining methodology and supervised machine learning, we analyze how neo-Schumpeterian growth theorists relate to the ...
(published in: Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, 2024, 48 (1), 104–140)
B40, O10, O30
15604 Rigissa Megalokonomou
Yi Zhang
How Good Am I? Effects and Mechanisms behind Salient Ranks
How can individuals respond to their ordinal ranking when they are not aware of it? We present evidence on the effects and mechanisms of achievement rank effects in middle schools when ranks are ...
(published in: European Economic Review, 2024, 170, 104870)
I21, J24
15602 Francisco Cabrera-Hernández
María Padilla-Romo
Cecilia Peluffo
Full-Time Schools and Educational Trajectories: Evidence from High-Stakes Exams
This paper estimates the effects of extending the school day during elementary school on students' education outcomes later in life. We do so in the context of Mexico City's metropolitan area, where ...
(published in: Economics of Education Review, 2023, 96, 102443)
I21, I25, J01
15601 Tito Boeri
Pierre Cahuc
Labor Market Insurance Policies in the XXI Century
The recovery from the Covid-19 crisis will force governments to accelerate transformation in their menu of labor market policy tools. The crisis was a stress test for unemployment insurance schemes ...
(published in: Annual Review of Economics, 2023, 15 (1), 1-22)
H5, J6
15597 Emily A. Beam
Social Media as a Recruitment and Data Collection Tool: Experimental Evidence on the Relative Effectiveness of Web Surveys and Chatbots
Online technologies enable lower-cost, rapid data collection, but concerns about access and data quality impede their use in global research. I conduct a randomized experiment in the Philippines to ...
(published in: Journal of Development Economics, 2023, 162, 103069)
C81, C83, C93, O15, I21
15595 Lara Bohnet
Susana Peralta
João Pereira dos Santos
Cousins from Overseas: The Labour Market Impact of a Major Forced Return Migration Shock
We study the labour market impact of the return of half a million Portuguese due to onset of the colonial war in 1974. Both the size and similarity with the native population (almost 80% were ...
(published in: European Economic Review, 2025, 172, 104925)
F22, J20, R23
15594 G.Jacob Blackwood
Cindy Cunningham
Matt Dey
Lucia Foster
Cheryl Grim
John C. Haltiwanger
Rachel Nesbit
Sabrina Wulff Pabilonia
Jay Stewart
Cody Tuttle
Zoltan Wolf
Opening the Black Box: Task and Skill Mix and Productivity Dispersion
An important gap in most empirical studies of establishment-level productivity is the limited information about workers' characteristics and their tasks. Skill-adjusted labor input measures have been ...
(published in: Susanto Basu, Lucy Eldridge, John Haltiwanger, and Erich Strassner (eds.), Technology, Productivity and Economic Growth, University of Chicago Press, 2025)
D24, J24, J31, L60
15590 Jeffrey P. Carpenter
Andrea Robbett
Measuring Socially Appropriate Social Preferences
We extend the literature structurally estimating social preferences by accounting for the desire to adhere to social norms. Our representative agent is strongly motivated by norms and failing to ...
(published in: Games and Economic Behavior 2024, 147, 517 - 532)
C91, D01, D91, D63, D30, C49
15589 Nicolas Lagios
Pierre-Guillaume Meon
Ilan Tojerow
Is Demonstrating against the Far Right Worth It? Evidence from French Presidential Elections
We study the electoral impact of protesting against the far right by investigating the demonstrations held during the 2002 French presidential elections against far-right candidate Jean-Marie Le Pen. ...
(published as 'Media, Spillovers and Social Norms: The Electoral Impact of Anti-Far-Right Protests in the 2002 French Election' in: Economic Journal, 2025, 135 (669), 1575–1608,)
D72
15587 Fenet Jima Bedaso
Uwe Jirjahn
Laszlo Goerke
Immigrants and Trade Union Membership: Does Integration into Society and Workplace Play a Moderating Role?
We hypothesize that incomplete integration into the workplace and society implies that immigrants are less likely to be union members than natives. Incomplete integration makes the usual mechanism ...
(revised version published in: British Journal of Industrial Relations, 2024, 62 (2), 262-292 (authored by Fenet Jima Bedaso and Uwe Jirjahn))
J15, J52, J61
15586 Abel Brodeur
Nikolai Cook
Carina Neisser
P-Hacking, Data Type and Data-Sharing Policy
In this paper, we examine the relationship between p-hacking and data-sharing policies for published articles. We collect 38,876 test statistics from 1,106 articles published in leading economic ...
(published in: Economic Journal, 2024, 134 (659), 985-1018)
A11, B41, C13, C40, I23
15585 Gozde Corekcioglu
Marco Francesconi
Astrid Kunze
Expansions in Paid Parental Leave and Mothers' Economic Progress
We examine the impact of government-funded universal paid parental leave extensions on the likelihood that mothers reach top-pay jobs and executive positions, using eight Norwegian reforms. Up to a ...
(published in: European Economic Review, 2024, 169, 104845)
H42, J13, J16, J18, M12, M14
15582 Lisa Marie Timm
Massimo Giuliodori
Paul Muller
Tax Incentives for High Skilled Migrants: Evidence from a Preferential Tax Scheme in the Netherlands
This paper examines to what extent an income tax exemption affects international mobility and wages of skilled immigrants. We study a preferential tax scheme for foreigners in the Netherlands, which ...
(published as 'Tax Incentives for Migrants With Mid-Level Earnings: Evidence From the Netherlands' in: American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, 2025, 17 (3), 42–79)
F22, J61, H24, H31
15581 Juan Pablo Rud
Michael Simmons
Gerhard Toews
Fernando Aragon
Job Displacement Costs of Phasing Out Coal
The reduction of carbon emissions will require a rapid phasing out of coal and the displacement of millions of coal miners. How much could this energy transition cost mining workers? We use the ...
(published in: Journal of Public Economics, 2024, 236, 105167)
labor displacement, energy transition, coal mines
15578 Arnab K. Basu
Ralitza Dimova
Monnet Benoit Patrick Gbakou
Romane Viennet
Parental Risk Preferences, Maternal Bargaining Power, and the Educational Progressions of Children: Lab-in-the-Field Evidence from Rural Côte D'Ivoire
We analyse the effect of parental risk preferences and a novel measure of maternal bargaining power over educational expenses - elicited via lab-in-the-field experiments in rural Côte d'Ivoire – on ...
(published in: Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics, 2023, 102, 101957)
C93, J43, O55
15576 Roland Benabou
Ania Jaroszewicz
George Loewenstein
It Hurts to Ask
We analyze the offering, asking, and granting of help or other benefits as a three-stage game with bilateral private information between a person in need of help and a potential help-giver. Asking ...
(published in: European Economic Review, 2025,171, 104911)
D03, D23, D64, D82, D83, D91
15573 Jorge Luis García
James J. Heckman
Three Criteria for Evaluating Social Programs
This paper examines the economic foundations of three criteria used for evaluating the costs and benefits of social programs. Some criteria do not consider the scale of programs or address the costs ...
(published in: Journal of Benefit-Cost Analysis, 2022, 13 (3), 281 - 286)
D61
 12991Result(s) returned for "All accepted Discussion Papers" 
(Previous 50 papers)  (Previous 10 papers)  | (Next 10 papers)  (Next 50 papers) 
 

© IZA  Impressum  Last updated: 2025-10-23  webmaster@iza.org    |   Bookmark this page    |   Print View