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The Price of Nails Since 1695: A Window into Economic Change Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2022-02-08 Daniel E. Sichel
This paper focuses on the price of nails since 1695 and the proximate source of changes in those prices. Why nails? They are a basic manufactured product whose form and quality have changed relatively little over the last three centuries, yet the process for producing them has changed dramatically. Accordingly, nails provide a useful prism through which to examine a wide range of economic and technological
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Isaiah Andrews, 2021 John Bates Clark Medalist Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2022-02-08 Anna Mikusheva, Jesse M. Shapiro
Isaiah Andrews is an exceptionally warm and caring person, a remarkable teacher, a collaborator and mentor, an exemplary contributor to his department and profession, and a brilliant econometrician. In this article, we review Isaiah’s contributions to econometric theory in the context of Isaiah’s receipt of the 2021 John Bates Clark Medal.
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Time Use and Gender in Africa in Times of Structural Transformation Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2022-02-08 Taryn Dinkelman, L. Rachel Ngai
Many African countries are still in the early stages of structural transformation. Typically, as economies move through the structural transformation, activities once conducted within the household are outsourced to the market. This has particular implications for women’s time use. In this paper, we document that current patterns of female time use in home production in several African countries closely
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Agricultural Technology in Africa Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2022-02-08 Tavneet Suri, Christopher Udry
We discuss recent trends in agricultural productivity in Africa and highlight how technological progress in agriculture has stagnated on the continent. We briefly review the literature that tries to explain this stagnation through the lens of particular constraints to technology adoption. Ultimately, none of these constraints alone can explain these trends. New research highlights pervasive heterogeneity
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The Puzzle of Falling US Birth Rates since the Great Recession Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2022-02-08 Melissa S. Kearney, Phillip B. Levine, Luke Pardue
This paper documents a set of facts about the dramatic decline in birth rates in the United States between 2007 and 2020 and explores possible explanations. The overall reduction in the birth rate reflects declines across many groups of women, including teens, Hispanic women, and college-educated white women. The Great Recession contributed to the decline in the early part of this period, but we are
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Labor Productivity Growth and Industrialization in Africa Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2022-02-08 Margaret McMillan, Albert Zeufack
Manufacturing has made an important contribution to raising living standards in many parts of the world. Concerns about premature deindustrialization have made some observers skeptical about the potential for manufacturing to play this role in Africa. But employment in African manufacturing has grown rapidly over the past 20 years. These employment gains have been accompanied by: (i) large increases
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Political Distortions, State Capture, and Economic Development in Africa Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2022-02-08 Nathan Canen, Leonard Wantchekon
This article studies the role of political distortions in driving economic growth and development in Africa. We first discuss how existing theories based on long-run structural factors (e.g., pre-colonial and colonial institutions, or ethnic diversity) may not capture new data patterns in the region, including changes to political regimes, growth patterns, and their variation across regions with similar
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Young Adults and Labor Markets in Africa Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2022-02-08 Oriana Bandiera, Ahmed Elsayed, Andrea Smurra, Céline Zipfel
Every year, millions of young adults join the labor market in Africa. This paper harmonizes surveys and censuses from 68 low- and middle-income countries to compare their job prospects to those of their counterparts in other low-income regions. We show that employment rates are similar at similar levels of development but that young adults in Africa are less likely to have a salaried job, especially
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Children and the US Social Safety Net: Balancing Disincentives for Adults and Benefits for Children. Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2022-01-01 Anna Aizer,Hilary Hoynes,Adriana Lleras-Muney
A hallmark of every developed nation is the provision of a social safety net-a collection of public programs that deliver aid to the poor. Because of their higher rates of poverty, children are often a major beneficiary of safety net programs. Countries vary considerably in both the amount of safety net aid to children and the design of their programs. The United States provides less aid to families
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Inequality in Early Care Experienced by US Children. Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2022-01-01 Sarah Flood,Joel McMurry,Aaron Sojourner,Matthew Wiswall
Using every major nationally representative dataset on parental and non-parental care provided to children up to age 6, we quantify differences in American children's care experiences by socioeconomic status (SES), proxied primarily with maternal education. Increasingly, higher-SES children spend less total time with their parents and more time in the care of others. Non-parental care for high-SES
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Neighborhoods Matter: Assessing the Evidence for Place Effects Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-11-04 Eric Chyn, Lawrence F. Katz
How does one's place of residence affect individual behavior and long-run outcomes? Understanding neighborhood and place effects has been a leading question for social scientists during the past half-century. Recent empirical studies using experimental and quasi-experimental research designs have generated new insights on the importance of residential neighborhoods in childhood and adulthood. This
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Rising Geographic Disparities in US Mortality Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-11-04 Benjamin K. Couillard, Christopher L. Foote, Kavish Gandhi, Ellen Meara, Jonathan Skinner
The twenty-first century has been a period of rising inequality in both income and health. In this paper, we find that geographic inequality in mortality for midlife Americans increased by about 70 percent between 1992 and 2016. This was not simply because states like New York or California benefited from having a high fraction of college-educated residents who enjoyed the largest health gains during
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The Economics of Policing and Public Safety Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-11-04 Emily Owens, Bocar Ba
The efficiency of any police action depends on the relative magnitude of its crime-reducing benefits and legitimacy costs. Policing strategies that are socially efficient at the city level may be harmful at the local level, because the distribution of direct costs and benefits of police actions that reduce victimization is not the same as the distribution of indirect benefits of feeling safe. In the
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Fragile Algorithms and Fallible Decision-Makers: Lessons from the Justice System Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-11-04 Jens Ludwig, Sendhil Mullainathan
Algorithms (in some form) are already widely used in the criminal justice system. We draw lessons from this experience for what is to come for the rest of society as machine learning diffuses. We find economists and other social scientists have a key role to play in shaping the impact of algorithms, in part through improving the tools used to build them.
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When Innovation Goes Wrong: Technological Regress and the Opioid Epidemic Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-11-04 David M. Cutler, Edward L. Glaeser
The fourfold increase in opioid deaths between 2000 and 2017 rivals even the COVID-19 pandemic as a health crisis for America. Why did it happen? Measures of demand for pain relief – physical pain and despair – are high and in many cases rising, but their increase was nowhere near as large as the increase in deaths. The primary shift is in supply, primarily of new forms of allegedly safer narcotics
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The Causal Effects of Place on Health and Longevity Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-11-04 Tatyana Deryugina, David Molitor
Life expectancy varies substantially across local regions within a country, raising conjectures that place of residence affects health. However, population sorting and other confounders make it difficult to disentangle the effects of place on health from other geographic differences in life expectancy. Recent studies have overcome such challenges to demonstrate that place of residence substantially
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The US Pretrial System: Balancing Individual Rights and Public Interests Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-11-04 Will Dobbie, Crystal S. Yang
In this article, we review a growing empirical literature on the effectiveness and fairness of the US pretrial system and discuss its policy implications. Despite the importance of this stage of the criminal legal process, researchers have only recently begun to explore how the pretrial system balances individual rights and public interests. We describe the empirical challenges that have prevented
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College Majors, Occupations, and the Gender Wage Gap Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-11-04 Carolyn M. Sloane, Erik G. Hurst, Dan A. Black
The paper assesses gender differences in pre-labor market specialization among the college-educated and highlights how those differences have evolved over time. Women choose majors with lower potential earnings (based on male wages associated with those majors) and subsequently sort into occupations with lower potential earnings given their major choice. These differences have narrowed over time, but
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Inside the Box: Safety, Health, and Isolation in Prison Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-11-04 Bruce Western
A large social science research literature examines the effects of prisons on crime and socioeconomic inequality, but the penal institution itself is often a black box overlooked in the analysis of its effects. This paper examines prisons and their role in rehabilitative programs and as venues for violence, health and healthcare, and extreme isolation through solitary confinement. Research shows that
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Next-Generation Policing Research: Three Propositions Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-11-04 Monica C. Bell
The Black Lives Matter movement has operated alongside a growing recognition among social scientists that policing research has been limited in its scope and outmoded in its assumptions about the nature of public safety. This essay argues that social science research on policing should reorient its conception of the field of policing, along with how the study of crime rates and police departments fit
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The Baker Hypothesis: Stabilization, Structural Reforms, and Economic Growth Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-07-29 Anusha Chari, Peter Blair Henry, Hector Reyes
In 1985, James A. Baker III's “Program for Sustained Growth” proposed a set of economic policy reforms including, inflation stabilization, trade liberalization, greater openness to foreign investment, and privatization, that he believed would lead to faster growth in countries then known as the Third World, but now categorized as emerging and developing economies (EMDEs). A country-specific, time-series
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Statistical Significance, p-Values, and the Reporting of Uncertainty Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-07-29 Guido W. Imbens
The use of statistical significance and p-values has become a matter of substantial controversy in various fields using statistical methods. This has gone as far as some journals banning the use of indicators for statistical significance, or even any reports of p-values, and, in one case, any mention of confidence intervals. I discuss three of the issues that have led to these often-heated debates
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The Great Unequalizer: Initial Health Effects of COVID-19 in the United States Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-07-29 Marcella Alsan, Amitabh Chandra, Kosali Simon
We measure inequities from the COVID-19 pandemic on mortality and hospitalizations in the United States during the early months of the outbreak. We discuss challenges in measuring health outcomes and health inequality, some of which are specific to COVID-19 and others that complicate attribution during most large health shocks. As in past epidemics, preexisting biological and social vulnerabilities
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Washington Consensus Reforms and Lessons for Economic Performance in Sub-Saharan Africa Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-07-29 Belinda Archibong, Brahima Coulibaly, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala
Over three decades after market-oriented structural reforms termed “Washington Consensus” policies were first implemented, we revisit the evidence on policy adoption and the effects of these policies on socio-economic performance in sub-Saharan African countries. We focus on three key ubiquitous reform policies around privatization, fiscal discipline, and trade openness and document significant improvements
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Retrospectives: James Buchanan: Clubs and Alternative Welfare Economics Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-07-29 Alain Marciano
James Buchanan wrote “An Economic Theory of Clubs” and invented clubs to support a form of welfare economics in which there is no social welfare function (SWF) and individual utility functions cannot be “read” by external observers. Clubs were a means to allow the implementation of individualized prices for public goods and services and to allow each individual to pay exactly the amount he wants to
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Tracking the Pandemic in Real Time: Administrative Micro Data in Business Cycles Enters the Spotlight Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-07-29 Joseph Vavra
In this paper I discuss the increasingly prominent role of administrative micro data in macroeconomics research. This type of data proved important for interpreting the causes and consequences of the Great Recession, and it has played a crucial role in shaping economists’ understanding of the COVID-19 pandemic in near real-time. I discuss a number of specific insights from this research while also
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Some Thoughts on the Washington Consensus and Subsequent Global Development Experience Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-07-29 Michael Spence
This paper discusses the Washington Consensus, its origins, and its insights in terms of subsequent development experience in a broad range of countries. I continue to find that when properly interpreted as a guide to the formulation of country-specific development strategies, the Washington Consensus has withstood the test of time quite well. In my view, subsequent experience, especially in Asia,
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Of Forking Paths and Tied Hands: Selective Publication of Findings, and What Economists Should Do about It Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-07-29 Maximilian Kasy
A key challenge for interpreting published empirical research is the fact that published findings might be selected by researchers or by journals. Selection might be based on criteria such as significance, consistency with theory, or the surprisingness of findings or their plausibility. Selection leads to biased estimates, reduced coverage of confidence intervals, and distorted posterior beliefs. I
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Washington Consensus in Latin America: From Raw Model to Straw Man Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-07-29 Ilan Goldfajn, Lorenza Martínez, Rodrigo O. Valdés
We take stock of three decades of a love–hate relationship between Latin American policies and the Washington Consensus, reviewing its implementation, national debate, and outcomes. Using regional data and case studies of Brazil, Chile, and Mexico, we discuss the various degrees of the Washington Consensus implementation and evaluate performance. We find mixed results: macroeconomic stability is much
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Effects of the COVID-19 Recession on the US Labor Market: Occupation, Family, and Gender Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-07-29 Stefania Albanesi, Jiyeon Kim
The economic crisis associated with the emergence of the novel corona virus is unlike standard recessions. Demand for workers in high contact and inflexible service occupations has declined while parental supply of labor has been reduced by lack of access to reliable child care and in-person schooling options. This has led to a substantial and persistent drop in employment and labor force participation
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Evidence on Research Transparency in Economics Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-07-29 Edward Miguel
A decade ago, the term “research transparency” was not on economists' radar screen, but in a few short years a scholarly movement has emerged to bring new open science practices, tools and norms into the mainstream of our discipline. The goal of this article is to lay out the evidence on the adoption of these approaches – in three specific areas: open data, pre-registration and pre-analysis plans,
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The Resilience of the Euro Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-05-03 Philip R. Lane
Over 2014 – 2019, the euro area charted a substantial post-crisis economic recovery while also reducing macro-financial vulnerabilities. The array of post-crisis institutional reforms has improved the capacity of the euro area to withstand adverse shocks, even if the narrowing of imbalances also came at a high cost (especially in the most indebted member countries). The pandemic has provided a new
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Mammograms and Mortality: How Has the Evidence Evolved? Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-05-03 Amanda E. Kowalski
Decades of evidence reveal a complicated relationship between mammograms and mortality. Mammograms may detect deadly cancers early, but they may also lead to the diagnosis and potentially fatal treatment of cancers that would never progress to cause symptoms. I provide a brief history of the evidence on mammograms and mortality, focusing on evidence from clinical trials, and I discuss how this evidence
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LGBTQ Economics Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-05-03 M.V. Lee Badgett, Christopher S. Carpenter, Dario Sansone
Public attitudes and policies toward LGBTQ individuals have improved substantially in recent decades. Economists are actively shaping the discourse around these policies and contributing to our understanding of the economic lives of LGBTQ individuals. In this paper, we present the most up-to-date estimates of the size, location, demographic characteristics, and family structures of LGBTQ individuals
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Fiscal Policy in Europe: Controversies over Rules, Mutual Insurance, and Centralization Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-05-03 Florin Bilbiie, Tommaso Monacelli, Roberto Perotti
We discuss the main fiscal policy issues in Europe, focusing on two that are at the core of the current debate. The first is that the government deficit and debt were, from the outset, the key objects of contention in the debate that led to the creation of the Eurozone, and they still are. The second issue is that a currency union implies the loss of a country-specific instrument, a national monetary
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An Ounce of Prevention Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-05-03 Joseph P. Newhouse
I look at prevention through an economic lens and make three main points. First, those advocating preventive measures are often asked how much money a given measure saves. This question is misguided. Rather, preventive measures can be thought of as insurance, with a certain cost in the present that may or may not pay off in the future. In fact, although most medical preventive measures improve expected
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The Rise of Research Teams: Benefits and Costs in Economics Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-05-03 Benjamin F. Jones
Economics research is increasingly performed in teams, and team-authored work has a large and increasing impact advantage. This article considers the benefits and costs of this “rise of teams.” Among its benefits, teamwork allows individuals to aggregate knowledge in productive and novel ways. For example, as knowledge accumulates over time, individuals become narrower in their expertise, and teamwork
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The Ways of Corruption in Infrastructure: Lessons from the Odebrecht Case Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-05-03 Nicolás Campos, Eduardo Engel, Ronald D. Fischer, Alexander Galetovic
In 2016, the Brazilian construction firm Odebrecht was fined $2.6 billion by the US Department of Justice. It was the largest corruption case ever prosecuted under the US Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. Our examination of judicial documents and media reports on this case provides new insights on the workings of corruption in the infrastructure sector. Odebrecht paid bribes for two reasons: to tailor
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The United States of Europe: A Gravity Model Evaluation of the Four Freedoms Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-05-03 Keith Head, Thierry Mayer
One of the pillars of the 1957 Treaty of Rome that ultimately led to the European Union is the commitment to the four freedoms of movement (goods, services, persons, and capital). Over the following decades, as the members expanded in numbers, they also sought to deepen the integration amongst themselves in all four dimensions. This paper estimates the success of these policies based primarily on a
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Migration and Labor Market Integration in Europe Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-05-03 David Dorn, Josef Zweimüller
The European labor market allows for the border-free mobility of workers across 31 countries that cover most of the continent’s population. However, rates of migration across European countries remain considerably lower than interstate migration in the United States, and spatial variation in terms of unemployment or income levels is larger. We document patterns of migration in Europe, which include
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The Elusive Employment Effect of the Minimum Wage Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-02-03 Alan Manning
It is hard to find a negative effect on the employment effect of rises in the minimum wage: the elusive employment effect. It is much easier to find an impact on wages. This paper argues the elusive employment effect is unlikely to be solved by better data, methodology, or specification. The reasons for the elusive employment effect are the factors contributing to why the link between higher minimum
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Taxing Our Wealth Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-02-03 Florian Scheuer, Joel Slemrod
This paper evaluates proposals for an annual wealth tax. While a dozen OECD countries levied wealth taxes in the recent past, now only three retain them, with only Switzerland raising a comparable fraction of revenue as recent proposals for a US wealth tax. Studies of these taxes sometimes, but not always, find a substantial behavioral response, including of saving, portfolio change, avoidance, and
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Staffing the Higher Education Classroom Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-02-03 David Figlio, Morton Schapiro
We discuss some centrally important decisions faced by colleges and universities regarding how to staff their undergraduate classrooms. We describe the multitasking problem faced by research-intensive institutions and explore the degree to which there may be a trade-off between research and teaching excellence using matched student-faculty-level data from Northwestern University. We present two alternative
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Why Does the United States Have the Best Research Universities? Incentives, Resources, and Virtuous Circles Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-02-03 W. Bentley MacLeod, Miguel Urquiola
Around 1875, the US had none of the world’s leading research universities; today, it accounts for the majority of the top-ranked. Many observers cite events surrounding World War II as the source of this reversal. We present evidence that US research universities had surpassed most countries’ decades before World War II. An explanation of their dominance must therefore begin earlier. The one we offer
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The Globalization of Postsecondary Education: The Role of International Students in the US Higher Education System Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-02-03 John Bound, Breno Braga, Gaurav Khanna, Sarah Turner
In the four decades since 1980, US colleges and universities have seen the number of students from abroad quadruple. This rise in enrollment and degree attainment affects the global supply of highly educated workers, the flow of talent to the US labor market, and the financing of US higher education. Yet, the impacts are far from uniform, with significant differences evident by level of study and type
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City Limits: What Do Local-Area Minimum Wages Do? Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-02-03 Arindrajit Dube, Attila Lindner
Cities are increasingly setting their own minimum wages, and this trend has accelerated sharply in recent years. While in 2010 there were only three cities with their own minimum wages exceeding the state or federal standard, by 2020 there were 42. This new phenomenon raises the question: is it desirable to have city-level variation in minimum wage polices? We discuss the main trade-offs emerging from
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The Rise of American Minimum Wages, 1912–1968 Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-02-03 Price V. Fishback, Andrew J. Seltzer
This paper studies the judicial, political, and intellectual battles over minimum wages from the early state laws of the 1910s through the peak in the real federal minimum in 1968. Early laws were limited to women and children and were ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme Court between 1923 and 1937. The first federal law in 1938 initially exempted large portions of the workforce and set rates that
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Melissa Dell: Winner of the 2020 Clark Medal Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-02-03 Daron Acemoglu
The 2020 John Bates Clark Medal of the American Economic Association was awarded to Melissa Dell, Professor of Economics at Harvard University, for her path-breaking contributions in political economy, economic history, and economic development. This article summarizes Melissa Dell's work, places it in the context of the broader literature, and emphasizes how, with its data collection, careful empirical
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How Do Firms Respond to Minimum Wage Increases? Understanding the Relevance of Non-Employment Margins Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-02-03 Jeffrey Clemens
This paper discusses non-employment margins through which firms may respond to minimum wage increases. Margins of interest include evasion, output prices, noncash compensation, job attributes including effort requirements, the firm’s mix of low- and high-skilled labor, and the firm’s mix of labor and capital. I discuss the basic theory behind each margin’s potential importance as well as findings from
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Estimating Judicial Ideology Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-02-03 Adam Bonica, Maya Sen
We review the substantial literature on estimating judicial ideology, from the US Supreme Court to the lowest state court. As a way to showcase the strengths and drawbacks of various measures, we further analyze trends in judicial polarization within the US federal courts. Our analysis shows substantial gaps in the ideology of judges appointed by Republican Presidents versus those appointed by Democrats
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Can Structural Changes Fix the Supreme Court? Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-02-03 Daniel Hemel
Proposals for structural changes to the US Supreme Court have attracted attention in recent years amid a perceived “legitimacy crisis” afflicting the institution. This article first assesses whether the court is in fact facing a legitimacy crisis and then considers whether prominent reform proposals are likely to address the institutional weaknesses that reformers aim to resolve. The article concludes
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Rising Geographic Disparities in US Mortality. Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-01-01 Benjamin K Couillard,Christopher L Foote,Kavish Gandhi,Ellen Meara,Jonathan Skinner
The 21st century has been a period of rising inequality in both income and health. In this paper, we find that geographic inequality in mortality for midlife Americans increased by about 70 percent between 1992 and 2016. This was not simply because states like New York or California benefited from having a high fraction of college-educated residents who enjoyed the largest health gains during the last
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Mammograms and Mortality: How Has the Evidence Evolved? Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2021-01-01 Amanda E Kowalski
Decades of evidence reveal a complicated relationship between mammograms and mortality. Mammograms may detect deadly cancers early, but they may also lead to the diagnosis and potentially fatal treatment of cancers that would never progress to cause symptoms. I provide a brief history of the evidence on mammograms and mortality, focusing on evidence from clinical trials, and I discuss how this evidence
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The Rise of Income and Wealth Inequality in America: Evidence from Distributional Macroeconomic Accounts Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2020-11-05 Emmanuel Saez, Gabriel Zucman
This paper studies inequality in America through the lens of distributional macroeconomic accounts—comprehensive distributions of the aggregate amount of income and wealth recorded in the official macroeconomic accounts of the United States. We use these distributional macroeconomic accounts to quantify the rise of income and wealth concentration since the late 1970s, the change in tax progressivity
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Epidemiology’s Time of Need: COVID-19 Calls for Epidemic-Related Economics Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2020-11-05 Eleanor J. Murray
The COVID-19 pandemic has catapulted scientific conversations and scientific divisions into the public consciousness. Epidemiology and economics have long operated in distinct silos, but the COVID-19 pandemic presents a complex and cross-disciplinary problem that impacts all facets of society. Many economists have recognized this and want to engage in efforts to mitigate and control the pandemic, but
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Growing Income Inequality in the United States and Other Advanced Economies Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2020-11-05 Florian Hoffmann, David S. Lee, Thomas Lemieux
This paper studies the contribution of both labor and non-labor income in the growth in income inequality in the United States and large European economies. The paper first shows that the capital to labor income ratio disproportionately increased among high-earnings individuals, further contributing to the growth in overall income inequality. That said, the magnitude of this effect is modest, and the
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Welfare Analysis Meets Causal Inference Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2020-11-05 Amy Finkelstein, Nathaniel Hendren
We describe a frame work for empirical welfare analysis that uses the causal estimates of a policy’s impact on net government spending. This framework provides guidance for which causal effects are (and are not) needed for empirical welfare analysis of public policies. The key ingredient is the construction of each policy’s marginal value of public funds (MVPF). The MVPF is the ratio of beneficiaries’
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The Persistent Effects of Initial Labor Market Conditions for Young Adults and Their Sources Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2020-11-05 Till von Wachter
Unlucky young workers entering the labor market in recessions suffer a range of medium-to long-term consequences. This paper summarizes the findings of the growing empirical literature on this subject and uses it to assess economic models of career development. The literature finds large initial effects on earnings, labor supply, and wages that tend to fade after ten to fifteen years in the labor market
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An Economist’s Guide to Epidemiology Models of Infectious Disease Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2020-11-05 Christopher Avery, William Bossert, Adam Clark, Glenn Ellison, Sara Fisher Ellison
We describe the structure and use of epidemiology models of disease transmission, with an emphasis on the susceptible/infected/recovered (SIR) model. We discuss high-profile forecasts of cases and deaths that have been based on these models, what went wrong with the early forecasts, and how they have adapted to the current COVID pandemic. We also offer three distinct areas where economists would be
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A 30-Year Perspective on Property Derivatives: What Can Be Done to Tame Property Price Risk? Journal of Economic Perspectives (IF 6.9) Pub Date : 2020-11-05 Frank J. Fabozzi, Robert J. Shiller, Radu S. Tunaru
The housing sector is the largest spot market in the world without a developed derivative contract to serve the risk management needs of market participants. This paper describes the evolution within a wider economic context of property derivatives in the United States and worldwide. We review various economic arguments presented in the literature to highlight the advantages of these financial instruments