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The Gains from Pension Reform

By Assar Lindbeck and Mats Persson

Journal of Economic Literature, March 2003

We classify social security pension systems in three dimensions: actuarial versus non-actuarial, funded versus unfunded, and defined-benefit versus defined-contribution systems. Recent pension reforms are discussed in terms of these dimensions. Shifting t...

Revolving Door Lobbyists

By Jordi Blanes i Vidal, Mirko Draca, and Christian Fons-Rosen

òòò½Íø Review, December 2012

Washington's "revolving door"—the movement from government service into the lobbying industry—is regarded as a major concern for policy-making. We study how ex-government staffers benefit from the personal connections acquired during their pub...

The Vulcanization of the Human Brain: A Neural Perspective on Interactions Between Cognition and Emotion

[Symposium: Cognition, Brain Science and Economics]

By Jonathan D. Cohen

Journal of Economic Perspectives, Fall 2005

Emotions may explain inconsistencies in human behavior and forms of behavior that some have deemed irrational, though such behavior may seem more sensible after a discussion of the functions that emotions serve—or may have once served in our evolutionar...

Driving under the (Cellular) Influence

By Saurabh Bhargava and Vikram S. Pathania

òòò½Íø Journal: Economic Policy, August 2013

We investigate the causal link between driver cell phone use and crash rates by exploiting a natural experiment induced by the 9 pm price discontinuity that characterizes a majority of recent cellular plans. We first document a 7.2 percent jump in driver ...

Economics in the Former Soviet Union

By Michael Alexeev, Clifford Gaddy, and Jim Leitzel

Journal of Economic Perspectives, Spring 1992

One of the most notable, but least discussed, aspects of the halting attempts during the past six years to reform the economies of the Soviet Union, and now those of its successor states, has been the prominent role played by professional economists. Not ...

Optimal Inflation for the US Economy

By Roberto M. Billi

òòò½Íø Journal: Macroeconomics, July 2011

This paper studies the optimal long-run inflation rate (OIR) in a small New Keynesian model, where the only policy instrument is a short-term nominal interest rate that may occasionally run against a zero lower bound (ZLB). The model allows for worst-case...