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What Explains the Gender Gap in College Track Dropout? Experimental and Administrative Evidence

By Ingvild ´¡±ô³¾Ã¥²õ, Alexander W. Cappelen, Kjell G. Salvanes, Erik Ø. ³§Ã¸°ù±ð²Ô²õ±ð²Ô, and Bertil Tungodden

òòò½Íø Review, May 2016

We exploit a unique data set, combining rich experimental data with high-quality administrative data, to study dropout from the college track in Norway, and why boys are more likely to drop out. The paper provides three main findings. First, we show that ...

Commodity Prices and Growth in Africa

[Symposium: Slow Growth in Africa]

By Angus Deaton

Journal of Economic Perspectives, Summer 1999

African states that came to independence by the late 1960s made a rapid transition to authoritarian rule during a period of reasonably robust growth. Growth then faltered badly from the mid-1970s to the mid-1990s as these regimes coped with external shock...

Information Aggregation in Polls

By John Morgan and Phillip C. Stocken

òòò½Íø Review, June 2008

We study information transmission via polling. A policymaker polls constituents, who differ in their information and ideology, to determine policy. Full revelation is an equilibrium in a poll with a small sample, but not with a large one. In large poll...

The Effect of Cash, Vouchers, and Food Transfers on Intimate Partner Violence: Evidence from a Randomized Experiment in Northern Ecuador

By Melissa Hidrobo, Amber Peterman, and Lori Heise

òòò½Íø Journal: Applied Economics, July 2016

Using a randomized experiment in Ecuador, this study provides evidence on whether cash, vouchers, and food transfers targeted to women and intended to reduce poverty and food insecurity also affected intimate partner violence. Results indicate that transf...

How Much Does Immigration Boost Innovation?

By Jennifer Hunt and Marjolaine Gauthier-Loiselle

òòò½Íø Journal: Macroeconomics, April 2010

We measure the extent to which skilled immigrants increase innovation in the United States. The 2003 National Survey of College Graduates shows that immigrants patent at double the native rate, due to their disproportionately holding science and engine...

Employment and Unemployment in the 1930s

[Symposium: The Great Depression]

By Robert A. Margo

Journal of Economic Perspectives, Spring 1993

Recent research on labor markets in the 1930s has shifted attention from aggregate to disaggregate time series and towards microeconomic evidence. The paper begins by reviewing the conventional statistics of the United States labor market during the Great...

Year-End Tax Planning of Top Management: Evidence from High-Frequency Payroll Data

By Claus Thustrup Kreiner, ³§Ã¸°ù±ð²Ô Leth-Petersen, and Peer Ebbesen Skov

òòò½Íø Review, May 2014

Using Danish high-frequency payroll data and tax reform variation, we detect year-end tax avoidance among top managers. Five to seven percent of top managers exploit year-end tax planning strategies to save taxes. Around 30 percent of the top managers eng...

The Case for Paying College Athletes

By Allen R. Sanderson and John J. Siegfried

Journal of Economic Perspectives, Winter 2015

Big-time commercialized intercollegiate athletics has attracted considerable attention in recent years. Popularity of this uniquely American activity, measured by attendance, television ratings, or team revenues, has never been higher. At the same time,...

The Politics of Market Socialism

By Andrei Shleifer and Robert W. Vishny

Journal of Economic Perspectives, Spring 1994

The debate over market socialism has ignored the importance of the assumptions about the objectives of politicians in determining resource allocation. Theory and evidence suggest that totalitarian socialism does not lead to efficient resource allocation b...