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The Beveridge Curve: A Survey

By Michael W. L. Elsby, Ryan Michaels, and David Ratner

Journal of Economic Literature, September 2015

Important progress has been made in economists' understanding of the Beveridge curve, from its measurement to its expression in canonical labor market models. Yet enduring puzzles remain. Chief among these are the empirical role of vacancies in the recrui...

Inflation Expectations and Readiness to Spend: Cross-Sectional Evidence

By ¸éü»å¾±²µ±ð°ù Bachmann, Tim O. Berg, and Eric R. Sims

òòò½Íø Journal: Economic Policy, February 2015

There have been suggestions for monetary policy to engineer higher inflation expectations to stimulate spending. We examine the relationship between expected inflation and spending attitudes using the microdata from the Michigan Survey of Consumers. The i...

Progress in Behavioral Game Theory

By Colin F. Camerer

Journal of Economic Perspectives, Fall 1997

Behavioral game theory aims to predict how people actually behave by incorporating psychological elements and learning into game theory. With this goal in mind, experimental findings can be organized into three categories: players have systematic 'recipro...

The Economics of Nationalism

By Xiaohuan Lan and Ben G. Li

òòò½Íø Journal: Economic Policy, May 2015

This paper provides an economic framework for examining how economic openness affects nationalism. Within a country, a region's level of nationalism varies according to its economic interests in its domestic market relative to its foreign market. All else...

The New Life Cycle of Women's Employment: Disappearing Humps, Sagging Middles, Expanding Tops

[Symposium: Women in the Labor Market]

By Claudia Goldin and Joshua Mitchell

Journal of Economic Perspectives, Winter 2017

A new life cycle of women's employment emerged with cohorts born in the 1950s. For prior cohorts, life-cycle employment had a hump shape; it increased from the twenties to the forties, hit a peak, and then declined starting in the fifties. The new life cy...

Escaping the Great Recession

By Francesco Bianchi and Leonardo Melosi

òòò½Íø Review, April 2017

We show that policy uncertainty about how the rising public debt will be stabilized accounts for the lack of deflation in the US economy at the zero lower bound. We first estimate a Markov-switching VAR to highlight that a zero-lower-bound regime captures...

Internal Labor Migration as a Shock Coping Strategy: Evidence from a Typhoon

By ´¡²Ô»å°ùé ³Ò°ùö²µ±ð°ù and Yanos Zylberberg

òòò½Íø Journal: Applied Economics, April 2016

We analyze how internal labor migration facilitates shock coping in rural economies. Employing high-precision satellite data, we identify objective variations in the inundations generated by a catastrophic typhoon in Vietnam and match them with household ...

The (Human) Sampler's Curses

By Mark Thordal-Le Quement

òòò½Íø Journal: Microeconomics, November 2016

We present a cheap talk model in which a receiver (R) sequentially consults multiple experts who are either unbiased or wish to maximize R's action, bias being unobservable. Consultation is costly and R cannot commit to future consultation behavior. We fi...