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Unhappiness and Pain in Modern America: A Review Essay, and Further Evidence, on Carol Graham's Happiness for All?

By David G. Blanchflower and Andrew J. Oswald

Journal of Economic Literature, June 2019

In Happiness for All? Unequal Hopes and Lives in the Pursuit of the American Dream, Carol Graham raises disquieting ideas about today's United States. The challenge she puts forward is an important one. Here we review the intellectual case and of...

Space, the Final Economic Frontier

By Matthew Weinzierl

Journal of Economic Perspectives, Spring 2018

After decades of centralized control of economic activity in space, NASA and US policymakers have begun to cede the direction of human activities in space to commercial companies. NASA garnered more than 0.7 percent of GDP in the mid-1960s, but is only ...

The Impact of Monitoring in Infinitely Repeated Games: Perfect, Public, and Private

By Masaki Aoyagi, V. Bhaskar, and Guillaume R. ¹ó°ù鳦³ó±ð³Ù³Ù±ð

òòò½Íø Journal: Microeconomics, February 2019

This paper uses a laboratory experiment to study the effect of the monitoring structure on the play of the infinitely repeated prisoner's dilemma. Keeping the strategic form of the stage game fixed, we examine the behavior of subjects when information abo...

A Spatial Knowledge Economy

By Donald R. Davis and Jonathan I. Dingel

òòò½Íø Review, January 2019

Leading empiricists and theorists of cities have recently argued that the generation and exchange of ideas must play a more central role in the analysis of cities. This paper develops the first system of cities model with costly idea exchange as the agglo...

Does Teacher Training Actually Work? Evidence from a Large-Scale Randomized Evaluation of a National Teacher Training Program

By Prashant Loyalka, Anna Popova, Guirong Li, and Zhaolei Shi

òòò½Íø Journal: Applied Economics, July 2019

Despite massive investments in teacher professional development (PD) programs in developing countries, there is little evidence on their effectiveness. We present results of a large-scale, randomized evaluation of a national PD program in China in which t...

Structural Interpretation of Vector Autoregressions with Incomplete Identification: Revisiting the Role of Oil Supply and Demand Shocks

By Christiane Baumeister and James D. Hamilton

òòò½Íø Review, May 2019

Traditional approaches to structural vector autoregressions (VARs) can be viewed as special cases of Bayesian inference arising from very strong prior beliefs. These methods can be generalized with a less restrictive formulation that incorporates uncertai...

Innovation and Production in the Global Economy

By Costas Arkolakis, Natalia Ramondo, ´¡²Ô»å°ùé²õ ¸é´Ç»å°ùí²µ³Ü±ð³ú-°ä±ô²¹°ù±ð, and Stephen Yeaple

òòò½Íø Review, August 2018

We develop a quantifiable general equilibrium model of trade and multinational production (MP) in which countries can specialize in innovation or production. Home market effects or comparative advantage leads some countries to specialize in innovation and...

Public Spillovers from Private Insurance Contracting: Physician Responses to Managed Care

By Michael R. Richards and D. Sebastian Tello-Trillo

òòò½Íø Journal: Economic Policy, November 2019

Managed care is rebounding as more emphasis is placed on cost containment. These efforts may benefit consumers but challenge providers; however, empirical evidence on how supply-side managed care influences physicians is incomplete. We leverage a quasi-ex...

Why Has Urban Inequality Increased?

By Nathaniel Baum-Snow, Matthew Freedman, and Ronni Pavan

òòò½Íø Journal: Applied Economics, October 2018

This paper examines mechanisms driving the more rapid increases in wage inequality in larger cities between 1980 and 2007. Production function estimates indicate strong evidence of capital-skill complementarity and increases in the skill bias of agglomera...

Measuring and Bounding Experimenter Demand

By Jonathan de Quidt, Johannes Haushofer, and Christopher Roth

òòò½Íø Review, November 2018

We propose a technique for assessing robustness to demand effects of findings from experiments and surveys. The core idea is that by deliberately inducing demand in a structured way we can bound its influence. We present a model in which participants resp...