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A Retrospective Look at Rescuing and Restructuring General Motors and Chrysler

[Symposium: The Bailouts of 2007-2009]

By Austan D. Goolsbee and Alan B. Krueger

Journal of Economic Perspectives, Spring 2015

The rescue of the US automobile industry amid the 2008-2009 recession and financial crisis was a consequential, controversial, and difficult decision made at a fraught moment for the US economy. Both of us were involved in the decision process at the time...

Are We Finally Winning the War on Cancer?

[Symposium: Health Care]

By David M. Cutler

Journal of Economic Perspectives, Fall 2008

President Nixon declared what came to be known as the "war on cancer" in 1971 in his State of the Union address. At first the war on cancer went poorly: despite a substantial increase in resources, age-adjusted cancer mortality increased by 8 percent betw...

The Questionable Value of Having a Choice of Levels of Health Insurance Coverage

[Symposium: Health Insurance and Choice]

By Keith Marzilli Ericson and Justin Sydnor

Journal of Economic Perspectives, Fall 2017

In most health insurance markets in the United States, consumers have substantial choice about their health insurance plan. However additional choice is not an unmixed blessing as it creates challenges related to both consumer confusion and adverse sele...

School Admissions Reform in Chicago and England: Comparing Mechanisms by Their Vulnerability to Manipulation

By Parag A. Pathak and Tayfun ³§Ã¶²Ô³¾±ð³ú

òòò½Íø Review, February 2013

In Fall 2009, Chicago authorities abandoned a school assignment mechanism midstream, citing concerns about its vulnerability to manipulation. Nonetheless, they asked thousands of applicants to re-rank schools in a new mechanism that is also manipulable...

Industrial Policy and Competition

By Philippe Aghion, Jing Cai, Mathias Dewatripont, Luosha Du, Ann Harrison, and Patrick Legros

òòò½Íø Journal: Macroeconomics, October 2015

Using a comprehensive dataset of all medium and large enterprises in China between 1998 and 2007, we show that industrial policies allocated to competitive sectors or that foster competition in a sector increase productivity growth. We measure competition...

A Theory of Patent Portfolios

By Jay Pil Choi and Heiko Gerlach

òòò½Íø Journal: Microeconomics, February 2017

This paper develops a theory of patent portfolios in which firms accumulate an enormous amount of related patents, which makes it impractical to develop new products that avoid inadvertent infringement. We show that patent peace arises if product market c...