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Older Workers and the Gig Economy

By Cody Cook, Rebecca Diamond, and Paul Oyer

òòò½Íø Papers and Proceedings, May 2019

As the workforce ages, how will the work lives of older people evolve? One way to ease into retirement is to move to the gig economy where workers choose hours and intensity of work that fit their needs and capabilities. However, older workers are often r...

A Review Essay on Social Neuroscience: Can Research on the Social Brain and Economics Inform Each Other?

By Carlos ´¡±ôó²õ-¹ó±ð°ù°ù±ð°ù

Journal of Economic Literature, March 2018

Social neuroscience studies the "social brain," conceived as the set of brain structures and functions supporting the perception and evaluation of the social environment. This article provides an overview of the field, using the book Social Neuroscienc...

Older Americans Would Work Longer If Jobs Were Flexible

By John Ameriks, Joseph Briggs, Andrew Caplin, Minjoon Lee, Matthew D. Shapiro, and Christopher Tonetti

òòò½Íø Journal: Macroeconomics, January 2020

Older Americans, even those who are long retired, have strong willingness to work, especially in jobs with flexible schedules. For many, labor force participation near or after normal retirement age is limited more by a lack of acceptable job opportunitie...

The Out-of-State Tuition Distortion

By Brian Knight and Nathan Schiff

òòò½Íø Journal: Economic Policy, February 2019

Public universities typically charge much higher tuition to nonresidents. We first investigate the welfare implications of this tuition gap in a simple model. While the social planner does not distinguish between residents and nonresidents, state governme...

The Logic of Insurgent Electoral Violence

By Luke N. Condra, James D. Long, Andrew C. Shaver, and Austin L. Wright

òòò½Íø Review, November 2018

Competitive elections are essential to establishing the political legitimacy of democratizing regimes. We argue that insurgents undermine the state's mandate through electoral violence. We study insurgent violence during elections using newly declassified...

From Final Goods to Inputs: The Protectionist Effect of Rules of Origin

By Paola Conconi, Manuel ³Ò²¹°ù³¦Ã­²¹-³§²¹²Ô³Ù²¹²Ô²¹, Laura Puccio, and Roberto Venturini

òòò½Íø Review, August 2018

Recent decades have witnessed a surge of trade in intermediate goods and a proliferation of free trade agreements (FTAs). FTAs use rules of origin (RoO) to distinguish goods originating from member countries from those originating from third countries. We...

Learning from Others' Outcomes

By Alexander Wolitzky

òòò½Íø Review, October 2018

I develop a simple model of social learning in which players observe others' outcomes but not their actions. A continuum of players arrives continuously over time, and each player chooses once-and-for-all between a safe action (which succeeds with known p...

The Long-Run Impacts of Financial Aid: Evidence from California's Cal Grant

By Eric Bettinger, Oded Gurantz, Laura Kawano, Bruce Sacerdote, and Michael Stevens

òòò½Íø Journal: Economic Policy, February 2019

We examine the long-term impacts of California's state-based financial aid by tracking educational and labor force outcomes for up to 14 years after high school graduation. We identify program impacts by exploiting variation in eligibility rules using GPA...