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Showing 10,201-10,220 of 18,056 items.

Finance and Business Cycles: The Credit-Driven Household Demand Channel

[Symposium: Macroeconomics a Decade after the Great Recession]

By Atif Mian and Amir Sufi

Journal of Economic Perspectives, Summer 2018

What is the role of the financial sector in explaining business cycles? This question is as old as the field of macroeconomics, and an extensive body of research conducted since the Global Financial Crisis of 2008 has offered new answers. The specific ide...

Information Design

By Ina Taneva

òòò½Íø Journal: Microeconomics, November 2019

A designer commits to a signal distribution that is informative about a payoff-relevant state. Conditional upon the privately observed signals, agents take actions that affect their payoffs as well as those of the designer. We show how to derive the (desi...

Private Provision of Social Insurance: Drug-Specific Price Elasticities and Cost Sharing in Medicare Part D

By Liran Einav, Amy Finkelstein, and Maria Polyakova

òòò½Íø Journal: Economic Policy, August 2018

We explore how private drug plans set cost sharing in the context of Medicare Part D. While publicly provided drug coverage typically involves uniform cost sharing across drugs, we document substantial heterogeneity in the cost sharing for different drugs...

Review of Books on Student Loans

By Christopher Avery

Journal of Economic Literature, June 2019

This essay reviews three recent books on the causes and consequences of student debt. In addition to increases in college tuition and fees, supply and resource constraints both contribute to the growing phenomenon of default: degree completion rates are r...

Tax Compliance and Enforcement

By Joel Slemrod

Journal of Economic Literature, December 2019

This paper reviews recent economic research in tax compliance and enforcement. After briefly laying out the economics of tax evasion, it focuses on recent empirical contributions. It first discusses what methodologies and data have facilitated these con...

Peer Effects in Legislative Voting

By Nikolaj Harmon, Raymond Fisman, and Emir Kamenica

òòò½Íø Journal: Applied Economics, October 2019

We exploit seating rules in the European Parliament to identify peer effects in legislative voting. Sitting adjacently leads to a 7 percent reduction in the overall likelihood that two members of the European Parliament (MEPs) from the same party differ i...

Who Pays for Rent Control? Heterogeneous Landlord Response to San Francisco's Rent Control Expansion

By Rebecca Diamond, Tim McQuade, and Franklin Qian

òòò½Íø Papers and Proceedings, May 2019

Using a 1994 law change, we exploit quasi-experimental variation in the assignment of rent control in San Francisco to study which types of landlords bear the burden of decreased rental payments versus substitute away from supplying rent-controlled housin...

Competition in Treasury Auctions

By Helmut Elsinger, Philipp Schmidt-Dengler, and Christine Zulehner

òòò½Íø Journal: Microeconomics, February 2019

We investigate the role of competition on the outcome of Austrian Treasury auctions. Austria's EU accession led to an increase in the number of banks participating in treasury auctions. We use structural estimates of bidders' private values to examine t...

Unconventional Fiscal Policy

By Francesco D'Acunto, Daniel Hoang, and Michael Weber

òòò½Íø Papers and Proceedings, May 2018

Unconventional fiscal policy uses announcements of future increases in consumption taxes to generate inflation expectations and accelerate consumption expenditure. It is budget neutral and time consistent. We provide preliminary evidence for the effective...