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Showing 10,861-10,880 of 18,058 items.

Upping the Ante: The Equilibrium Effects of Unconditional Grants to Private Schools

By Tahir Andrabi, Jishnu Das, Asim I. Khwaja, Selcuk Ozyurt, and Niharika Singh

òòò½Íø Review, October 2020

We assess whether financing can help private schools, which now account for one-third of primary school enrollment in low- and middle-income countries. Our experiment allocated unconditional cash grants to either one (L) or all (H) private schools in a vi...

Misperceived Social Norms: Women Working Outside the Home in Saudi Arabia

By Leonardo Bursztyn, Alessandra L. ³Ò´Ç²Ô³úá±ô±ð³ú, and David Yanagizawa-Drott

òòò½Íø Review, October 2020

We show that the vast majority of young married men in Saudi Arabia privately support women working outside the home (WWOH) and substantially underestimate support by other similar men. Correcting these beliefs increases men's (costly) willingness to help...

Business-Cycle Anatomy

By George-Marios Angeletos, Fabrice Collard, and Harris Dellas

òòò½Íø Review, October 2020

We propose a new strategy for dissecting the macroeconomic time series, provide a template for the business-cycle propagation mechanism that best describes the data, and use its properties to appraise models of both the parsimonious and the medium-scale v...

Artificial Intelligence, Algorithmic Pricing, and Collusion

By Emilio Calvano, Giacomo Calzolari, Vincenzo ¶Ù±ð²Ô¾±³¦´Ç±ôò, and Sergio Pastorello

òòò½Íø Review, October 2020

Increasingly, algorithms are supplanting human decision-makers in pricing goods and services. To analyze the possible consequences, we study experimentally the behavior of algorithms powered by Artificial Intelligence (Q-learning) in a workhorse oligopoly...

E-governance, Accountability, and Leakage in Public Programs: Experimental Evidence from a Financial Management Reform in India

By Abhijit Banerjee, Esther Duflo, °ä±ôé³¾±ð²Ô³Ù Imbert, Santhosh Mathew, and Rohini Pande

òòò½Íø Journal: Applied Economics, October 2020

Can e-governance reforms improve government policy? By making information available on a real-time basis, information technologies may reduce the theft of public funds. We analyze a large field experiment and the nationwide scale-up of a reform to India's...

The Elasticity of Science

By Kyle Myers

òòò½Íø Journal: Applied Economics, October 2020

This paper identifies the degree to which scientists are willing to change the direction of their work in exchange for resources. Data from the National Institutes of Health are used to estimate how scientists respond to targeted funding opportunities. In...

Rules for Recovery: Impact of Indexed Disaster Funds on Shock Coping in Mexico

By Alejandro del Valle, Alain de Janvry, and Elisabeth Sadoulet

òòò½Íø Journal: Applied Economics, October 2020

Government provision of disaster transfers is typically hampered by liquidity constraints and by weak rules and administrative capacity to disburse reconstruction resources. We show that by easing these hurdles, Mexico's indexed disaster fund (Fonden) con...

The Impact of Insurance Expansions on the Already Insured: The Affordable Care Act and Medicare

By Colleen M. Carey, Sarah Miller, and Laura R. Wherry

òòò½Íø Journal: Applied Economics, October 2020

Some states have not adopted the Affordable Care Act (ACA) Medicaid expansions due to concerns that the expansions may impair access to care and utilization for those who are already insured. We investigate such negative spillovers using a large panel of ...

Bubbly Recessions

By Siddhartha Biswas, Andrew Hanson, and Toan Phan

òòò½Íø Journal: Macroeconomics, October 2020

We develop a tractable bubbles model with financial friction and downward wage rigidity. Competitive speculation in risky bubbles can result in excessive investment booms that precede inefficient busts, where post- bubble aggregate economic activities col...