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Resolving Conflicting Preferences in School Choice: The "Boston Mechanism" Reconsidered

By Atila ´¡²ú»å³Ü±ô°ì²¹»å¾±°ù´ÇÄŸ±ô³Ü, Yeon-Koo Che, and Yosuke Yasuda

òòò½Íø Review, February 2011

Despite its widespread use, the Boston mechanism has been criticized for its poor incentive and welfare performances compared to the Gale-Shapley deferred acceptance algorithm (DA). By contrast, when students have the same ordinal preferences and schools ...

On the Political Economy of Urban Growth: Homeownership versus Affordability

By ¹ó°ù²¹²Ôç´Ç¾±²õ °¿°ù³Ù²¹±ô´Ç-²Ñ²¹²µ²Ôé and Andrea Prat

òòò½Íø Journal: Microeconomics, February 2014

We study the equilibrium properties of an overlapping-generation economy where agents choose where to locate and how much housing to own, and city residents vote on the number of new building permits every period. Undersupply of housing persists in equil...

Anticipated Banking Panics

By Mark Gertler, Nobuhiro Kiyotaki, and Andrea Prestipino

òòò½Íø Review, May 2016

We develop a macroeconomic model with banking instability. Sunspot runs can arise that are harmful to the economy. However, whether a run equilibrium exists depends on fundamentals. In contrast to earlier work, the probability of a sunspot run is the outc...

Family Inequality: Diverging Patterns in Marriage, Cohabitation, and Childbearing

[Symposium: Inequality Beyond Income]

By Shelly Lundberg, Robert A. Pollak, and Jenna Stearns

Journal of Economic Perspectives, Spring 2016

Popular discussions of changes in American families over the past 60 years have revolved around the "retreat from marriage." Concern has focused on increasing levels of nonmarital childbearing, as well as falling marriage rates that stem from both increas...

Housing Booms and City Centers

By Edward L. Glaeser, Joshua D. Gottlieb, and Kristina Tobio

òòò½Íø Review, May 2012

Popular discussions often treat the great housing boom of the 1996-2006 period as if it were a national phenomenon with similar impacts across locales, but across metropolitan areas, price growth was dramatically higher in warmer, less educated cities wit...

Labor Supply and the Extensive Margin

By Richard Blundell, Antoine Bozio, and Guy Laroque

òòò½Íø Review, May 2011

In this paper we propose a systematic way of examining the importance of the extensive and the intensive margins of labor supply in order to explain the overall movements in total hours of work over time. We show how informative bounds can be developed on...