òòò½Íø

Search

Showing 1,921-1,940 of 17,304 items.

Symposium on Global Climate Change

[Symposium]

By Richard Schmalensee

Journal of Economic Perspectives, Fall 1993

Global climate change, and policies to slow it or adapt to it, may be among the primary forces shaping the world's economy throughout the next century and beyond. Nonetheless, popular treatments of this issue commonly ignore economics. This introductory e...

The Relative Performance of Real Estate Marketing Platforms: MLS versus FSBOMadison.com

By Igal Hendel, Aviv Nevo, and ¹ó°ù²¹²Ôç´Ç¾±²õ °¿°ù³Ù²¹±ô´Ç-²Ñ²¹²µ²Ôé

òòò½Íø Review, December 2009

We compare house sales on a For-Sale-By-Owner (FSBO) platform to Multiple Listing Service (MLS) sales and find that FSBO precommission prices are no lower, but that FSBO is less effective in terms of time to sell and probability of a sale. We do not fi...

Unhealthy Insurance Markets: Search Frictions and the Cost and Quality of Health Insurance

By Randall D. Cebul, James B. Rebitzer, Lowell J. Taylor, and Mark E. Votruba

òòò½Íø Review, August 2011

We analyze the effect of search frictions in the market for commercial health insurance. Frictions increase insurance premiums (enough to transfer 13.2 percent of consumer surplus from fully insured employer groups to insurers—approximately $34.4 b...

A Theory of Demand Shocks

By Guido Lorenzoni

òòò½Íø Review, December 2009

This paper presents a model of business cycles driven by shocks to consumer expectations regarding aggregate productivity. Agents are hit by heterogeneous productivity shocks, they observe their own productivity and a noisy public signal regarding aggr...

Tax Reform Unraveling

[Symposium: U.S. Tax Policy in International Perspective]

By Michael J. Graetz

Journal of Economic Perspectives, Winter 2007

The Tax Reform Act of 1986 was widely heralded as the most significant change in our nation's tax law since the income tax was extended to the masses during World War II. It was the crowning domestic policy achievement of President Ronald Reagan, who proc...

How Special Is the Special Relationship? Using the Impact of U.S. R&D Spillovers on U.K. Firms as a Test of Technology Sourcing

By Rachel Griffith, Rupert Harrison, and John Van Reenen

òòò½Íø Review, December 2006

We examine the "technology sourcing" hypothesis that foreign research labs located in the U.S. tap into U.S. R&D spillovers and improve home country productivity. We show that U.K. firms that established a high proportion of inventors based in the U.S. by...