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The National Bureau of Economic Research is dedicated to conducting and disseminating nonpartisan economic research.
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http://www.nber.org 22-05-2009 14:30:37
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Documenting novel survey-based facts on preferred long-run inflation rates among US consumers find consumers on average prefer a 0.20 percent annual inflation rate, from Hassan Afrouzi, Alexander Dietrich, Kristian Myrseth, Romanos Priftis, and Raphael Schoenle nber.org/papers/w32379
Export activity is disproportionately concentrated in larger cities – even more so than overall economic activity, from Jan David Bakker, Alvaro Garcia, Andrei V. Potlogea, Nico Voigtländer, and Yang Yang nber.org/papers/w32377
Labor markets in higher-income countries are more meritocratic, meaning there is more skill-based sorting between workers and jobs. This matters for development in subtle ways, from Oriana Bandiera, Kotia, Lindenlaub, Chris Moser, and Andrea Prat nber.org/papers/w32375
A study of 34 countries finds that, culture — in particular individualism — is the biggest factor explaining international differences in working from home, from Pablo Zarate, Dolls, Davis, Nick Bloom, Jose Maria Barrero, and Cevat Giray Aksoy nber.org/papers/w32374
A new method for using individual-level race probabilities to estimate differences in outcomes by race, from Cory McCartan, Robin Fisher, Jacob Goldin, Daniel E. Ho, and Kosuke Imai nber.org/papers/w32373
When potential college applicants may be poorly informed about their admission chances, transparency in college admissions can increase diversity and raise grades and persistence, from Adam Kapor nber.org/papers/w32372
Pre-retirement employment protection legislation generates limited negative externalities on employment of soon to be covered workers, from Paweł Chrostek, Krzysztof Karbownik, and Michał Myck nber.org/papers/w32371
Using Markov Chain methods to study post-bellum occupational dynamics. Despite reductions for the 1940-1950 cohort, Black-White differences do not self-correct over the long run, from Steven N. Durlauf, Gueyon Kim, Dohyeon Lee, and Xi Song nber.org/papers/w32370
Analyzing a mechanism for assigning CPS investigators to child maltreatment cases finds that the mechanism can reduce prediction mistakes by up to 10 percent, in a revenue-neutral way, from Jason Baron, Lombardo, Ryan, Suh, and Valenzuela-Stookey nber.org/papers/w32369
The increased share of reporting self-employment in US tax data post-2000 is not due to the rise of platform gig work. Rather, more taxpayers report self earnings to benefit from the Earned Income Tax Credit, from Andy Garin, Emilie Jackson, and Dmitri Koustas nber.org/papers/w32368
Attacking the spread of misinformation from the demand side, from @econ_4_everyone, Lina M. Ramírez, Julia Seither, Jaime Unda, and Beatriz Vallejo nber.org/papers/w32367
Examination of the effects of recessions on the salary-offer gender gap, using evidence from the largest online job portal in Nigeria, finds that the 2016 recession narrowed the gap, from Belinda Archibong and @peterblairhenry nber.org/papers/w32366
Proposing a new nonlinear single-factor asset pricing model, from Nicola Borri, Denis Chetverikov, Yukun Liu, and Aleh Tsyvinski nber.org/papers/w32365