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(L to R) Marjorie B. McElroy, N. Gregory Mankiw, and  Robert A. Margo
(L to R) Marjorie B. McElroy, N. Gregory Mankiw, and Robert A. Margo

American Economic Association Names Distinguished Fellows for 2026

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The American Economic Association (AEA) has named four new Distinguished Fellows, three of whom, Marjorie McElroy, N. Gregory Mankiw, and Robert A. Margo, have long-standing ties to the NBER.  

Marjorie McElroy of Duke University has done path-breaking research in labor economics with a focus on the application of bargaining theory to understand within-household decision making. She served on the NBER Board of Directors for 32 years and is currently a director emeritus. 

N. Gregory Mankiw of Harvard University has contributed foundational improvements to our…

A research summary from the monthly NBER Digest

The Health and Healthcare Spending Effects of GLP-1s Primary tabs

The Health and Healthcare Spending Effects of GLP-1s

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Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1s), better known by brand names such as Ozempic and Wegovy, have generated intense interest as potentially transformative treatments for type 2 diabetes and obesity. Clinical trials found substantial weight loss and improved cardiovascular outcomes associated with taking these medications. Two new studies estimate how these drugs affect health outcomes and medical care costs in the broad population.

In Weighing the Impacts of GLP-1s: Quasi-Experimental Evidence from Provider Adoption (NBER Working Paper 34667), Sam BockJasmin Moshfegh, and Jonathan Zhang study 1.4 million veterans who were diagnosed with diabetes...

From the NBER Reporter: Research, program, and conference summaries

Program Report: Development Economics Figure 1

Program Report: Development Economics

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The Development Economics (DEV) program was launched in 2012 and has 190 affiliated researchers. The success the program is enjoying today is in very large part thanks to Duncan Thomas, who led the program for its first six years. A unique aspect of the program is its close connections with BREAD, the Bureau for Research and Economic Analysis of Development, which is an independent group with worldwide membership. Our fall program meeting is held jointly with BREAD every other year.

Development economics is, broadly speaking, the study of two questions. First, why are some countries poor while other countries are wealthy?…

From the NBER Bulletin on Entrepreneurship

Capital Gains Taxation and Startup Founders figure

Capital Gains Taxation and Startup Founders

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The US capital gains tax is realization based, which means that taxes are due when appreciated assets are sold. Critics of this approach argue that it allows asset holders, such as corporate founders, to defer their tax obligations, sometimes indefinitely. An alternative approach, taxing gains on accrual, would require asset holders to value their assets periodically and to pay tax on the gain since the last valuation. Critics of this approach argue that it could force founders to surrender ownership stakes just to pay tax bills, potentially discouraging startup formation. In Dilution vs. Risk Taking: Capital Gains Taxes and Entrepreneurship (NBER Working Paper 34512), Eduardo M. AzevedoFlorian ScheuerKent Smetters, and Min Yang examine how shifting from realization-based to accrual-based capital gains...

From the NBER Bulletin on Health

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Immunotherapy Increases the Cost of Cancer Care but Reduces Mortality

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Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are immunotherapy drugs that mobilize the patient’s immune system to detect and attack cancer cells. They are considered a breakthrough development in cancer care, but are very expensive, with a full course of treatment costing more than $150,000 per patient. In The Impact of Immunotherapy on Reductions in Cancer Mortality: Evidence from Medicare (NBER Working Paper 34317), Danea Horn, Abby E. Alpert, Mark Duggan, and Mireille Jacobson use Medicare claims data to evaluate the impact of the first ICIs on healthcare use, costs, and mortality among beneficiaries diagnosed with...

Featured Working Papers

Michael GraberMorten HåvarsteinMagne MogstadGaute Torsvik, and Ola L. Vestad find that labor supply elasticities in Norway are higher at higher than lower income levels, and that they are high enough that reducing top tax rates would increase tax revenue.

The rate at which employed workers in the US today receive better-paying outside job offers is about half what it was in the 1980s, reducing annual real wage growth by 0.68 percentage points, according to Niklas EngbomAniket Baksy, and Daniele Caratelli.

Ufuk AkcigitCraig A. ChikisEmin Dinlersoz, and Nathan Goldschlag find that the average earnings of the top 1 percent of industry AI scientists are about $1.5 million higher than the earnings of comparable academics—a fivefold increase since 2001. Academics who permanently move to industry publish less than half as many papers as their academic peers, but apply for nearly six times as many patents.

Poor weather during campus tours at a college in the Northeastern US reduced the likelihood that prospective students applied. Hot temperatures lowered application rates by 10 percent and precipitation by 8 percent, according to Olivia FeldmanJoshua M. Hyman, and Matthew L. McGann.

Department of Justice anti-fraud lawsuits against hospitals for over-admitting emergency department patients are associated with a drop in admission rates of about 3.6 percentage points, and no increase in patient mortality, saving Medicare an estimated $1.3 billion over five years, according to David H. Howard, and Jetson Leder-Luis.

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