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Philippe Aghion Peter Howitt Joel Mokyr
(L to R) Philippe Aghion, Peter Howitt, and Joel Mokyr

Philippe Aghion, Peter Howitt, and Joel Mokyr Awarded 2025 Nobel Prize

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Philippe Aghion, research associate Peter Howitt, and NBER board member Joel Mokyr have been awarded the 2025 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences “for having explained innovation-driven economic growth.” The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, in announcing the prize, explained that their studies have illuminated the process by which “new products and production methods [replace] old ones in a never-ending cycle. This is the basis for sustained economic growth, which results in a better…

NBER Appoints 51 Research Associates, Fall 2025

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The NBER Board of Directors appointed 51 research associates, 49 of whom were promoted from faculty research fellows, at its September 2025 meeting. Two of the new appointees were former research associates who resigned from the NBER for public service and who have returned to their universities. Research associates must be tenured faculty members at North American colleges or universities; their appointments are recommended to the board by directors of the NBER’s 19 research programs, typically after consultation with a steering committee of leading scholars. The new research associates are affiliated with 33 different colleges and universities, and they received graduate training at 27 different institutions. Following the promotions, the NBER has 1576 research associates and 270 faculty research fellows. The names and…

A research summary from the monthly NBER Digest

34011_Financial Distress_figure_draft_final

Municipal Debt and Public Services During the Great Depression

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The value of the US municipal bond market in early 2025 was $4.2 trillion. This substantial debt burden exposes local governments to significant financial risks during downturns. While in recent decades US cities have often received federal assistance during recessions—like the $350 billion Coronavirus Local Fiscal Recovery Fund during the COVID-19 pandemic—such support mechanisms are relatively recent innovations in American fiscal federalism.

In Public Goods Under Financial Distress (NBER Working Paper 34011), Pawel Janas examines how municipal debt affected local public services during the Great Depression. This historical setting offers two key advantages for analysis: local governments…

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

17th Annual Martin Feldstein Lecture, 2025: The Fiscal Future Figure 1

17th Annual Martin Feldstein Lecture, 2025: The Fiscal Future

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N. Gregory Mankiw

It is a great honor and delight to deliver this year’s Feldstein Lecture. I was never one of Marty’s students—I was educated not at Harvard, but at Princeton and MIT. Yet Marty nonetheless had a profound influence on my life and career.

As a freshman at Princeton in 1977, I took introductory microeconomics from the superb teacher Harvey Rosen, who later hired me to be his research assistant. Harvey was a recent PhD student of Marty’s, so even though I did not know it at the time, I entered the economics profession as Marty’s grandstudent.

Four years later, as a first-year student in MIT’s PhD program, I took a couple of courses from a promising, young assistant professor named Larry Summers, making me Marty’s grandstudent…

From the NBER Bulletin on Entrepreneurship

Underwriting Based on Cash Flow Helps Younger Entrepreneurs Access Credit

Underwriting Based on Cash Flow Helps Younger Entrepreneurs Access Credit

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Younger entrepreneurs are disadvantaged in small business loan markets because lenders rely heavily on personal credit scores, which favor long histories of repaying debt. In Modernizing Access to Credit for Younger Entrepreneurs: From FICO to Cash Flow (NBER Working Paper 33367), researchers Christopher M. HairSabrina T. HowellMark J. Johnson, and Siena Matsumoto document this fact and show that younger entrepreneurs benefit from underwriting that augments personal credit scores (like FICO) with cash flow data. They analyze comprehensive…

From the NBER Bulletin on Health

Addressing Common Misconceptions About the Child Mental Health Crisis

Addressing Common Misconceptions About the Child Mental Health Crisis

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The US Surgeon General has called the child mental health crisis “the defining public health crisis of our time.” In 2020, 13 percent of US children aged 3 to 17 had a diagnosed mental or behavioral condition. In 2021, mental health services for children cost $31 billion—47 percent of pediatric medical spending. Childhood mental health issues are linked to lower educational attainment, reduced employment, and increased use of welfare programs. Also, youth suicide rates are especially high in the US; males aged 15 to 19 have a rate four times higher than in France. In Investing in Children to Address the Child Mental Health Crisis (NBER Working Paper 33632), Janet Currie explores three common misconceptions about this youth mental health...

Featured Working Papers

John Y. CampbellCarolin Pflueger, and Luis M. Viceira document that bond-stock betas switched from positive to negative around the year 2000 across the US, UK, and Europe. Recent macroeconomic events appear to have moved these betas back to positive territory, though it remains unclear whether this a transitory or longer-term change. 

When chemicals were reclassified as carcinogens by the US National Toxicology Program, housing values within 3 miles of emitting plants declined by between 1 and 2 percent relative to properties farther away, according to an analysis of housing transactions from 2000–2020 by Jules H. van BinsbergenJoão F. CoccoMarco Grotteria, and S. Lakshmi Naaraayanan.

Over the period 2020–2022, Chinese residential land prices rose about 12 percent while transaction volumes plummeted by as much as 40 percent. Jeffery (Jinfan) ChangYuheng Wang, and Wei Xiong find that these movements were associated with local governments propping up land prices through state-owned financing vehicles which purchased as much as one third of the market. 

An experiment that provided energy-efficient production technology to manufacturers in Dhaka, Bangladesh found that businesses located within 500 meters of a “treated” firm were 19 percentage points more likely to adopt the technology themselves, according to Ritam ChaureyGaurav NayyarSiddharth Sharma, and Eric Verhoogen.

Danish mothers accurately predict whether they will eventually return to work but overestimate how quickly they will do so. Almost 65 percent expect to be working at 9 months postpartum if their partner takes leave, but only 35 percent actually work, according to a survey of 11,000 women analyzed by Andrew CaplinSøren Leth-Petersen, and Christopher Tonetti

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Through a partnership with the University of Chicago Press, the NBER publishes the proceedings of four annual conferences as well as other research studies associated with NBER-based research projects.

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Supported by the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation grant #20241113 and the Peter G. Peterson Foundation grant #25053
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Supported by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation grant #G-2023-19618 and Microsoft 
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Supported by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation grant #G-2023-19618 and Microsoft
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Supported by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation grant #G-2023-19618 and Microsoft
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Supported by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation grant #G-2023-19618 and Microsoft
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