National Bureau of Economic Research
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The Effects of Mandatory Investment in Wildfire Resilience
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Wildfires have ravaged California in recent decades, often destroying homes and displacing residents. Building codes that require fire resistance in new construction have been one of the responses to this devastation. In Mandated vs. Voluntary Adaptation to Natural Disasters: The Case of US Wildfires (NBER Working Paper 29621), Patrick W. Baylis and Judson Boomhower examine the impact of mandatory statewide regulations on new residences. They find that newer homes, built under these rules, are much more likely to survive a wildfire.
Research on COVID Impacts and Responses
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More than 540 NBER working papers have addressed various aspects of the COVID-19 pandemic. These papers are open access and have been collected for easy reference. Like all NBER papers, they are circulated for discussion and comment, and have not been peer-reviewed. View them in reverse chronological order or by topic area.
Aguiar, Tesar to Lead International Finance and Macro Program
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Research Associates Mark Aguiar and Linda Tesar will become the codirectors of the NBER’s International Finance and Macroeconomics Program effective April 4.
Aguiar is the Walker Professor of Economics and International Finance at Princeton University. His research spans both open- and closed-economy macroeconomics, including sovereign debt, business cycles in emerging markets, capital taxation, growth, and the microfoundations of consumption and labor supply.
Tesar is a professor of economics at the University of Michigan. Her research has examined cross-country business cycle linkages, capital flows, especially to emerging markets, the consequences of exchange rate exposure, and global risk-sharing.
The new codirectors will succeed Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas, a professor of economics and the S.K. and Angela Chan Professor of Global Management at the University of California, Berkeley. Gourinchas will be going on leave from the university and the NBER to become economic counsellor and head of the research department at the International Monetary Fund.
From the NBER Reporter: Research, program, and conference summaries
The Economic Impact of Climate Change over Time and Space
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Climate change is an unintended consequence of the industrialization of the world economy. The evidence that human activity has released large amounts of CO2 into the atmosphere, leading to rising global temperatures, is by now uncontroversial. However, so far, the scientific and political recognition of this reality has not translated into a commitment to emissions reductions sufficient to stop further global warming. As a result, economists are tasked with evaluating the economic costs of climate change and designing policies to address them. These evaluations are essential: the world cannot embark on ambitious attempts to reduce carbon emissions if we are not reasonably confident that the benefits of these actions will outweigh their costs.
Evaluating the economic impact of climate…
The 45th Annual NBER Summer Institute
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The 45th annual NBER Summer Institute will be held from Monday, July 11 to Friday, July 29, 2022. It will consists of nearly 50 distinct meetings, each focusing on a topic or a sub-field in economics. The schedule of meetings can be found here. Meetings will hopefully include an in-person as well as a virtual component. To be considered for presentation, papers must be submitted by 11:59pm Eastern time on Wednesday, March 23, here.
From the NBER Bulletin on Health
The Persistent Mortality Advantage of a College Degree
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In 2019, Americans with a four-year college degree had six years greater life expectancy at age 25 than those without a degree. These educational differences in mortality have been growing in recent decades and are apparent across demographic groups. In Mortality Rates by College Degree before and during COVID-19 (NBER Working Paper 29328), Anne Case and Angus Deaton explore the evolution of these differences during the pandemic.
If every American faced an equal threat of infection and death from COVID-19, then the mortality gap between more and less educated individuals would have narrowed during the pandemic. However, the risks from COVID-19 were plausibly greater…
From the NBER Bulletin on Entrepreneurship
Universities Catalyze Entrepreneurial Culture
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Many cities and states search for policy levers that could enable them to develop a startup culture. In "More than an Ivory Tower: The Impact of Research Institutions on the Quantity and Quality of Entrepreneurship" (NBER Working Paper 28846), Valentina Tartari and Scott Stern conclude that research universities, particularly those in urban areas and near high-income zip codes, provide the most fecund ground for high-quality local entrepreneurship.
The researchers analyze information from the Startup Cartography Project, which provides zip-code-level measures of both the…
From the NBER Bulletin on Retirement and Disability
Legal Representation in Disability Insurance Claims
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The process of applying for Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) benefits is complex. Applicants must complete a long application documenting their employment history, medical conditions, and medical treatments, obtain relevant medical records, understand the relevance of certain administrative rules and requirements, and in case of those who are denied benefits, navigate a lengthy appeals process.
Legal representatives have long played a role in SSDI cases at the appellate level, as cases reaching this level must be argued at a hearing before an administrative law judge. Disability representatives – primarily attorneys but also registered non-attorneys – work on a contingency-fee basis, receiving 25 percent of the claimant’s past-due benefits up to a maximum of $6,000. In 2019, fees to…
Featured Working Papers
Increases in children’s Medicaid eligibility increases the likelihood a mother is married, decreases her labor market participation, and reduces her smoking and alcohol consumption, according to research by Daniel S. Grossman, Sebastian Tello-Trillo, and Barton Willage.
The costs of adjusting instruction in programs that deliver assembly, repair, and maintenance skills to students explain about one-fifth of the 9.5 percent decline in community college enrollment between 2019 and 2020, and nearly all the difference in enrollment declines by gender during this period, Diane Whitmore Schanzenbach and Sarah Turner find.
Air quality alert systems in South Korea generate benefits worth 10 times their costs. An alert issuance reduces youth respiratory and adult cardiovascular expenditures by about 30 and 27 percent, respectively, Michael L. Anderson, Minwoo Hyun, and Jaecheol Lee find.
Survey evidence suggests that the US public would prefer nonprofit entities to expand their activities during downturns, but data from these organizations’ tax returns indicate that their activities are actually procyclical, a study by Christine L. Exley, Nils H. Lehr, and Stephen J. Terry finds.
Survey evidence from Germany indicates that workers in low-wage firms underestimate their outside options and the wages offered by other firms, which raises employer monopsony power and leads to wage dispersion, according to research by Simon Jäger, Christopher Roth, Nina Roussille, and Benjamin Schoefer.
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