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 China’s Rise in Global Research Primary tabs

China’s Rise in Global Research

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Although Western nations have dominated global scientific research since the nineteenth century, recent decades have witnessed profound shifts in where research is conducted, what topics it addresses, and how widely its findings spread across borders. In The Geography of Science (NBER Working Paper 34694), Abhishek Nagaraj and Randol Yao provide a comprehensive analysis of the evolution of global science between 1980 and 2022. Using data on 44 million publications from nearly 12,000 journals, they track where science is produced, based on author affiliations, what science studies...

Entrepreneurship and Innovation Policy and the Economy, volume 5

Entrepreneurship and Innovation Policy and the Economy, volume 5

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Benjamin Jones and Josh Lerner, editors.

This volume of the Entrepreneurship and Innovation Policy and the Economy series brings rigorous new economic research to bear on a number of current policy issues. 

Andrew Fieldhouse and Karel Mertens quantify the social returns to public R&D and find that federal investments have yielded extraordinarily high productivity payoffs. They argue that cuts to non-defense R&D…

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...

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

Quantitative Trade Policy in a Changing World

Quantitative Trade Policy in a Changing World

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Introduction

Over the past three decades trade policy has profoundly shaped the structure of production, employment, and welfare across countries. The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), China’s entry into the World Trade Organization (WTO), and the recent resurgence of tariff protectionism illustrate how deeply globalization and policy choices are intertwined. Evaluating their effects requires quantitative frameworks that capture how shocks to both technology and policy propagate through supply chains, labor markets, and international linkages.

Our research develops tractable general equilibrium models to quantify how shocks such as tariffs affect economies—both in the aggregate and across workers, regions, and sectors. These frameworks extend the Ricardian model of trade to include…

Featured Working Papers

Black and Native Americans drafted during the Vietnam war were roughly 40 percent more likely to marry a white spouse and register as Republican, while no significant effects on White veterans were found, according to Zachary Bleemer.

Analyzing cross-state variation in the US, Erik BrynjolfssonJ. Frank LiJavier MirandaRobert Seamans, and Andrew J. Wang find that 10 percent increase in the minimum wage raises the likelihood of robot adoption among manufacturing firms by approximately 8 percent. 

Chinese city-level solar subsidies from 2004–2020 explain more than 40 percent of the aggregate growth in Chinese solar innovation, revenues, and price declines, with every $1 of subsidy generating $1.65 in social benefits—a figure that doubles when environmental costs are included, according to Ignacio Banares-SanchezRobin BurgessDávid LászlóPol Simpson, and John Van ReenenYifan Wang.

R. Jason FabermanAndreas I. Mueller and Ayşegül Şahin find that differences in women’s preferences for job amenities—such as flexibility, remote work, and lighter physical demands—account for nearly 40 percent of the gender wage gap.

Among US households who chose to install residential air quality monitors, the installation reduced indoor PM2.5 concentrations by 2.5 µg/m3 within 12 weeks, driven primarily by air purifier adoption rather than changes in behavior like cooking, according to Benjamin Krebs and Matthew J. Neidell.

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