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Entrepreneurship and Innovation Policy and the Economy, Volume 3

Entrepreneurship and Innovation Policy and the Economy, Volume 3

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Benjamin Jones and Josh Lerner, editors.

Entrepreneurship and Innovation Policy and the Economy, Volume 3 synthesizes key findings about entrepreneurial and innovative activity in the US economy, conveying insights on contemporary challenges and providing an analytical base for policy design. 

In the first paper, Jorge Guzman, Fiona Murray, Scott Stern, and Heidi Williams examine regional innovation engines and highlight the place-specific actions, potential bottlenecks, and roles of different stakeholders in…

A research summary from the monthly NBER Digest

Measuring the Informal Economy, with a Literary Twist figure

Measuring the Informal Economy, with a Literary Twist

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Novelist Victor Hugo offered insightful analysis of the underground economy in his 1862 novel Les Misérables: “when work is lacking, when the trade is nil, the taxpayer resists the tax by shortage, exhausts and exceeds the deadlines, and the State spends a lot of money in duress and enforcement fees. When work abounds … the tax is easily paid.” In Rethinking the Informal Economy and the Hugo Effect (NBER Working Paper 31963), Francesco Pappadà and Kenneth S. Rogoff develop a novel measure of the size of the off-the-books economy in the countries in the European Union, and they…

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

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Generic Drugs: A Healthcare Market Trial

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Can healthcare markets deliver access, affordability, and quality? While markets for hospital and physician services both have unique challenges, generic drug pricing is often seen as a success story for market forces. After patent-related exclusivity ends, prices fall dramatically. Consumers have access to a range of highly clinically valuable products at low prices. Is this success unique or can it be replicated in other parts of the healthcare sector?

As in other healthcare markets, insurers play a crucial role in determining both prices and utilization of prescription drugs. Patients purchase pharmaceuticals from a pharmacy, either in a physical location or by mail. Like many retailers of consumer goods, pharmaceutical retailers purchase products from wholesalers and manufacturers. A unique feature in the financing of…

From the NBER Bulletin on Retirement and Disability

Social Security and Retirement around the World

Social Security and Retirement around the World

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Over the past 25 years, labor force participation at older ages has increased dramatically. In the 12 countries that are part of the NBER’s International Social Security (ISS) project, participation among those aged 60 to 64 has risen by an average of over 20 percentage points for men and over 25 percentage points for women.

In The Effects of Reforms on Retirement Behavior: Introduction and Summary (NBER Working Paper 31979), authors Axel Börsch-Supan and Courtney Coile report on the most recent work of the ISS project. The current analysis builds on previous project phases which showed that changes in health and education could…

From the NBER Bulletin on Health

Broadband Internet Access Improves Health Outcomes for Medicare Patients Primary tabs

Broadband Internet Access Improves Health Outcomes for Medicare Patients

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Access to a high-speed internet connection provides patients with a low-cost means of collecting information related to medical decisions and the quality of medical care providers. In Broadband Internet Access and Health Outcomes: Patient and Provider Responses in Medicare (NBER Working Paper 31579), Jessica Van Parys and Zach Y. Brown link information on broadband availability by ZIP code from the Federal Communications Commission to Medicare claims data from 1999 to 2008. They analyze the effect of high-speed internet access on health outcomes and provider choices for Medicare beneficiaries who are undergoing common procedures.

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From the NBER Bulletin on Entrepreneurship

C-Suite Differences: Public versus Privately Held Firms figure

C-Suite Differences: Public versus Privately Held Firms

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Private equity (PE) firms’ business model is to acquire privately held companies, to change their strategy and operations with the goal of improving profitability and growth, and ultimately to sell the companies for a profit. The senior management team is replaced at a majority of private equity acquisitions. More than 40 percent of PE firms report that this is a key way to improve their acquisitions’ success.

In The Market for CEOs: Evidence from Private Equity (NBER Working Paper 30899), Paul Gompers, Steven Kaplan, and Vladimir Mukharlyamov compare the characteristics of CEOs installed by PE firms to the characteristics of those who become...

Featured Working Papers

Donghoon Lee, Anirban Basu, Jerome A. Dugan, and Pinar Karaca-Mandic find that  for-profit inpatient psychiatric hospitals in California are more likely than not-for-profits to treat high-cost patients, but they do not find any evidence that they are enhancing profitability by choosing patients for reasons other than need for care.

Receiving radiation therapy following a breast cancer diagnosis increases patients’ employment ten years later by 37 percent, and earnings by 45 percent, in addition to having lifesaving benefits, according to a study of Danish data by N. Meltem Daysal, William N. Evans, Mikkel Hasse Pedersen, and Mircea Trandafir.

Borrowing costs, which have risen at the fastest rates in decades, do much to explain why consumer sentiment remains depressed despite low unemployment and falling inflation, according to Marijn A. Bolhuis, Judd N. L. Cramer, Karl Oskar Schulz, and Lawrence H. Summers. 

Providing graduating cohorts of undergraduate business majors with objective information about the gender gap in negotiation and its effects can nudge women who have potentially large financial returns to negotiation to realize these gains, Patricia Cortés, Jacob French, Jessica Pan, and Basit Zafar find.

Studying three reforms of wealth taxation in Sweden and Denmark, Katrine Jakobsen, Henrik Kleven, Jonas Kolsrud, Camille Landais, and Mathilde Muñoz estimate that a one percentage point increase in the average wealth tax rate on the top 2 percent of households leads to outmigration of at most 2 percent of these households.

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Books & Chapters

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.

Research Spotlights

NBER researchers discuss their work on subjects of wide interest to economists, policymakers, and the general public. Recordings of more-detailed presentations, keynote addresses, and panel discussions at NBER conferences are available on the Lectures page.

Research Spotlight
An investigation of the role of anonymity in online communication and social media posting.    ...
Research Spotlight
In recognition of Black History Month, Research Associate Conrad Miller of the University of California, Berkeley,...
Research Spotlight
In recognition of Black History Month, Research Associate Trevon Logan of The Ohio State University, who directs the...
Research Spotlight
A growing fraction of US medical care is delivered through integrated healthcare systems that include many medical...
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