National Bureau of Economic Research
Latest from the NBER
A research summary from the monthly NBER Digest

Transportation Productivity and the US Economy, 1947–2017
article
Over the past century, transportation costs have fallen dramatically, yielding substantial economic benefits. In The Long-Run Effects of Transportation Productivity on the US Economy (NBER Working Paper 33248), A. Kerem Coşar, Sophie Osotimehin, and Latchezar Popov demonstrate how improved transportation efficiency has enhanced trade and boosted GDP.
The freight transportation sector saw remarkable gains in multifactor productivity — output growth beyond direct input increases — of 59 percent from 1947 to 2016, compared to 32 percent in other sectors of the US economy. This progress stemmed...
From the NBER Reporter: Research, program, and conference summaries

The Economics of Transformative AI
article
The rapid advancement of artificial intelligence (AI) may usher in the most significant economic transformation since the Industrial Revolution. For nearly a decade, as I witnessed the continuous progress in deep learning, I have been studying the economics of transformative AI — how our economy may be transformed as AI systems advance toward mastering all forms of cognitive work that can be performed by humans, including new tasks that don’t even exist yet. The prospect of understanding the strange new world we will inhabit when transformative AI is developed has felt both intellectually urgent and personally meaningful to me as a father of two young children.
Today, AI systems are approaching and exceeding human-level performance in many domains, and it looks increasingly like our world will be transformed before…
From the NBER Bulletin on Retirement and Disability

Disability Benefits, Aggregate Economic Conditions, and Earnings
article
In How Do Economic Conditions Affect Earnings and Return to Disability Programs for Beneficiaries Whose Benefits Were Terminated? (NBER RDRC Paper NB22-03), Jeffrey Hemmeter, Kathleen Mullen, and Stephanie Rennane find that individuals whose benefits end due to medical improvement during an economic downturn earn less in the short run and are more likely to reapply for benefits within five years than those...
From the NBER Bulletin on Health

Health Consequences of Wildfire Smoke
article
Tiny, inhalable particles known as fine particulate matter (PM2.5) are a primary component of wildfire smoke and are detrimental to human health. Since smoke can drift hundreds of miles from its source, exposure to these pollutants is widespread: wildfire smoke accounts for about 18 percent of the ambient PM2.5 concentrations affecting the US population.
In The Nonlinear Effects of Air Pollution on Health: Evidence from Wildfire Smoke (NBER Working Paper 32924), Nolan H. Miller, David Molitor, and Eric Zou leverage variation in the location of wildfire smoke plumes across counties and over time to show that…
From the NBER Bulletin on Entrepreneurship

Immigrant Entrepreneurship in the US
article
Immigrants to the US are more entrepreneurial than the native population and overrepresented among high-growth startups and venture-backed tech firms. In Immigrant Entrepreneurship: New Estimates and a Research Agenda (NBER Working Paper 32400), Saheel Chodavadia, Sari Pekkala Kerr, William Kerr, and Louis Maiden use business surveys and administrative employment records to provide new evidence on the prevalence and predictors of immigrant...
Featured Working Papers
Felipe Brugués, Ayumu Ken Kikkawa, Yuan Mei, and Pablo Robles study the introduction of NAFTA and find that the price of Mexican products sold domestically declined as manufacturers gained access to cheaper inputs. Exporters raised markups in response to US tariff reductions, resulting in only a small net decrease in the prices of Mexican goods to US consumers.
Work from home currently accounts for a quarter of paid workdays among Americans aged 20–64, with rates higher by 7 percentage points for workers with children under eight, according to Shelby R. Buckman, Jose Maria Barrero, Nicholas Bloom, and Steven J. Davis.
Higher-income parents reduce their other borrowing when taking on educational loans to pay for college, while lower-income parents take on more debt, according to analysis of data on student aid applications and credit records in California by Palaash Bhargava, Sandra E. Black, Jeffrey T. Denning, Robert W. Fairlie, and Oded Gurantz.
Gaétan de Rassenfosse and Adam B. Jaffe study recent fee reforms by the US Patent and Trademark Office and find that reductions in patent fees do not appear to increase participation in the patent system by small businesses and other micro entities.
From 2017 to 2023, "dark ships" evading detection transported an estimated 7.8 million metric tons of crude oil monthly — 43 percent of global seaborne crude exports — according to analysis of detailed ship tracking data by Jesús Fernández-Villaverde, Yiliang Li, Le Xu, and Francesco Zanetti.
In the News
Recent citations of NBER research in the media
_______________________________________
Research Projects
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.
Videos
Recordings of presentations, keynote addresses, and panel discussions at NBER conferences are available on the Videos page.