National Bureau of Economic Research
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Isaiah Andrews Wins John Bates Clark Medal
NBER Research Associate Isaiah Andrews of Harvard University is year’s recipient of the John Bates Clark Medal, which is awarded by the American Economic Association to the American economist under the age of 40 who has made the most substantial contribution to economic thought and knowledge.
Andrews has made pathbreaking contributions in econometric theory and in the application of empirical methods in applied economics. He has provided new tools for assessing the sensitivity of parameter estimates to data inputs, explored the role of publication bias and potential corrections for it when evaluating published research, and advanced the analysis of weak identification in econometric models. The prize citation notes that he is "playing a key role in the recent turn of econometrics back toward the study of the most important problems faced in empirical research." The full citation for his award may be found here.
Andrews is affiliated with the NBER Labor Studies Program. He received his BA from Yale University, and his PhD from MIT.
Urban Rent Gradients Have Flattened During the Pandemic
Rents and housing prices are usually highest at the center of dense urban areas, reflecting the value that residents place on short commutes and proximity to cultural amenities, shopping, and restaurants. The decline in rents with distance from center cities is know as the "rent gradient." House prices display a similar pattern. The COVID-19 pandemic has shuttered many of the businesses and institutions that city-dwellers value, and turned density from a positive to a negative community attribute. The coincident rise in work from home has eliminated the value of short commutes to downtown for many individuals. The result has been a decline in rents in center cities relative to those in lower-density, more-suburban areas. NBER Research Associate Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh of Columbia Business School, along with Arpit Gupta, Vrinda Mittal, and Jonas Peeters, studies the evolution of rent- and price-gradients in 30 large metropolitan areas over the last three years (28675). Pre-pandemic, the researchers find clear evidence of declining rents and house prices as distance to downtowns rises, but the rent gradient began to decline in March 2020 and was nearly gone by year’s end. The house price gradient declined much less. Van Nieuwerburgh summarizes these findings in the video below. An archive of NBER videos on pandemic-related research may be found here.
More than 390 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.
Panelists Explore Impact of Rising Government Borrowing
Most developed nations have adopted deficit-financed programs of economic stimulus in response to the COVID-19 recession. In the United States, the ratio of the national debt to gross national product is projected to exceed 100 percent this year, nearly three times the level of 15 years ago. Over the same period, real interest rates have declined, reducing the burden of servicing a given level of public debt. Three panelists at the NBER’s 36th Annual Conference on Macroeconomics on April 8 offered insights on the effects of rising debt levels on capital markets and long-term economic growth. Carmen Reinhart of Harvard University and NBER, who is currently chief economist of the World Bank, Ricardo Reis of the London School of Economics, and Lawrence Summers of Harvard University and NBER, presented their perspectives and outlined dimensions on which current policy developments are raising new research issues. The panel, which was moderated by Raghuram Rajan of the University of Chicago and NBER, may be viewed here.
From the Bulletin on Health
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From the Bulletin on Retirement and Disability
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Featured Working Papers
Reliance on information about relatives' Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder diagnoses can perpetuate marginal diagnoses across family members, raising caseloads and health care costs without improving patient well-being, Petra Persson, Xinyao Qiu, and Maya Rossin-Slater find.
A field experiment by Kevin Boudreau finds that subjective expectations play a crucial role in shaping early adoption of platforms. Individuals are more likely to adopt platforms that they believe many others will adopt.
Robot adoption increases nursing home employment in Japan by augmenting the number of care workers and nurses on flexible employment contracts, and decreases difficulty in staff retention, a study by Karen Eggleston, Yong Suk Lee, and Toshiaki Iizuka shows.
Stricter lockdown policies, both in-country and globally, drove larger declines in national stock prices, conditional on COVID-19 pandemic severity, workplace mobility, and income support and debt-relief policies, Steven J. Davis, Dingqian Liu, and Xuguang Simon Sheng find.
Non-partnered mothers spend slightly less time performing childcare and much less time in other household activities than partnered mothers, a study of data from seven wealthy countries by Daniel S. Hamermesh shows. Unpartnered mothers’ total work time — paid work and household production — is slightly less than partnered women’s.
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