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AEA Poster Session

Poster Session

Friday, Jan. 5, 2024 7:00 AM - 6:00 PM (CST)

Grand Hyatt, Lone Star Ballroom Prefunction A-B

Saturday, Jan. 6, 2024 7:00 AM - 6:00 PM (CST)

Grand Hyatt, Lone Star Ballroom Prefunction A-B

Sunday, Jan. 7, 2024 7:00 AM - 3:00 PM (CST)

Grand Hyatt, Lone Star Ballroom Prefunction A-B
Hosted By: American Economic Association

A Bayesian Approach to Longitudinal Social Relations Model (C1, I2)

Li Tan
,
Arizona State University
Xingchen Xu
,
Arizona State University

Abstract

The Social Relations Model (SRM) serves as a comprehensive conceptual and methodological framework for analyzing voluntary or involuntary interpersonal relationships and interactions among individuals within groups. Widely employed in social sciences research, SRM has gained particular relevance in the economics of education, given the increasing focus on team learning and collaborative project-based learning.
Longitudinal team learning data is abundant in practice. For instance, the Comprehensive Assessment of Team Member Effectiveness (CATME) system has been utilized by over 1.4 million students and 17,000 instructors. Instructors frequently gather multiple rounds of round-robin peer evaluation and assessment data within student teams throughout a semester or even across several semesters. Although previous research has applied the standard SRM to longitudinal social relations data, the model was originally developed based on cross-sectional data. Consequently, its application to longitudinal data, where the same individuals are observed across multiple periods, has demonstrated critical limitations.
To address the scarcity of methods for analyzing the Longitudinal Social Relations Model (LSRM), we present a Bayesian approach, aimed at developing a general and flexible framework to bridge this gap. Utilizing a simulation-based framework, we first demonstrate that the Bayesian method significantly outperforms two alternative approaches—a two-step method and the Social Relations Structural Equation Model—in terms of estimation accuracy. Furthermore, the Bayesian method is applied on an empirical application to illustrate its additional benefits: it easily incorporates covariates, such as demographic variables, into the Bayesian LSRM, and effectively handles missing data, a common issue in round-robin peer-evaluation datasets.
By introducing the Bayesian LSRM, we pave the way for analyzing a range of impactful and policy-relevant questions in social sciences research. This advanced method enhances the understanding and interpretation of longitudinal interpersonal relationships and interactions within groups, contributing to more effective policy-making and interventions in educational and other social contexts.

A Behavioral Heterogeneous Agent New Keynesian Model (E5, E3)

Fabian Seyrich
,
Berlin School of Economics
Oliver Pfäuti
,
University of Texas-Austin

Abstract

Recent empirical evidence led to a rethinking of the transmission mechanisms of monetary policy: (i) monetary policy influences consumption largely through indirect effects; (ii) households with higher marginal propensities to consume are more exposed to monetary policy; (iii) forward guidance has relatively weak effects on current economic activity; and (iv) the lower bound on nominal interest rates does not cause significant instability. To account for these facts simultaneously, we develop a New Keynesian model with cognitive discounting and household heterogeneity. In contrast to existing models, we jointly account for these facts without having to rely on a specific monetary or fiscal policy. The interaction of household heterogeneity and cognitive discounting leads to a novel amplification channel of inflationary supply shocks. To stabilize inflation, monetary policy needs to raise interest rates more substantially than under rational expectations, which leads to a stronger increase in consumption inequality and larger fiscal implications.

A Generalized Model of Growth in the Data Economy (O3, O4)

Danxia Xie
,
Tsinghua University
Longtian Zhang
,
Central University of Finance and Economics

Abstract

In this paper, we build a generalized model to describe the long-run effects of different types of data from consumption-generated to production-generated. We first introduce two new types of data which are generated from the production process and the nature, i.e., producer data and nature data, respectively. Labor will be employed for collecting and cleaning the data before they can be used; however, there are no privacy concerns as assumed in previous studies, which all focus on consumer data. We explore along the balanced growth path and find a higher growth rate of the economy than that can be derived when only using data from consumers---a result that we have not found in existing studies. We then go further to the generalized model using all the types of data simultaneously, and provide a full picture on the transformations of different growth regimes. This framework has new and important implications for the data economy.

A Historical Housing Price Index from South China: 1570–1949 (N9, R3)

Siyu Pan
,
Northern Arizona University

Abstract

Economic studies on premodern housing markets have earned more attention in recent years, but such work is still restricted by the scarcity of data and the scope is limited to a few urban areas scattered across the globe. In this paper, I collect a novel housing transaction dataset with over 1000 observations from the historic Huizhou prefecture, a relatively rural area in south China that had a strong economic influence in late imperial China. This paper develops a housing price index that covers the late Ming Dynasty, the Qing Dynasty, and the Republic of China era (1570--1949) using hedonic regression models. Besides the size of the property, my results also reveal housing price determinants that are unique to the historical and cultural background of this market: the orientation of the property, familial ties between sellers and buyers, adjacency to the ancestral halls, and whether the seller is in an urgent financial situation.

A Real Theory of Aggregate Demand Shortages (E3, D6)

Ehsan Ebrahimy
,
International Monetary Fund

Abstract

How can low consumer spending cause an inefficient recession or recovery? We propose a theory, in which aggregate demand shortages are the result of aggregate demand externalities stemming from financial frictions rather than nominal rigidities. In our theory, an economy can be demand constrained when, i) consumption goods and assets used as saving vehicles are not perfect substitutes, ii) productivity in the consumption goods sector can be improved or maintained via investment, and iii) external financing of this investment is subject to a tight enough borrowing constraint. In a demand-constrained equilibrium, a saving tax can increase consumption, investment, employment, output, and welfare. A tighter firms' borrowing constraint implies more severe aggregate demand shortages in a demand-constrained equilibrium. We use stylized extensions of our benchmark model to show how financial shocks can create demand-constrained recessions. Our theory suggests that fiscal rather than monetary policy might become the primary policy tool to restore the efficiency under certain conditions. Demand management policies might be necessary over a long period of time. The "potential", i.e., the constrained efficient allocation, may depend on both supply and demand factors.

A Unified Framework to Estimate Macroeconomic Stars (E3, C5)

Saeed Zaman
,
Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland

Abstract

We develop a flexible semi-structural time-series model to estimate jointly several macroeconomic “stars” — i.e., unobserved long-run equilibrium levels of output (and growth rate of output), the unemployment rate, the real rate of interest, productivity growth, the price inflation, and wage inflation. The ingredients of the model are in part motivated by economic theory and in part by the empirical features necessitated by the changing economic environment. Following the recent literature on inflation and interest rate modeling, we explicitly model the links between long-run survey expectations and stars to improve the stars’ econometric estimation. Our approach permits time variation in the relationships between various components, including time variation in error variances. To tractably estimate the large multivariate model, we use a recently developed precision sampler that relies on Bayesian methods. The by-products of this approach are the time-varying estimates of the wage and price Phillips curves, and the pass-through between prices and wages, both of which provide new insights into these empirical relationships’ instability in US data. Furthermore, our estimates of the stars are among the most precise. Lastly, we document the competitive real-time forecasting properties of the model and, separately, the usefulness of stars’ estimates as steady-state values in external models.

Access to High-Income Countries and Product Innovation: Evidence from China (F1, O3)

Wenshuang Yu
,
University of Calgary

Abstract

In this paper, I study the effect of access to markets in high-income countries on firms' product innovation in developing countries. To do so, I exploit a reform that exogenously increased market access for firms in the world's largest developing country, China. Applying an instrumental variables strategy to rich firm-level administrative data, I show that exporting to high-income countries leads firms to innovate new products. These gains were driven primarily by privately-owned firms. My estimates show that a ten percentage point increase in market access to richer countries caused a 1.9 percentage point increase in product innovation for privately-owned firms. These effects are induced by the increase in revenue produced by exporting to high-income countries.

Adaptive Diarchy: Authority between Two Heads (D8, H1)

Yucheng Qiu
,
Peking University
Zanhui Liu
,
Tsinghua University

Abstract

An organization is referred to as diarchy if it appoints two executives with the same responsibility. This paper explores rationale behind diarchial organizations, starting from their most intriguing feature: A diarchy is often composed of two agents with ambiguous authority allocation. We study a model where a principal must rely on a biased agent for information and execution. To seek extra advice, she can appoint a supervisor with intrinsic preferences over dissenting voice. However, the supervisor may collude with the agent and advocate the latter's advice in communication. For the principal, the only way to prevent potential collusion is to make the supervisor roving. Nevertheless, the signal disclosed by the roving supervisor may become completely uninformative. We show that when vertical conflict of interest is moderate, adaptive diarchy emerges in equilibrium, and is characterized by three features. First, there exists a stationary supervisor. Second, although ex ante contingent delegation is impossible with the principal's lack of necessary expertise, the allocation of real authority is adaptive ex post. Third, the supervisor and the agent are of slight difference of opinion and similar relative status. We then embed our baseline setting in an infinite-horizon model to explore the historical regime shift from roving to stationary supervisors. We show that adaptive diarchy emerges in the proceed of the principal's learning about the extent to which enhancement of control erodes agents' participation.

Affirmative Action Policies with Race-Neutral Preferences (I2, J1)

Kendall Kennedy
,
Mississippi State University

Abstract

The role of structural biases in the university admissions process has been the subject of much attention, but the economics literature has only modeled the existence of affirmative action policies as the result of university preferences for diverse student populations, or as affecting endogenous effort choices. This study presents a simple university admissions model that predicts affirmative action even in the absence of explicit preferences for racial diversity.

First, human capital production theory implies that Black students have greater returns to university attendance than White students of equal human capital. In a standard human capital production framework, mean human capital is greater for White students than for Black students due to well-known inequality in educational investment. However, if comparing two students with similar human capital, the Black student has a lower expected level of investment but a higher expected innate ability than the White student. If ability and investments are complements in human capital production, then attending a university increases the human capital of Black students by more than White students in expectation.

Second, following the canonical Arrow-Phelps models of statistical discrimination, Black students have a lower mean and higher variance in their human capital. Students generate noisy signals of their true human capital, but these signals are biased against Black students both additively and through unequal signal precision. Admissions officers observe race-specific signal distributions but cannot distinguish between signal bias and Black-White human capital differences in observed Black-White signal gaps.

Combining these two channels, affirmative action is optimal if any of the following are true: (i) there is a Black-White education investment gap and complementarity between innate ability and investment; (ii) there is additive bias disfavoring Black students in signaling; or (iii) signals are less precise for Black students and the university’s objective function is convex in human capital.

Agricultural Minimum Wage and U.S. Agricultural Employment (Q1, J3)

SongYi Paik
,
University of Minnesota

Abstract

American farmers have faced widespread labor shortages for years, and foreign-born workers have become an essential labor resource. Due to concerns of a depressive effect on the wages of American farmworkers, the US government requires employers who hire foreign workers through the H-2A program to pay at least the minimum wage, called the Adverse Effect Wage Rates (AEWRs) around 40-50% higher than the state minimum wages.

This paper examines the relationship between the AEWRs and agricultural employment, and I narrow agricultural employment down to the employment of three different groups of workers who are most likely affected by the AEWRs: less-educated domestic farmworkers, undocumented farmworkers, and foreign workers.

Using the Department of Labor's H-2A program data along with the 2005-2019 American Community Survey, I estimate the changed agricultural employment at the Public Use Microdata Areas (PUMAs) level based on a two-way fixed effects specification. I find the disemployment effect among employed agricultural workers and those with less education. The AEWRs also have heterogeneous effects on agricultural workers: one dollar increase in the AEWR is associated with a decrease of 93 domestic workers with less education (22 percent reduction of the mean) and a decrease of 41 undocumented workers (30 percent reduction of the mean) while there is little impact on foreign workers. Also, one dollar increase in AEWR reduces 126 non-Hispanic White workers while increasing 31 Hispanic workers.

Although the AEWR policy is designed to avoid any adverse effects on American agricultural workers, it raises concerns about its negative consequences of harming job opportunities for less-educated domestic agricultural workers. Moreover, an increase in farmers’ labor costs disproportionally affects job opportunities for non-Hispanic White. However, the jobs left by them appear not to be sufficiently filled by other workers such as foreign workers or domestic Hispanic workers.

Aid, Coup D'état, and Conflict: Evidence from Myanmar (O1, F3)

Changwei Zhan
,
National University of Singapore

Abstract

This study analyzes the aid-politics-conflict nexus by empirically examining aid-related conflict occurrence in the context of political turmoil. Specifically, I focus on the aftermath of the 2021 military coup d'état in Myanmar, which resulted in sustained nationwide conflicts. I combine aid actions and conflict events datasets and construct a village-year-month panel covering over 13,000 villages. I employ the Difference-in-Differences design and control for fine granular fixed effects and control variables derived from high-resolution geographical data. I find that villages that received pre-coup aid experienced a 1.2 percentage points higher post-coup conflict incidence than adjacent villages without pre-coup assistance. Aid is mainly associated with anti-authoritarian movements by protesters and political militias against the military force. The aid-coup-conflict relationship can be explained by the feeling of relative deprivation and ideologically winning hearts and minds. I also include other discussions such as cash transfer, dependency on local economy, foreign-controlled enterprises, the Rohingya crisis, and China’s power. This study adds to the longstanding debate on the relationship between aid and conflicts in the context of intense political upheaval.

An Affine Term Structure Model with Fed Chairs' Speeches (E5, G1)

Eunmi Ko
,
Rochester Institute of Technology

Abstract

This paper analyzes the impact of the sentiment expressed in speeches by Fed Chairs on bond yields, using an affine term structure model similar to the framework by Ang and Piazzesi (2003). The speeches by Fed Chairs are evaluated using finBERT (Huang, Wang, Yang, 2022) to generate three sentiment factors: negative, neutral, and positive. The variance decomposition analysis indicates that sentiment factors account for a considerable portion of the variance in short-term and long-term yield forecasts. Also, the inclusion of sentiment factors is helpful to improve out-of-sample forecast performance for relatively longer-term yields.

Analysis of the Bank of Japan’s Monetary Easing Policy since the 2000s (E5, G1)

Hideaki Ohta
,
Ritsumeikan University

Abstract

This paper empirically analyses and evaluates the impact of the Bank of Japan's (BOJ) series of monetary easing policies (the world's first Quantitative Easing (QE) [2001-06], Comprehensive Monetary Easing (CME) and Quantitative and Qualitative Easing (QQE)) on the real economy, exchange rates and financial markets over the past two decades from April 2001 to March 2020. The analysis based on a Bayesian vector autoregressive model (BVAR) shows that during QE, monetary easing had a clear and positive impact on the real economy and markets (exchange rate, interest rates and bank lending), including real GDP growth, business indices (Bank of Japan Tankan and Business Watchers Survey), industrial production and bank lending The CME also functioned relatively effectively during the worst period after the Global Financial Crisis and had a positive impact on the economy and markets, including business confidence indices, the real effective exchange rate and bank lending. The QQE, on the other hand, had little impact on Japan's real economy and financial markets, except for a slight rise in stock prices, despite the substantial expansion of the monetary base. The analysis in this paper therefore clearly shows that QQE failed to achieve its original objective of bringing the Japanese economy back from long-term stagnation of the economy.

Antitrust and (Foreign) Innovation: Evidence from the Xerox Case (O3, L4)

Robin Mamrak
,
Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich

Abstract

How does antitrust enforcement against patent-based monopolies affect innovation? I address this question by empirically studying the US antitrust case against Xerox, the monopolist in the market for plain-paper copiers. In 1975, Xerox was ordered to license all its copier-technology patents in the US and abroad. I show that this promoted innovation by other firms in the copier industry, measured by a disproportionate increase in patenting in technologies where Xerox patents became available for licensing. This positive effect is driven by increased innovation by Japanese competitors. They started developing smaller desktop copiers and their innovation became more diverse.

Artificial Intelligence and Dual Contract (D0, G3)

Qian Qi
,
Peking University

Abstract

With the dramatic progress of artificial intelligence algorithms in recent times, it is hoped that algorithms will soon supplant human decision-makers in various fields, such as contract design. We analyze the possible consequences by experimentally studying the behavior of algorithms powered by Artificial Intelligence (Multi-agent Q-learning) in a workhorse dual contract model for dual-principal-agent problems. We find that the AI algorithms autonomously learn to design incentive-compatible contracts without external guidance or communication among themselves. We em- phasize that the principal, powered by distinct AI algorithms, can play mixed-sum behavior such as collusion and competition. We find that the more intelligent princi- pals tend to become cooperative, and the less intelligent principals are endogenizing myopia and tend to become competitive. Under the optimal contract, the lower con- tract incentive to the agent is sustained by collusive strategies between the principals. This finding is robust to principal heterogeneity, changes in the number of players involved in the contract, and various forms of uncertainty.

Associations of Telehealth Use During the Early COVID-19 Public Health Emergency with Subsequent Total Medical Costs and Health Care Utilization Among Individuals with Heart Disease (I1, I0)

Jun Soo Lee
,
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Ami Bhatt
,
ASRT, Inc., Atlanta, Georgia, USA
Lisa Pollack
,
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Sandra Jackson
,
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Ji Eun Chang
,
New York University
Xin Tong
,
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Feijun Luo
,
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Telehealth utilization increased during the COVID-19 pandemic. Despite this increased use, few studies have documented the impacts of telehealth on medical costs and healthcare utilization.

METHOD: Using the MarketScan® Commercial Database, we estimated the associations of telehealth utilization during the stay-at-home order period (March 1-June 30, 2020) with total medical costs and healthcare utilization in the subsequent years among patients with heart disease (HD) using difference-in-difference methodology. Telehealth utilization was identified using place of service and procedure codes. The pre-pandemic period was defined from March 2018–February 2020 (i.e., two years of pre-telehealth utilization periods), and the follow-up period was defined from July 2020-June 2022 (i.e., two years of post-telehealth utilization periods). We controlled time-varying comorbidity indicators, COVID-19 infection status, and patient characteristics. We extended analyses on telehealth and outcomes related explicitly to HD. We conducted the sensitivity analyses using generalized linear and zero-inflated binomial models for costs and count variables, respectively.

RESULTS: Among the 70,041 patients with HD, 21,598 (30.8%) used telehealth during the stay-at-home order period. Using telehealth during the stay-at-home order period was associated with reducing per person total medical costs (-$1,814, p<0.001) and number of emergency department visits (-0.089, p<0.001) and inpatient admissions (-0.0324, p<0.001) over the following year. On the other hand, using telehealth was associated with an increase in the number of per person pharmacy prescriptions (0.514, p<0.01) and average number of days of drug supply (-.773 days, p<0.001). All results from the sensitivity analyses were consistent with the main analyses.

CONCLUSIONS: Among individuals with HD, telehealth utilization during the pandemic stay-at-home order was associated with increased medication claims and decreased total medical costs and healthcare utilization. These beneficial effects of telehealth use can inform decision-makers, insurance companies, and healthcare professionals, especially in the context of disrupted access to healthcare.

Asymmetric Updating and Memory in the Social Domain (D9, D8)

Xinxin Zhu
,
Maastricht University
Peiran Jiao
,
Maastricht University
Jing Li
,
Dongbei University of Finance and Economics

Abstract

Individuals tend to overweight positive signals relative to negative ones when updating beliefs in the ego-relevant domain, including their own intelligence, beauty, and skills. One’s kindness to others can also be thought of as ego-relevant. Indeed, it has been documented that people have motivated memory regarding their kindness to others. However, these two strands of literature have been isolated to date. This paper combines them by investigating asymmetric belief updating about one’s kindness in dictator games, in the social preference domain, as kindness is also highly ego-relevant. In a series of lab experiments, we let subjects play the dictator game, and adopt the paradigm in the asymmetric updating literature to elicit subjects’ prior beliefs and posterior beliefs after seeing some noisy signals. To establish a connection between memory and belief, we also have a surprise memory task and an additional belief elicitation task for the same subjects several days after the main session. Moreover, this setting also grants us the convenience of exploring another unexplored direction in the asymmetric updating literature, namely asymmetric updating regarding negatively framed images. Our results contribute to both asymmetric updating and social preferences, demonstrating the generalizability and persistence of self-image concerns. They may also generate implications as to how we can enhance other-regarding behavior by triggering self-image concerns.

Bayesian Persuasion with Fact-Checking: An Experimental Investigation (C9, D8)

Zeeshan Samad
,
Utah State University
Lucas Rentschler
,
Utah State University

Abstract

Despite the ever-increasing accessibility of fact-checking, there is little empirical evidence on how it influences a person’s ability to persuade another. This paper experimentally investigates the impact of a fact-checking device that probabilistically flags false messages in a Bayesian persuasion framework. In theory, such a device should not reduce the effectiveness of persuasion because the sender can simply compensate for increases in fact-checking by lying more frequently. However, our experimental data contradicts this prediction. We find that senders do not lie any more frequently in the presence of fact-checking than in its absence, a behavior consistent with lying aversion. By contrast, receivers' actions are monotonic in their induced posterior, a behavior consistent with Bayes rationality. Finally, we discuss how these results apply to a variety of real-world persuasive contexts such as litigation, lobbying, and disinformation dissemination.

Belief Updates and Asset Mispricing (G1, D4)

Munenori Nakasato
,
Aoyama Gakuin University
Hirotaka Fushiya
,
Aoyama Gakuin University
Tomoki Kitamura
,
Musashi University

Abstract

We develop a theory of traders’ belief update process for the stock market with private information. This process is close to a Bayesian process. It can eventually converge to the true value similar to the true Bayesian but at a slower pace when private information does not exist, which causes asset mispricing. We experimentally examine whether the respondent’s behavior is consistent with this quasi-Bayesian updating model. We consider two uncertainties in our theoretical model: uncertainty of the asset value and uncertainty of the existence of an informed trader. Our model has three types of market participants: market maker, informed trader, and noise trader. Assuming the market maker uses quasi-Bayesian updating, it updates asset value belief through transactions. We consider two types of markets: a market with an informed trader and that without one. The market maker does not know which market it faces, meaning it does not know whether or not an informed trader exists. Thus, it also updates beliefs about the existence of informed traders through transactions. In our theoretical examination, we find that (1) when a market maker does not know the existence of informed traders and the informed trader exists, the asset price monotonically converges to the fair value, and (2) when a market maker does not know of the existence of informed traders and the informed trader does not exist, the asset price systematically deviates from fair value, causing asset mispricing. This situation is close to the information mirage. However, after the market maker sufficiently updates belief, it adequately finds the non-existence of the informed trader. Asset mispricing then shrinks, and the stock price converges to fair value. We also confirm this process using numerical simulations and experiments.

Broad-Based Categorical Eligibility Policy and SNAP Participation (H5, I1)

Xingguo Wang
,
Texas A&M University
Pourya Valizadeh
,
Texas A&M University
Henry Bryant
,
Texas A&M University
Bart Fischer
,
Texas A&M University
Rodolfo M Nayga Jr.
,
Texas A&M University

Abstract

The Broad-Based Categorical Eligibility (BBCE) policy option allows states to expand Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) eligibility by raising the gross income threshold and/or modifying the asset test. Several previous studies have estimated the contribution of BBCE policy to recent increases in SNAP caseloads, primarily using traditional two-way fixed effects (TWFE) estimators leveraging the geographical and temporal variation created by the staggered adoption of the BBCE policy across states. This empirical strategy, however, ignores treatment effect heterogeneity among states and over time, which could lead to results that are biased and inconsistent. This study examines the causal effect of BBCE on SNAP caseloads utilizing SNAP Quality Control (QC) data from 1996 to 2016 and a recently developed difference-in-differences method that addresses shortcomings of the traditional TWFE estimators. We show that the effect of BBCE on SNAP participation per capita is at least one time larger than estimates in previous studies. There is heterogeneity in effects across states with varying gross income test thresholds under BBCE policy as well as across subpopulations with different income levels and socio-demographic characteristics. Counterfactual simulations indicate that if BBCE were eliminated during the period between 2000 and 2016, SNAP enrollment would be reduced by 30 million and benefit expenditures would be recuded by 42 billion dollars. We further discuss the policy implications of our findings as they relate to program spending on benefits.

Broadcasting Change: India's Community Radio Policy and Women's Empowerment (O1, J1)

Felix Rusche
,
University of Mannheim

Abstract

Field experiments and the investigation of unintended effects of entertainment television suggest that media can change behaviors, attitudes, and provide valuable information. However, research on media use as a policy for development remains very limited. This paper provides a way forward by evaluating a 2006 policy change in India that allowed NGOs and educational institutions to apply for radio licenses. By 2020, a total of 288 Community Radio Stations (CRS) had been launched. I evaluate the effectiveness of the policy regarding one of its main aims: empowering women. For this, I combine detailed information on the radios' coverage areas with high-resolution data from the National Family and Health Survey (NFHS). For identification, topographic features between radio towers and observations are exploited. In addition, I introduce and utilize a novel approach that reduces noise in randomly displaced data, such as DHS data. The results demonstrate that CRS are effective in changing behaviors and attitudes of and toward women. Girls in areas exogenously exposed to CRS receive more years of education and are more likely to obtain a degree. Boys' education is unaffected, suggesting both a shift in parents' attitudes towards girls' schooling and a general increase in their willingness to invest in education. CRS also lower the probability of women getting married below the age of 25 and increase age at first birth. They also decrease fertility across all affected age groups, suggesting a more general effect on family planning. Finally, I provide evidence of CRS increasing young women's autonomy concerning household decisions and mobility. Overall, the findings suggest that CRS can be an effective policy to empower women and improve their education, family planning, and decision-making abilities.

Building the Education Revolution: The Employment Effects of Fiscal Stimulus in Australia (E6, H3)

Juha Tervala
,
University of Helsinki
Timothy Watson
,
Australian National University

Abstract

This paper estimates the causal impact of the Great Recession-era Building the Education Revolution (BER) school infrastructure stimulus program on labour market outcomes in Australia. This is the first extensive academic evaluation of the BER. The evidence suggests that the program provided value for money, with costs per job-year saved most likely below $8,500 ($US 8,000) on average between 2009 and 2012. In 2009, the main year of program impact, roughly one third of employment benefits related to lowering unemployment, and two-thirds reduced labour force exit. Unemployment reductions were concentrated amongst men, while program effects on employment appear more equally distributed by gender than would be anticipated based on the gender composition of the construction industry. Employment benefits were highly concentrated amongst 25 to 34 year olds, were not greater in regions experiencing higher unemployment at the outset of the program. A Bayesian dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE) model with hysteresis is also estimated to relate cost per job-year saved estimates to approximate `closed economy, no monetary policy response' output multipliers. We find empirical support for the learning-by-doing process in the production technology, which implies productivity and output hysteresis. The empirical and theoretical results hint that a fiscal stimulus program comprising many small infrastructure projects can be a very cost effective form of stimulus in recessions. Factors that contributed to the program’s success most likely include targetting a highly cyclically sensitive industry; geographically dispersing projects broadly across the country; the crowding-in of private investment; the speed to peak construction during the most intensive stage of the crisis; and the focus on promoting skill development and human capital formation amongst younger Australians.

Bust to Another Bust: The Macroeconomic Effects of Households Assets Allocation (R3, G5)

Yanshuo Chen
,
University of California-Santa Cruz

Abstract

During the early 2000s, the U.S. witnessed the 2000 dot-com bubble crash and the housing market boom. In this study, I propose a new explanation of the origin of the early 2000s housing boom: the household asset allocation channel. I argue that after the dot-com bubble crash, households invested less in stocks and invested more in houses, and this pushed up housing prices. First, I found that a decline in the stock market participation during 2001-2003 driven by the dot-com bubble crash increased housing prices immediately (2001-2003) and in the medium term (2001-2006). Then, I studied the micro-foundation of this finding. I found that the decline in stock market participation during 2001-2003 increased both the investor share in the local housing markets during 2001-2006 and the purchases of primary residences by the young during 2001-2007. In the theoretical model section, I showed that the households’ portfolio share on stocks affects housing prices in two ways: the wealth effect and the flow-of-funds effect. The model predicts that housing prices increase as the households’ portfolio share on stocks goes down whenever the flow-of-funds effect dominates. The model quantitatively shows that the households’ portfolio share on stocks explains about 18% of the U.S. real housing price growth during 2000-2006. The household asset allocation channel endogenously connects the Global Financial Crisis (GFC) with the dot.com bubble crash and infers that one crisis may bury some seeds for another crisis.

Can Bad News Be Good Predictors? Estimating Actual Crime Levels with Crime-Related News (K4, E2)

Christina Heike Maass
,
University of Hamburg

Abstract

Unreported crimes pose a threat to economies and societies worldwide as they prevent state authorities from effectively addressing crimes. This paper sheds light into the dark of unregistered incidents by investigating the informational value of crime-related news articles (bad news) in a machine-learning context. Centre of the approach is a text analysis of news reports from the Dow Jones Newswire augmented by macroeconomic variables (GDP, unemployment and inflation) and monthly dummies. With this approach, we are able to approximate monthly overall crime levels in the United States as indicated by the National Crime Victimization Survey with high accuracy of approximately 71 % on average and especially high performance in case of profound changes. In addition, our retrospective forecast is available briefly after the end of the previous month and at low costs, whereas surveys results are only available with a delay and rather expensive. Our results suggest that there is a strong monthly pattern present in the data and that our macroeconomic variables add small pieces of information with a tendency towards lower crime levels with better economic performance. By shedding light on the actual extent of criminal activity, including crimes that are not reported or detected, our approach is of high practical relevance in several ways. (1) Efficient resource allocation in the police and increased willingness to allocate the necessary (financial) resources to police and protective measures. (2) Early insights into crime patterns nationwide for decision makers as well as society. (3) Greater citizen confidence in statistics and thus in democracy. (4) Greater awareness of the issue in the public debate, which could encourage citizens to report crimes. All these factors are expected to increase economic prosperity.

Can Technology Transfers Save Innovation? Evidence from China (O3, F3)

Zhangfeng Jin
,
Zhejiang University

Abstract

This paper examines the causal impact of technology transfers on long-run innovation inputs by exploiting variations in the adoption of Soviet-aided industrialization programs across Chinese cities. Focusing on 156 major industrial projects aided by the Soviet Union, I find that adopting these programs substantially reduces local industrial firms’ investments in research and development after nearly half a century, particularly for non-state-owned firms. The decline in innovation inputs is further supported by firms’ lower probability of patenting in adopting localities. Low adoption of performance-based reward systems, rather than inadequate capital and skilled workers, is a likely underlying mechanism. Despite prior successes achieved in the era of planned-oriented economy, the adoption of such foreign aid tends to impede innovation with China’s transition toward a more market-oriented economy.

Central Bank Mandates and Monetary Policy Stances: Through the Lens of Federal Reserve Speeches (C5, E5)

Christoph Bertsch
,
Sveriges Riksbank
Isaiah Hull
,
BI Norwegian Business School and CogniFrame
Robin L. Lumsdaine
,
American University, Erasmus University Rotterdam, NBER and Tinbergen Institute
Xin Zhang
,
Sveriges Riksbank and BIS Innovation Hub

Abstract

Speeches give valuable insights into the Fed's interpretation of its mandate and the reasoning behind the historical conduct of monetary policy. They also provide a direct way to measure policy makers' objective functions. In this paper we dissect the information in speeches of Fed officials to identify whether the discussion of other policy goals is also associated with decreased focus on the dual mandate. Finding evidence for this, we then consider the consequences of such deviations for the conduct of monetary policy and for the relationship between asset markets and monetary policy stances.

To analyze the Fed speeches, we draw on recent advances in NLP that were driven by the development of transformer models (Vaswani et al., 2017). Specifically, we use the BERT model introduced by Devlin et al. (2019) and the modified RoBERTa model introduced by Liu et al. (2019). Transformer models are a form of “foundation model” that are trained on a general task using a large corpus, such as the entire English language Wikipedia, and are then fine-tuned to perform a variety of specialized downstream tasks, such as classification without training, extractive question answering, sentiment classification, and textual similarity measurement. As such, we differ methodologically from earlier work in economics, which has approached this problem by measuring features in textual data using dictionary-based methods.

Our results indicate that there is a strong association between non-dual mandate-related concerns and the discussion of financial stability, as well as variation over the financial cycle in the use of speech tense and academic focus. The identified semantic variables significantly predict returns of broad asset classes, even after controlling for macroeconomic and financial controls, confirming the information content of officials' speeches.

Certificate of Need and Self-Employment (I1, J2)

James Bailey
,
Providence College

Abstract

34 US states currently have Certificate of Need (CON) laws, which require health care providers to obtain certification of their “economic necessity” from a state board before they can legally open or expand. While dozens of articles have evaluated the effect of CON on hospitals and consumers, no published article has evaluated its effect on health care workers. Economists expect entry barriers such as CON to reduce the number of firms. This could lead to fewer workers overall, and in particular to fewer small firms and self-employed workers. I turn to the data to quantify the magnitude of these effects, providing the first estimates of how CON affects health care workers. The American Health Planning Association and the Mercatus Center provide data on CON laws themselves, noting which states had CON in a given year and which types of health providers are covered by the law in each state. Labor market data come primarily from the Current Population Survey, supplemented by the Statistics of US Business. The main empirical strategy is a difference-in-difference analysis of CON repeals.

Charactering Stagflation into Mild, Moderate and Severe Episodes: A New Approach (E3, E5)

Azhar Iqbal
,
Wells Fargo
Nicole Cervi
,
Wells Fargo

Abstract

The door to stagflation has opened. Consumer price inflation has hit a 40-year high and real GDP growth was negative through the first half of 2022. Our study presents a new framework to characterize stagflation in mild, moderate, or severe episodes. By categorizing stagflationary cases on a severity scale, the suite of monetary policy actions necessary to combat each case is easier to discern.
Our framework employs the CPI and the PCE deflator as measures of inflation and real GDP as a proxy for output growth. We utilize the magnitude and duration of high inflation, along with low output growth, to characterize stagflation into different categories. That said, not all stagflationary episodes are alike. The underlying structures of the U.S. economy have evolved over time, which can make one period’s high inflation (i.e., the 1970s) feel too high of a bar to clear for other time periods (i.e., the 2000s). Thus, we employ a timing-varying benchmark for growth and inflation.
Our work estimates 13 episodes of stagflation taking place from 1947 to present. Five of those episodes are mild, four are moderate and four are severe. Notably, the current episode (Q2-2021 to present) falls into the severe category. Furthermore, four episodes took place without a recession, and nine overlapped with recessions.
The final phase discusses lessons from these past episodes, and how they may guide future decisions. Particularly, we look at policy decisions that were effective at combating stagflation. On the flip side, we consider the actions that may have prolonged or worsened a stagflation episode. For example, the oil price shocks of 1970s are widely considered the major driver behind the Great Stagflation of the 1970s to mid-1980s, but some studies have found that monetary expansion during the 1970s explains the bulk of the Great Stagflation.

Chasers Drive the Volatility Term Structure (G1, D4)

Hirotaka Fushiya
,
Aoyama Gakuin University
Tomoki Kitamura
,
Musashi University
Munenori Nakasato
,
Aoyama Gakuin University

Abstract

When estimating long-term volatility in the stock markets using historical data, it is common to use the root-T rule, which states that N-period volatility is the root N times 1-period volatility. Previous studies show divergences between the results of the root-T rule and implied volatilities, especially that volatilities diverge upward as term periods are longer. The root-T rule assumes independent and identically distributed returns. To explain the divergences in volatility term structure, previous studies relax those assumptions but additionally assume that volatility has time-varying structures, such as GARCH model. Using a sequential trading model, we show that the volatility term structure shifts upward from the root-T rule due to the presence of traders chasing other traders. Our model assumes three types of traders: first, traders with private information; second, chasers following the behavior of the previous trader; and third, noise traders. The contributions of this study are (1) to explain the volatility term structure only from the market structure without using a model with a time-varying volatility structure, (2) to quantitatively show the deviation from the root-T rule, (3) to show the adjustment formula for volatility term structure, and (4) to conduct an empirical study on the effectiveness of the adjustment formula. Traditional traders and regulators should consider our adjustments as traders using AI increases.

Clarifying the Relationship Between Bank Concentration and Risks: Role of Bank Capital (G2, E4)

Yu Yi
,
London School of Economics

Abstract

How does bank capital affect the relationship between bank concentration and risk taking? I develop a tractable dynamic model with heterogeneous financially constrained entrepreneurs and an imperfectly competitive banking sector. When the bank capital ratio exceeds the minimum requirement, reducing bank concentration leads to more entrepreneurs’ risk taking; otherwise, the concentration-risk relationship is ambiguous. To explain the equilibrium characterization, I propose two mechanisms, a net margin mechanism and a risk shifting mechanism, whose direction depends on banks’ optimal decisions regarding loan quantity and the accumulation of excess bank capital. Considering the risk shifting mechanism and the non-binding capital constraint, the model suggests a non-monotonic relationship between bank concentration and the loan rate. The two mechanisms also jointly establish a non-monotonic relationship between bank concentration and allocative efficiency. Two pieces of micro-level evidence in U.S. support the model predictions: first, the relationship between bank concentration and loan rate is non-monotonic; second, the effect of bank concentration on loan rate is positive only when the bank capital ratio is low. I discuss how efficiency and stability can be enhanced simultaneously.

Close By or Closed By? Bank Branches and the Rise of Fintech Mortgages (G2, R1)

Felix Dornseifer
,
TU Dortmund University

Abstract

Online mortgage providers have flourished over the last decade while banks have downsized branch networks. This paper explains how rising market shares of fintech lenders in the residential mortgage market affect the number and distribution of US bank branches. Increasing fintech market shares are associated with a decreasing number of bank branches. The results hold across different models as well as spatial levels. The debranching is more pronounced for small banks and leads to lower deposits. To strengthen identification, a geographically purged version of Facebook’s Social Connectedness Index to Wayne County, home of the headquarter of the largest fintech lender Quicken Loans, is used as an instrumental variable for fintech market shares.

Club Dynamics and Non-Rival Resources (D0, D9)

Jaimie Lien
,
Shandong University
Anning XIE
,
Chinese University of Hong Kong
Jie Zheng
,
Tsinghua University

Abstract

We consider a dynamic Club Goods Game in which each player can include and/or exclude other players into their personal club, and potentially make contributions to their club which will benefit all their club members. To understand the reciprocity dynamics behind club membership and contributions, we implement four experimental treatments which vary based on whether club members can be invited, excluded, both or neither. We find that contributions are highest, and club size is most stable, under the most flexible membership determination procedure. The ability to permanently exclude members from one’s club induces the greatest reciprocal behavior among players, which is a key determinant of contributions. In addition, we examine how prior experience in the Club Goods Game affects subsequent contributions in a standard Public Goods Game. Experience in the flexible membership Club Goods Game treatment leads to the highest contributions in the Public Goods game, while fully inflexible membership produces the lowest contributions. Altogether, our study helps pinpoint the group and individual level dynamics for effective provision of non-rival resources.

Collateral and Punishment: A Tale of Two Contracts (D5, G5)

Mrithyunjayan MJ Nilayamgode
,
University of Virginia

Abstract

This paper builds a binomial general equilibrium model where both secured and unsecured debt contracts are available for trade and analyzes this model to prove the existence and determine the nature of equilibria. In particular, I define a coexistence equilibrium in this economy as an equilibrium that involves trade in at least one asset of each type and study the conditions sufficient to guarantee its existence. This paper combines endogenous leverage with the anonymity of perfectly competitive markets to present a scenario where agents choose to hold two different kinds of debt. I connect this behavior to endowment inequalities that prevent some agents from being able to afford the down payment necessary to access secured credit. Finally, by comparing equilibria across financial structures where only one or both kinds of contracts are available, I also explore the redistributive and asset pricing implications of these results, especially in a world where such inequalities exist.

Competition, Firm Innovation, and Growth under Imperfect Technology Spillovers (O3, O4)

Seula Kim
,
Princeton University
Karam Jo
,
Korea Development Institute

Abstract

This paper studies the effect of competition on firm innovation by developing a discrete-time endogenous growth model where multi-product firms do two types of innovation subject to friction in technology spillovers. Firms improve their existing products through internal innovation while entering others’ product markets through external innovation. We introduce novel friction termed imperfect technology spillovers, which refers to friction in learning others’ technology in the process of external innovation. In contrast to existing models, this friction allows incumbent firms to defend themselves from competitors by building technological barriers through internal innovation. Using firm-level data from the U.S. Census Bureau integrated with firm-level patent data, we find regression results consistent with the model predictions. Our counterfactual analysis shows that rising competition by foreign firms leads domestic incumbent firms to undertake (i) more (less) internal innovation for the products they have a (no) technological advantage in, and (ii) less external innovation. This compositional change in firm innovation affects overall innovation in the aggregate economy in different directions depending on the costs of external innovation. Specifically, the shift in innovation composition in response to rising competition decreases overall innovation in the U.S. while increasing that in an economy with high external innovation costs.

Complex Innovation and the “Visible Hand”: the Role of Knowledge Interdependence in Employee Entrepreneurship (O3, J6)

Yuheng Ding
,
University of Maryland

Abstract

How does growing knowledge interdependence in firm innovation activities affect potential entrepreneurs' decision to start their own business ventures? To answer this question, I adopt an abductive approach and leverage matched employee-employer data from the U.S. Census Bureau between 2000-2014. Using the sample of innovative (patenting) U.S. firms, I show that higher knowledge interdependence in incumbent firms is negatively associated with employee entrepreneurship, while the negative effect is pronounced even stronger among the highest-performing employees. This suggests that knowledge interdependence does not merely raise the bar for entry into entrepreneurship. Further examination of the data reveals that firms with a higher degree of knowledge interdependence implement better pay-for-performance compensation schemes to retain valuable human assets, leading also to greater compensation dispersion within firms with higher knowledge interdependence. Together, these factors create a strong selection effect on the quality of spin-outs being formed especially by individuals ranked highest in the human capital distribution. I offer a structural model to corral the empirical findings and show that knowledge interdependence could also raise between-firm income inequality when it generates large enough profits on the product market.

Consumption Inequality in the Digital Age (E2, O3)

Kai Arvai
,
Bank of France
Katja Mann
,
Copenhagen Business School

Abstract

This paper studies how digitalization affects consumption inequality. We assemble a novel
dataset of digital technology used in the production process, link it to US consumption data
and establish a new stylized fact: High-income households consume a higher share of digitally
produced products than low-income households. Building on this finding, we present a
structural model in which digitalization affects consumption inequality in two ways: By a polarization
of incomes and by a decline in the relative price of digitally produced goods. Both
channels work in favor of high-income households. Calibrating the model to the US economy
between 1960 and 2017, we demonstrate that the price channel has sizeable welfare effects and
amplifies the increase in consumption inequality that is caused by digitalization by around
25%.

Corporate Bond Issuance Over Financial Crises: A Global Perspective (G3, F3)

Michele Dathan
,
Federal Reserve Board
Yuriy Kitsul
,
Federal Reserve Board
Valentina Bruno
,
American University

Abstract

We use a merged global data set of security-level corporate bond issuance and firm-level financial statement data to examine how nonfinancial corporate bond issuance patterns during the COVID pandemic compared to those observed in previous crises across firms and countries. In contrast to other periods of acute financial stress, we find that firms in all regions were more likely to issue bonds during COVID relative to non-crisis periods. Further, we find that increased issuance was driven by less risky firms in advanced economies but by riskier firms in emerging economies. We explore potential channels that explain corporate bond issuance patterns, such as firm characteristics, interest rates, market stress and supply of capital. Finally, we examine the evolution of firm financial ratios around the COVID pandemic.

Corporate Payout Policies after Labor Unionization at Major Customer Firms (G3, J0)

Ngoc Le
,
University of Alabama
Hoang Nguyen
,
University of Alabama

Abstract

We examine whether labor unionization at major customer firms affects suppliers’ payout policies. We empirically test for two competing and opposite effects: cost stickiness (i.e., the asymmetry in cost responses to decreases vs. increases in sales) vs. rent extraction. Under the cost stickiness effect, following labor unionization at major customers, suppliers may face higher cost stickiness due to their newly unionized customer’s operating inflexibility; which may decrease their future free cash flows, resulting in a reduction in their dividend payouts. Under the rent extraction effect, dependent suppliers may increase their dividend payout to mitigate rent extraction from their newly unionized, major customers. We employ the regression discontinuity design (RDD) approach to identify the causal effects of unionization of a customer on its supplier’s payout policies. In the full sample, dependent suppliers respond by reducing their total dividends by 0.7% of total assets and decreasing their dividend yield by 2.1%. These effects are even larger when either the customer (1) is more important to the supplier, (2) has greater market power, and (3) has had a long-term business relationship with the supplier, or the supplier has (1) low market power, (2) high specific investments, and (3) high ex ante cost stickiness. The rent extraction effect dominates for suppliers with low ex ante cost stickiness. We also find evidence of increased ex post cost stickiness for the dependent suppliers after the labor unionization at their major customers. Our findings suggest that overall, the cost stickiness effect dominates: following customer unionization, dependent suppliers reduce their payout policies due to their higher cost stickiness.

COVID-19 Labor Market Shocks and Pediatric Mental Health: Evidence from Primary Care (I1, J2)

Christopher Lowenstein
,
Stanford University
Xuechao Qian
,
Stanford University
Rishi Parikh
,
Stanford University

Abstract

Youth and adolescents have faced an unprecedented confluence of stressors to their mental health in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. This study draws on individual-level electronic health records (EHR) from a large, geographically diverse cohort of primary care patients to examine youth mental health in the context of the labor market shock of Spring 2020. Primary care plays a crucial role in the mental health service delivery system and has been referred to as “a critical stopgap” during the pandemic, yet few studies have examined the effects of pandemic-induced economic shocks within the context of primary care.

We exploit geographic variation in the impact of the pandemic-induced recession on sector-specific employment in generalized difference-in-differences and event study frameworks to compare outcomes in counties with more versus less exposure to the pandemic economic shock. Using detailed, individual-level EHR data on visit diagnoses, procedures, medication prescriptions, and physician referrals, we examine key mental health outcomes such as incident diagnoses, treatment utilization, and indicators of disruptions in care.

The underlying study population consists of over 200,000 unique patients between the ages 5-17. Between February and April 2020, rates of any pediatric primary care visits for any mental health conditions, depression, and anxiety decreased by 30%, 32%, and 33%, respectively. The average number of mental and behavioral health screens per month initially decreased by 78% before partially rebounding in subsequent months. Preliminary results from generalized difference-in-differences models suggest that a one SD-increase in county vulnerability based on pre-pandemic industry composition is associated with 32 per 100,000 patient increase in the visit rate for anxiety following the onset of the pandemic (p < 0.05), an increase of approximately 11.5% relative to the sample mean.

Credit Provision or Employment Protection: Which Is More Effective at Supporting Smes in a Stress? (D2, G3)

Sudipto Karmakar
,
Bank of England and King's College London
Arvind Narayan
,
Bank of England

Abstract

The Covid-19 pandemic has seen many governments across the world employ a variety of measures
to help support firms and workers ranging from credit support to direct payments of wage bills. This
paper aims to understand which measures were most effective in supporting small and medium sized
enterprises (SMEs) in reducing distress. In particular, we compare the two main schemes aimed
at SMEs in the UK, the Bounce Back Loans scheme, which provided credit support, and furlough,
which provided employment support. We use a novel micro-level credit data set that accounts for the
vast majority of SME firms in the UK and machine learning techniques to construct a counterfactual
using propensity score matching. Using a Diff-in-Diff framework, we find that the furlough scheme
was more effective in reducing firm distress, especially in the longer-term, whereas the credit support
measure mostly helped to reduce short-term distress with the effects dissipating once repayments
commence. We also find that more fragile firms benefited more from both schemes.

Debt Accumulation of CCT Benefiary Households: Evidence from rich Brazilian Administrative Dataset (D1, G5)

Felipe Tomkowski
,
Insper
Marco Bonomo
,
Insper
Lucas Teixeira
,
Brazilian Central Bank

Abstract

Financial inclusion is still a problem in many developing countries, and gaining insights into how cash transfer policies affect credit access can help policymakers fine-tune effective interventions to foster an inclusive economic environment while averting potential issues of over-indebtedness. Using Brazilian credit registry data and a difference-in-differences design comparing newly eligible households to those marginally above the new income threshold, we find evidence that households increase credit card usage and have a higher rate of credit origination after they start receiving the transfer unexpectedly. Moreover, the results indicate that new beneficiary households in extreme poverty start getting credit under better conditions. This new evidence indicates that the transfer can work as a "pseudo-pledgeable income“, increasing credit origination and improving credit conditions.

Demographic Aging and the New Keynesian Phillips Curve (E5, J1)

Gene Paul Gerard Ambrocio
,
Bank of Finland

Abstract

I document a statistical link between old-age dependency ratios and average markups. I propose that a mechanism whereby households develop deep habits in consumption as they age could explain this feature of the data. I show that when this mechanism is embedded in an otherwise standard New Keynesian model with overlapping generations, the slope of the New Keynesian Phillips Curve flattens as the population ages. Further, the contractionary effects of monetary policy surprises on output are amplified while the deflationary effect on prices take longer to materialize. When the model is calibrated to demographic changes in Japan and the US over 1980 to 2016, I find that demographic changes only have a modest contribution on their own but that spillovers with other factors that raise firms’ market power are non-negligible.

Desperate Capital Breeds Productivity Loss: Evidence from Public Pension Investments in Private Equity (G2, G1)

Vrinda Mittal
,
Columbia University

Abstract

I study the effects of private equity (PE) buyouts on labor productivity using a novel micro-data on investments in PE funds and PE buyout deals, combined with confidential Census data. I show that while PE increased productivity at target firms until 2011, it substantially decreased productivity post 2011. In the time series, the decrease in labor productivity is correlated with an increase in capital from the most underfunded public pensions. In the cross-section, I show that firms financed predominantly by the most underfunded public pensions experience a -5.2% annual change in labor productivity, as compared to firms financed by other investors which experience a +5.2% annual change. Firms supported by low quality PE funds face productivity decreases. The key mechanism is the notion of desperate capital, where the most underfunded public pensions allocate capital to low quality GPs, and realize lower PE returns. I introduce a novel instrument of public unionization rates to establish support for underfunded positions causing selection into low quality GPs, which ultimately leads to capital misallocation within private markets.

(Full paper can be accessed here: https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4283853 )

Differential Effects of Unconventional Monetary Policy (E5, G2)

Sebastian Eiblmeier
,
Leibniz University Hannover

Abstract

Did the Eurosystem's quantitative easing from 2015 to 2018 have differential effects regarding the bank lending volume to different institutional sectors, industry sectors, or types of loans? To investigate this question, this paper employs linked microdata of the German banking system. These allow for computing the volume of bond redemptions at bank level as a measure of banks' exposure to QE. Because when a bond matures, the bank is faced with the decision of whether to reinvest the proceeds into bonds or whether to rebalance into another asset such as loans. When the central bank squeezes bond yields through large-scale purchases, banks with more redemptions have a stronger incentive to rebalance. However, a fixed effects model reveals no significant difference between banks with a high exposure compared to the control group regarding their overall lending. Neither can any of the mentioned differential effects be observed. While these findings are at odds with some of the previous empirical literature, they are in line with theories that argue that lending is purely demand-led and any central bank action geared towards the supply side of the loan market merely constitutes ``pushing the string''.

Digital Currencies and Banknotes: Developments, Impacts, and Challenges (E5, G1)

John Kuforiji
,
Prince Mohammad University

Abstract

Financial technology had revolutionized e-commerce, digital currency, and digital payment developments globally. Digital payment system had made financial payment settlements to be easier, cheaper, and faster; than the traditional paper currency; as well as created some structural and financial transactions’ exclusions, impediments, and risks. The two operating design models of the digital currency are: a single-tier model and hybrid two-tier model. Hence, we need new definitions, functions, and measurement of money. This study will focus on the developments, impacts, and challenges of the digital currencies and banknotes in some selected countries. The study’s research questions include: What are the impacts and challenges of the digital currencies and digital banknotes on the economy of the chosen countries? What will be the new definition and measurement of money by the Central Banks with digital currencies and digital banknotes? Is a digital currency legal tender and promoter of international settlements? To what extent will the banks’ financial intermediation roles be affect by digital currencies? What would be the new structure of the monetary base? Who is liable for the digital currency component of the monetary base? What will be the effects of digital currencies and digital banknotes on the monetary policies of the Central Banks? To answer all these questions, secondary economic data will be collected from various sources and multiple regression analysis will be conducted to examine those research questions. The study’s regression analysis results will provide answers to all the questions raised above. These study findings will contribute to the literature on monetary and financial economics disciplines. The study’s results will harmonize with previous studies in the disciplines. Practitioners could use these study

Digital Technology and Inclusive Development During Global Crisis: Evidence from A Randomised Experiment in Bangladesh (O3, O2)

Jianan Lu
,
University of Portsmouth
Xiaolan Fu
,
University of Oxford
Pervez Ghauri
,
University of Birmingham

Abstract

We investigate the role of digital technology in inclusive development by conducting a randomised control trial (RCT) in Bangladesh. We analyse the mechanisms through which access to content-based digital platforms, as an emerging digital technology, empowers marginalised communities’ entrepreneurship and employment and hence contributes to their income. Based on a sample of 2974 respondents, we found that the treatment group, who received our content-based digital platform usage training programme, manifested higher income resilience during the Covid19 pandemic in 2020-2021, as a result of higher entrepreneurship and better employment status. This study contributes to the literature by analysing the transmission mechanisms through which a platform technology-based novel business model includes the marginalised communities into economic activities, and provides the first RCT-based empirical evidence on the developmental impact of content-related digital platform technology that requires low capital investment.

Digital Technology, Gender, and Environmental Behavior (Q5, G4)

Sheng Huang
,
China Europe International Business School
Shaoyan Jiang
,
Zhejiang University
Qigui Liu
,
Ningbo University

Abstract

Using a representative sample of 200 thousand individual users from 332 cities in China from a leading BigTech platform, we document a significant role that digital technology plays in facilitating and incentivizing individuals’ participation in environmentally friendly behaviors and highlight a gender difference in environmentalism. Specifically, over 86% of the sampled individuals participate in a digitalized green initiative launched by the digital platform that incentivizes individuals to opt for green behaviors in lifestyles in exchange for real tree planting and contribution to environmental conservation areas by the platform. We find a higher participation rate and more active participation in proenvironmental activities among women than men through the digital initiative. Moreover, women exhibit a stronger preference for greener funds in their financial investment made through the BigTech platform, although such a preference does not yield higher financial returns for them. Overall, our study provides support for the idea of utilizing digital technologies to combat climate change and enhancing women’s representation in environmental governance.

Do Customers Play a Corporate Governance Role? (G3, L0)

Jiaying Li
,
Bayes Business School
Xiaoke Ye
,
Bayes Business School

Abstract

This paper presents new evidence that corporate customers play a governance role in disciplining managerial behavior. Using a comprehensive dataset of customer-supplier relationships, we show that major downstream firms respond to upstream firms' EPS manipulation - instrumented by variations in the incentive to manipulate - by severing business relationships. Ex ante, the threat of withdrawal by major customers appears to deter upstream firms from engaging in EPS manipulation. Suppliers with short-term incentives strategically reallocate trade credit among customers to retain their largest customers, which mitigates the ex-post impact of customer governance.

Do Females Perform Better During Crises: An Analysis of Bank Performance After Bailouts (G2, D8)

Sajid Chaudhry
,
Aston University
Mohajer Alowisi
,
Aston University
Elnaz Bajoori
,
University of Bath

Abstract

This paper investigates the impact of gender diversity on the performance of the US banks after the US government's bailout initiatives. We draw upon recently developed the theory of strategic uncertainty and cultural diversity by Kets and Sandroni (2021) and show that the behavior and influence of a minority group are a function of its size. Specifically, we show that there is a threshold for the proportion of minority group that maximizes the payoff of the economic outcome. The research establishes an optimal proportion of women on boards that enhances bank performance and reconciles mixed findings from previous research on this topic. This study validates the game theory of strategic uncertainty and cultural diversity that in the presence of strategic uncertainty, cultural diversity is optimal.

Does Enforcement of Stricter Seat Belt Law Reduce Motor Vehicle Crash Fatality? (I1, R4)

Babasoji Oyemakinde
,
University of Memphis
Albert Okunade
,
University of Memphis

Abstract

Despite its importance, economics research is currently sparse on the enforcement effects of seat belt laws on motor vehicle traffic fatalities. None of these few studies probed the differential fatality effects of gender and geographic regions of the US states that upgraded from secondary to primary enforcement of seat belt law. The current study fills this important void in the literature. Moreover, this investigation explores the short and long run effects of switching to primary enforcement. (Primary enforcement of the law mandates that drivers be cited for failure to use seat belts while under secondary enforcement, non-belted drivers are further cited for other traffic violations.) We employ an event study empirical strategy, using 1988-2019 US state level data from the Fatality Analysis Reporting System (FARS). This design enables us to exploit variation in the location (treated and control states) and staggered timing of the states switching to primary enforcement effects on motor vehicle crash fatality five years pre- and six years post- the policy change. Study findings indicate that upgrading to primary enforcement law generated a statistically significant reduction in total occupant fatality in the short and medium runs. Interestingly, significant fatality reduction effect of the policy switch occurred earlier for females (in year 2) than for males (in year 3). Finally, residents of the top 10 poorest states benefit more from the switch to stricter seat belt law. Public policy implications of these findings are explored.

Does ``Financial Affirmative Action’’ Affect Minority Well-Being? Evidence from a Directed Credit Program (O1, G5)

Subrata Kumar Ritadhi
,
Ashoka University
Yasir Khan
,
University of Pittsburgh

Abstract

Can government policies relax credit constraints faced by minority citizens and affect their economic well-being? We examine this question exploiting an unique policy intervention in India which targeted credit towards religious minorities. The policy encouraged commercial banks to expand credit in "minority concentration" districts -- districts where the share of religious minorities exceeded 25% of the district population. Comparing districts within a narrow window around the discontinuity threshold in the spirit of a regression discontinuity design, we identify substantial increases in minority credit access along both the extensive, and the intensive margins. The expansion in credit access is primarily driven by increased lending from bank operated self-help groups, suggesting banks' use of local information networks to target credit to relatively poor minority households. Credit from informal sources also increase, pointing to an overall expansion in liquidity in local credit markets. The increased credit to religious minorities is driven by consumption and non-farm business loans, and there is suggestive evidence of higher fixed capital ownership by these households. Consistent with an increase in non-farm business credit, minority workers in minority concentration districts have a disproportionately higher likelihood of being employed in the manufacturing sector, and also increase their labour supply hours in manufacturing activities.

Dominated Strategy in Random Game (C7)

Xihao Song
,
University of Glasgow

Abstract

It’s difficult to characterize a game that does not have a strictly dominated strategy. Therefore, there are two major contributions to this study: computational and economic. First, we show that the probability that there is no strictly dominated strategy will go to 1 if M equals N and increases to infinity, moreover, this is true for M ∈ [log_{ρ}N^2+δ}, ρ^{N/(2+δ)}, for some δ > 0. In addition, we show a positive result, this result s not true when this relationship doesn’t hold. A second advantage of this work is that it provides an efficient algorithm instead of the natural one by definition, which reduces the time complexity from O(M N (M − 1)) to O(M log(N )(M − 1)).

Early Life Experience and CEOs’ Reactions to COVID-19 (G3)

Kunru Zou
,
Renmin University of China
Hong Ru
,
Nanyang Technological University
Endong Yang
,
University of Macau

Abstract

This paper studies how CEOs’ early life experiences of natural disasters affect corporate activities during the COVID-19 pandemic in the U.S. We find that following the sudden initial outbreak of COVID-19 in late February 2020, CEOs with early life experience of natural disasters responded to the outbreak more significantly than others, for example, by more dramatically reducing capital expenditure (CapEx). In the reopening period beginning in the second half of 2020, firms with CEOs who had experienced natural disasters also achieved better performance. To further strengthen the causal effects of CEOs’ early life experience on corporate activities, we focus on CEOs who experienced outbreaks of diseases with symptoms or modes of transmission similar to those of COVID-19, and we still find that these firms react significantly more strongly (e.g., through reductions in CapEx, R&D, and SG&A) than others. It is unlikely that boards intentionally selected CEOs with experience of similar infectious disease outbreaks before COVID-19, which was an unforeseeable event.

Economic Effects of Data Privacy Regulation (K2, M2)

Shan Wang
,
Tulane University
Gans Narayanamoorthy
,
Tulane University

Abstract

Development of information technology has made personal consumer data essential for most companies, while also simultaneously creating incentives for hackers to “steal” it for private gain. California passed the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) in 2018 to ensure consumers the right to control their personal information and imposed limits on data sharing. Seventeen separate consumer privacy bills are currently introduced/planned at the federal level. No economic analysis of such legislations exists to date.
The CCPA had limited political support and was a consequence of citizen-initiated activism. It was opposed by, among others, Google and Facebook, who argued that these regulations can impair firms’ ability to innovate and impose a large compliance burden. However, protecting consumer privacy would likely help firms build consumer trust and encourage more consumers to share their personal data, thereby increasing firm value in the long run.
We find that the overall U.S. stock market reacted significantly negatively to the passage and the returns are comparable in magnitude to compliance costs associated with Sarbanes-Oxley. There appears to be no difference in abnormal returns between California registrants and non-California registrants even in the absence of federal regulation suggesting that any imposition of federal privacy regulation (or regulation from other states) is unnecessary.
Our long-term stock-market tests indicate that the initial reaction was likely overblown. The companies that lost the most value around CCPA’s passage subsequently rebounded the most. California also passed a more stringent version of CCPA, the California Privacy Rights Act (CPRA), in 2020. Again, stocks of companies most adversely impacted at CCPA passage actually performed better in a short-window around CPRA passage. In summary, our study provides important insights into the perceived short-term and actual long-term economic impacts of consumer privacy laws and questions the need for several extant legislative efforts, especially at the federal level.

Effect of Redetermination of Safety-Net on Crime and Financial Distress: Evidence from Indiana (I0, H0)

Sakshi Bhardwaj
,
University of Illinois-Urbana-Champaign
daniel Tabak
,
University of Illinois-Urbana-Champaign

Abstract

This paper investigates the effect of losing welfare benefits on local household financial distress and crime. We estimate this effect using a quasi-experiment in which Indiana outsourced and automated the processing of TANF, food stamps, and Medicaid applications. The welfare automation policy was implemented in three waves prior to its cancellation in 2009, before reaching all counties. Using consumer credit panel data, we explore this variation to find that the Indiana welfare automation program, which reduced enrollment in SNAP and TANF enrollment, significantly increased the number of accounts in collections, collections balances, bankruptcy filings, and decreased credit scores. Using data from the Uniform Crime Reporting series, we find that welfare automation policy has also increased crime, primarily property crimes which we consider financially motivated.

Effects and Transmission of Macroprudential Policies in the Euro Area (E5, E6)

Sina Aßhoff
,
University of Duisburg-Essen
Katarzyna Budnik
,
European Central Bank
Gerhard Ruenstler
,
European Central Bank

Abstract

This paper studies the effects and transmission of macroprudential policy in
the Euro Area using a panel quantile local projection approach with a monthly
detailed bank-level database. Our analysis shows that the effectiveness of
macroprudential policies varies across different points of the credit growth
distribution. We find that policies such as borrower-based and capital based
measures can be effective in reducing credit growth and stabilizing the financial
system, particularly during periods of high credit growth. However, the
effectiveness of these policies diminishes as credit growth approaches the lower
quantiles of the distribution. Overall, our findings provide insights into the
effectiveness of macroprudential policies in the Euro Area and their transmission.

Effects of COVID-19 on Grain Stockpiling Behavior in Rural Households: Evidence from China (R2, D1)

Songqing Jin
,
Michigan State University
Jiayang Lyu
,
Zhejiang University and Stanford University
Jun Guo
,
Research Center for Rural Economy

Abstract

In this research, we aim to contribute to the emerging literature by comprehensively evaluating the effect of COVID-19 on China’s rural household stockpiling behavior and its underlying mechanisms. Our data comes from a nationally representative household survey spanning 2015-2021, which includes over 300 villages in China.

Our main estimation strategy follows the same logic as a standard difference-in-differences (DID) strategy. We estimate the change in rural household grain stockpile quantity between locations of different levels of pandemic severity and before and after the COVID-19 period. The crucial difference between our design and a classical difference-in-differences design is that we use a continuous measure of the intensity of treatment (i.e., the cumulative confirmed cases), thereby capturing more variation in the data. We further conduct the parallel trend and falsification tests using grain stockpiling data from multiple pre-COVID years to substantiate our DID identification strategy. Moreover, we examine the heterogeneity in household income sources and household operations, as well as the mechanism analysis.

Our analysis so far has yielded some important and consistent findings: First, the pandemic significantly influenced the rural households’ grain stockpiling behavior, causing a significant augment in grain stockpile quantity. On average, the household would increase its grain stock by 59kg after the pandemic outbreak compared to the pre-COVID period. Second, we found that grain stockpile quantities were higher among households whose income primarily comes from farm work or animal husbandry. Finally, the mechanism analyses verified several critical potential pathways through which COVID-19 impacts household grain stockpiling behavior. We found that households increased (1) their sown area after the pandemic crisis, which led to higher production; (2) their labor inputs, which contributed to improved productivity; (3) despite increased production, the quantity of grain sold remained stable.

Effects of Temperature Exposures on Early Childhood Cognitive Development and Home Environment (I1, J1)

Jun Hyung Kim
,
Jinan University
Wenjie Wu
,
Jinan University
Zhe Yang
,
Jinan University
Ai Yue
,
Shaanxi Normal University

Abstract

Climate change poses significant threats to the children's development, but its impacts are not well known because of data and methodological limitations. Using a unique panel study in disadvantaged rural communities, we find that exposures to low temperatures undermine subsequent cognitive development before age 5, and reduce caregiver-child interactions and material investments. Climate affects children likely by disrupting human capital investments in children instead of household income, child's health, or temporary cognitive performance. Our results suggest that climate change may widen socioeconomic inequalities across households by affecting their capacity to adapt, which is severely limited among disadvantaged households.

Empirical Study on the Voting Results Recommended by Proxy Advisory Companies (G3, G1)

Hiroaki Miyachi
,
University of Tokyo
Fumiko Takeda
,
Keio University

Abstract

This study examines 1,025 shareholder meeting proposals recommended by proxy advisory firms in Japan between March 2010 and March 2022. During the last few decades, Japanese corporate governance has transformed from a stakeholder governance system characterized by cross-shareholding among affiliated companies to a shareholder governance system in which institutional investors are expected to monitor investee companies. Many studies have examined the influence of proxy advisory firms in the U.S. Some argue that their influence is so great that regulation is necessary, whereas others argue that their influence is not as great in real terms as to warrant regulation Despite growing interest in proxy advisory companies, empirical studies on their influence have not been accumulated in Japan. Our multivariate regression analyses revealed that the dissenting recommendations of the two main proxy advisory firms, the Institutional Shareholder Service (ISS) and Glass Lewis, were negatively correlated with the approval rate of proposals, and that ISS was more influential than Glass Lewis. The results also indicate that the dissenting recommendations of proxy advisory firms are negatively correlated with the percentage of affirmative votes cast by institutional investors and that institutional investors’ voting behavior is more consistent with the recommendations of proxy advisory firms than that of other investors. The Chow test showed that the influence of proxy advisory firms’ recommendations on voting results did not change after 2017.

Empirical Testing and Mechanism Analysis of the Convergence of Agricultural Labor Productivity in China: Based on the Driving Role of Transportation Infrastructure (R0, E0)

Danhong Shen
,
North University of China
Haimeng Liang
,
North University of China
Wangfang Shi
,
North University of China

Abstract

If the underdeveloped regions of China can achieve the "catch-up effect" by improving agricultural labor productivity and converge with the developed regions, it will be conducive to the implementation of the rural revitalization strategy and is also a necessary condition for achieving common prosperity. This article selects provincial panel data from 1999 to 2020, uses convergence theory to test the β-convergence, σ-convergence, and conditional convergence of agricultural labor productivity in China, and verifies the driving role of basic transportation infrastructure. The results show that there is significant σ-convergence and β-convergence in China's agricultural labor productivity, indicating the phenomenon of "catch-up" in underdeveloped regions. The improvement of transportation infrastructure can accelerate market flow, optimize resource allocation, and promote the convergence of agricultural labor productivity.

Energy and Climate Policy in a DSGE Model of the United Kingdom (Q4, Q5)

Stephen Millard
,
National Institute of Economic and Social Research
Sandra Batten
,
Bank of England

Abstract

We build an open economy Dynamic Stochastic General Equilibrium model with energy and use it to simulate the impact of different climate policies – specifically the introduction of a carbon tax and bans on petrol or gas usage – on macroeconomic variables. The model has four sectors: households, businesses, government, and a monetary policy authority. To analyse the impact of climate policies on the macro-economy, we assume that households consume petrol, gas, and electricity, as well as a ‘non-energy good’, which is produced using labour, capital, imported intermediates, electricity, gas, and petrol. Electricity, itself, can be produced using fossil fuels or renewables. As we are modelling the UK, we assume the economy is endowed with gas and oil (which we assume can be costlessly converted into petrol), and imports (exports) any additional gas and petrol its households and firms need to consume (have spare). We show how the different policies lead to falls in both households’ consumption of energy and firms’ use of energy in production, while also having the effect of shifting the production of electricity from fossil fuels to renewable sources. Since energy inputs in production of non-energy and electricity fall by more than gross output of non-energy and electricity, value-added by these industries increases. Given our assumption that the economy is endowed with oil and gas, and oil and gas production does not require any other inputs, value-added in the oil and gas industries is fixed. Hence, GDP increases in response to these policies. Finally, we find that the policies result in a temporary increase in inflation and a tightening in monetary policy.

Estimating Treatment Effects with Spillovers in Unobserved Networks (C3, C8)

Shuo Qi
,
Southern Methodist University

Abstract

Estimating treatment effects is one of the most fundamental problems in econometric studies, especially program evaluation. Treatment effects often interfere with spillover effects in social networks. In this research, we focus on the spillovers in the treatment assignments and study the resulting Bayesian Nash equilibrium of a binary participation game, as known as peer-influenced propensity scores (Jackson, Lin, and Yu., 2022). In addition, we allow for the case when the network cannot be observed. Under network sparsity, the estimation problem is formulated as a penalized maximum likelihood estimation, where the missing binary links are treated as high-dimensional nuisance parameters. Simulation studies demonstrate the performance of our treatment effects estimators with finite samples: our approach has good performance for small networks. We apply the proposed methodology to revisit the seasonal migration field experiments in Bangladesh.

Evaluating Instrument Validity Using the Principle of Independent Mechanisms (C4, C0)

Patrick Burauel
,
California Institute of Technology

Abstract

The validity of instrumental variables to estimate causal effects is typically justified narratively and often remains controversial. Critical assumptions are difficult to evaluate since they involve unobserved variables. Building on Janzing and Schoelkopf’s (2018, JS) method to quantify a degree of confounding in multivariate linear models, we develop a test that evaluates instrument validity without relying on Balke and Pearl’s (1997) inequality constraints. Instead, our approach is based on the Principle of Independent Mechanisms, which states that causal models have a modular structure. Monte Carlo studies show a high accuracy of the procedure. We apply our method to two empirical studies: first, we can corroborate the narrative justification given by Card (1995) for the validity of college proximity as an instrument for educational attainment to estimate financial returns to education. Second, we cannot reject the validity of past savings rates as an instrument for economic development to estimate its causal effect on democracy (Acemoglu et al., 2008). The paper includes an extensive summary of the method to estimate a degree of confounding in multivariate linear models (JS). It builds intuition on how the method works and what the underlying Principle of Independent Mechanisms implies in the two case studies.

Exchange Rate Asymmetry and Third Country Effect: Evidence from Bangladesh's Apparel and Textile Industry (F1, F3)

Takrima Sayeda
,
Macquarie University

Abstract

Using fully modified ordinary least squares (FMOLS) estimation, this study focuses on the relationship between the real exchange rate changes and Bangladesh's exports from three standpoints: (1) apparel and textile exports, (2) asymmetries in bilateral real exchange rates and (3) the third country effect. The study uses annual data for ten major trading partners and five competing countries of Bangladesh from 1986 to 2020. The triangulation between the home country, partner countries, and competing countries confirms that bilateral real exchange rates have asymmetric effects on the apparel and textile industries. In both cases, a real depreciation increases export earnings more than appreciation reduces them in the long run. Moreover, when focusing on the competitor countries' currency appreciation as a third country effect, apparel exports show resilience compared to textiles exports. The study suggests that the depreciations of exchange rates (induced by policy), diversification, and quality improvement of apparel and textile products can increase Bangladesh's export earnings and its competitiveness in the world market.

Expanding the Reach of Corporate Bond Purchase Program: the Spillover Effect of SMCCF on Bank-Dependent Firms (E5, G2)

Chenyu Mao
,
University of Maryland

Abstract

Corporate bond purchase programs are one of the monetary policy tools that central banks use to support credit markets during economic downturns. The Federal Reserve launched the Secondary Market Corporate Credit Facility (SMCCF) in March 2020 to provide liquidity to the bond market during the COVID-19 pandemic, but its effects on private firms have not been explored. This paper examines the spillover effects of the SMCCF on private firms' external finance through the banking sector. Based on the loan-level dataset, we find that eligible public firms tend to reduce their loan origination and enjoy a lower interest rate on the new loan, indicating a decrease in their loan demand. Furthermore, banks that lend to those eligible firms offer more favorable terms to non-eligible firms to compensate for the decrease in loan demand. As a result, private firms have access to more bank loans and enjoy a lower interest rate on new loans following the announcement of the SMCCF. Overall, our results suggest that the SMCCF has positive spillover effects on private firms by increasing bank credit supply. To provide a theoretical basis for our empirical findings, we propose a framework that explicitly models the banking sector to emphasize its role in the transmission channel. Our findings provide insights into the transmission mechanism of corporate bond purchase programs and suggest that such programs can have broader effects beyond the targeted sectors. These findings have important implications for the design and implementation of corporate bond purchase programs as a monetary policy tool.

Exploring Search Patterns: Health Policy, Birthrates, and Abortion Trends (I1, I2)

Brad Scott
,
Rowan-Cabarrus Community College and Gardner-Webb University

Abstract

The 2022 U.S. Supreme Court ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization granted states the authority to regulate abortion laws, emphasizing the need to evaluate sex education policies and their impact on information-seeking behavior. This study examines the relationship between sex education policies and Google Trends data, using advanced statistical techniques to identify potential knowledge gaps and predict current and future trends. By understanding how sex education policies influence individuals' search for information, policymakers can make informed decisions about sex education programs and better anticipate the consequences of legislative changes.

Exploring the Causes and Effects of Poverty in India: A Comprehensive Analysis (I3, R0)

Sushma Shukla
,
Piedmont Virginia Community College

Abstract

This paper explores the causes and effects of poverty in India with a comprehensive analysis of the current socio-economic conditions in the country. It examines the various factors that contribute to poverty, such as low levels of education, lack of access to healthcare, and gender inequality. The paper also looks at the effects of poverty, including malnutrition, poor housing, and lack of access to basic services. Finally, the paper provides an overview of the government's efforts to reduce poverty and suggests potential solutions to address the issue. The paper concludes that poverty in India is a complex problem that requires a multi-faceted approach to address.

Exuberant Investors and Market Dynamics in the Petroleum Industry between 1859 and 1913: Implications for the Current Antitrust Debate (N5, K2)

Haiwei Chen
,
University of Alaska-Fairbanks
Jim Arkell
,
University of Alaska-Fairbanks

Abstract

We document evidence of an oil rush during the period of 1859-1913. There is no Granger causality from the changes in the interest rate and crude oil prices to the changes in new oil wells or producing wells. Not deterred by declines in the oil price, exuberant investors keep funding new oil wells and owners of the existing wells keep pumping oil. This exuberance results in persistent decreases in the oil price. The results demonstrate the pitfall in pivoting too much toward assessing consumer welfare “through the lens of product prices” in antitrust enforcement, especially in today’s free platform economy.

Financial Constraints and Emission Intensity (G3, G2)

Eleonora Sfrappini
,
Halle Institute for Economic Research

Abstract

When facing a tightening in financial constraints emission intensive firms can exploit internal capital markets and reduce funding to less profitable subsidiaries, to protect more profitable ones. When profitable subsidiaries are more emission-intensive this ``winner-picking'' behavior leads to increasing emission intensity. However, when the tightening is caused by the firm's high-emitting status, headquarters can also engage in constraint minimization. By shifting funding to cleaner subsidiaries they can reduce emission intensity and financial constraints at the expense of profitability. These contrasting incentives are modeled in a Tirole (2006) setting and derived propositions are tested empirically.

Financial Shock Transmission to Heterogeneous Firms: the Earnings-Based Borrowing Constraint Channel (E5, G1)

Livia Chitu
,
European Central Bank
Magdalena Grothe
,
European Central Bank
Tatjana Schulze
,
International Monetary Fund
Ine van Robays
,
European Central Bank

Abstract

We study the heterogeneous impact of jointly identified monetary policy and global risk shocks on corporate funding costs. We disentangle these two shocks in a structural Bayesian Vector Autoregression framework and investigate their respective effects on prices of equities and bonds issued by heterogeneous firms using micro-data for the US. We tease out mechanisms underlying the effects by contrasting traditional financial frictions arising from asset-based collateral constraints with the recent earnings-based borrowing constraint hypothesis, differentiating firms across leverage and earnings. Our empirical evidence strongly supports the earnings-based borrowing constraint hypothesis. We find that global risk shocks have stronger and more heterogeneous effects on corporate funding costs which depend on firms' position within the earnings distribution.

Financial Skills and Search in the Mortgage Market (E2, G5)

Marta Cota
,
CERGE-EI
Ante Sterc
,
CERGE-EI

Abstract

Are households with low financial skills disadvantaged in the mortgage market? Using stochastic record linking, we construct a unique U.S. dataset encompassing a rich set of mortgage details and borrowers' characteristics, including their objective financial literacy measure. We find that households with low financial literacy are up to 4% more likely to search less and lock in at 15-20 b.p. higher rates. Upon origination, unskilled borrowers face a 12-16% higher mortgage delinquency and end up with a 30% lower likelihood of refinancing. Overall, for a $100,000 loan, the potential losses from low financial literacy are more than $9,329 over the mortgage duration. To understand how financial education, more accessible mortgages, or mortgage rate changes affect households with low financial literacy, we formulate and calibrate a mortgage search model with heterogeneous search frictions and endogenous financial skills. Our model estimates show that search intensity and financial skill variations contribute to 55% and 10% of mortgage rate variations, respectively. We find that i) more accessible mortgages lead to a higher delinquency risk among low-skilled households, ii) financial education mitigates the adverse effects of increased accessibility, and iii) low mortgage rates favor high-skilled homeowners and, by reinforcing refinancing activity, deepen consumption differences across different financial skill levels.

Finding a Needle in a Haystack: A Machine Learning Framework for Anomaly Detection in Payment Systems (C4, E4)

Ajit Desai
,
Bank of Canada
Anneke Kosse
,
Bank for International Settlements
Jacob Sharples
,
Bank of Canada

Abstract

We propose a novel machine learning (ML) framework for real-time transaction monitoring in high-value payment systems (HVPS), which are a central piece of a country’s financial infrastructure. This framework can be used by the system operators and overseers to detect anomalous transactions, which---if caused by a cyber attack or an operational outage and left undetected---could have serious implications for the HVPS, its participants and the financial system more broadly. Given the substantial volume of HVPS payments settled each day and the scarcity of anomalous transactions to date, detecting anomalies resembles an attempt to find a needle in a haystack. Therefore, our framework uses a layered approach. In the first layer, a supervised ML algorithm is used to identify and separate typical payments. In the second layer, only the remaining payments are run through an unsupervised ML algorithm for anomaly detection. We tested this framework using artificially manipulated transactions and payments data from the Canadian HVPS. The ML algorithm employed in the first layer achieves a detection rate of 93%, marking a 44% improvement compared to traditional econometric models. Moreover, the ML algorithm used in the second layer indeed identifies the artificially manipulated transactions as being more suspicious than the original transactions, proofing its effectiveness.

Firm Leverage and Boom-Bust Cycles (E2, G3)

Can Sever
,
International Monetary Fund

Abstract

This paper explores the dynamic relationship between firm debt and real outcomes using data from 24 European economies over the period of 2000-2018. Based on macro data, it shows that a rise in credit to firms is associated with an increase in employment growth in the short-term, but employment growth declines in the medium-term. This pattern remains similar, even when the changes in credit to households are accounted for. Next, using data from a large sample of firms, it shows that firm leverage buildups predict similar boom-bust growth cycles in firm employment: Firms with a larger increase in leverage experience a boost in employment growth in the short-term, but employment growth decreases in the medium-term. Relatedly, the volatility of employment growth increases in the aftermath of firm leverage buildups. Finally, this paper provides suggestive evidence on the role of a financial channel in the relationship between firm leverage buildups and employment growth. The results show that a rise in firm leverage is associated with a persistently higher debt service ratio, pointing the drag on finances. Consistently, boom-bust growth cycles in the aftermath of firm leverage buildups are not limited to employment growth, but are also pronounced for investment. Moreover, the medium-term decline in firm employment growth as predicted by leverage buildups becomes even larger if aggregate financial conditions tighten. The findings are in favor of “lean against the wind” approach in policy making.

Firm-Level Consequences of Corporate Quantatitive Easing (E5, G3)

Philipp Poyntner
,
Vienna University of Economics and Business

Abstract

This paper examines the effects of the European Central Bank's Corporate Sector Purchasing Programme (CSPP) on firm behavior. While previous research has focused on the program's impact on financing conditions, this paper investigates whether the easing of financing conditions resulted in changes in employment, investment, and profit. Using data on corporate bonds and firm balance sheet information, a difference-in-differences model is estimated that compares the economic dynamics of firms targeted by the CSPP with comparable firms along the bond ratings eligibility threshold. The findings suggest that the CSPP had a positive and robust effect on investment, but no significant effect on employment or profit margins.

Firms’ Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Monetary Policy (E5, Q0)

Pedram Pourabbasvafa
,
Sorbonne Economics Centre
Olena Havrylchyk
,
Sorbonne Economics Centre

Abstract

This paper uses an event-study methodology to explore the impact of unanticipated monetary policy changes on the stock prices of firms with different greenhouse emission intensities. We show that the stock returns of brown firms react more aggressively to monetary policy changes compared to green firms. This finding is explained by fundamental differences between green and brown firms. Firstly, green firms own more intangible assets while brown firms hold more tangible assets. Since tangible assets have stronger collateral value, this results in a stronger credit channel of monetary policy for brown firms. Secondly, brown firms operate more in industries that produce durable goods. This results in a stronger interest rate channel of monetary policy because the demand for durable goods is more interest rate sensitive. Our results are robust across different measures of monetary shocks and different measures of firm environmental footprint. Our findings have important monetary policy implications because we show that the adherence to the market neutrality principle by central banks favors brown firms.

Fog or Smog? The Impact of Uncensored Reporting on Pollution on Individuals’ Environmental Awareness (Q5, P3)

Sven Alfred Hartmann
,
Trier University

Abstract

This paper analyzes the effect of exposure to foreign mass media on environmental awareness and pro-environmental behavior. We exploit a natural experiment occurring in the German Democratic Republic, where the reception of West German television was determined by geographic characteristics. Western media was a reliable source of information about environmental pollution in the German Democratic Republic, a topic that was not covered in the East German state media. Using survey data conducted before the German reunification we find that access to Western media increased the environmental awareness among GDR citizens. The analysis of data from the German Socio-Economic Panel supports this finding and reveals a positive and persistent effect on the probability of being active in environmental organizations. Finally, by examining election data, we show that counties with former West German television reception were more likely to vote for the Greens in the first two federal elections in reunified Germany.

Following the Green Trail: Identifying FDI Environmental Spillovers on Chinese Firms (F2, Q5)

Chun Liu
,
Southwestern University of Finance and Economics
Chenchen Deng
,
Xi'an Jiaotong University

Abstract

Despite the abundant evidence regarding the spillover effects of foreign direct investment (FDI) on domestic productivity, the influence of FDI on local environment remains unclear. This study investigates the causal impact of FDI on environmental outcomes of Chinese domestic firms by leveraging the plausibly exogenous relaxation of FDI regulations that occurred during China's accession to the World Trade Organization. Our analysis reveals that the presence of foreign firms has positive intra-industry spillover effects on the environmental performance of domestic firms. Within the same industry, the positive spillovers are attributed to the dominant demonstration effect over the competition effect of FDI. Further heterogeneity analysis shows that this FDI environmental spillover effect is more significant in regions with more stringent environmental regulations and for firms with higher absorptive capacity. We also find evidence for the inter-industry spillovers that domestic firms tend to reduce pollution when they are forward or backward linked to foreign firms. Additionally, our analysis of pollution abatement suggests that domestic firms adopt both production processes and end-of-pipe reduction strategies in the presence of FDI. These findings support the pollution halo hypothesis and provide important policy implications for emerging economies seeking to achieve sustainable development.

Foodborne Outbreaks, Product Recalls, and Firm Learning (D8, D9)

Sherzod B. Akhundjanov
,
Utah State University
Veronica F. Pozo
,
Utah State University
Briana Thomas
,
Utah State University

Abstract

Firms in the food industry may experience more than one contamination incident over time. In a food safety context, increasing the time between foodborne outbreaks represents a key objective for the food industry and public health officials. We propose to implement a recurrent event survival analysis framework to identify the extent of firm learning from inter-event time. Unlike the methods used in previous literature, which are either inefficient or inappropriate, this approach is opportune for the analysis of repeated recall incidents as it accommodates the order of recurring events and accounts for intra-firm correlation arising from these events. Analysis of repeated recall data of meat/poultry products in the United States for the period 1994-2015 show that more diversified firms incur a smaller risk of repeat recall as firm size expands compared to firms producing primarily meat/poultry products. The hazard of a recall incident decreases with the severity of the past recall incident. Some evidence of firm learning is found, but there is no definitive evidence indicating that a firm's ability to prevent recalls grows with the number of foodborne outbreaks it has experienced.

Force behind Anti-Corruption: Evidence from China (P0)

Hong Ru
,
Nanyang Technological University

Abstract

This paper documents the clientelism in anti-corruption investigations across the politician
patronage network in China. Having connections to highly ranked politicians in the Politburo
makes local politicians 56.3% less likely to be investigated; they are also more likely to receive
a lighter sentence after being investigated. I employ a regression discontinuity design to
establish the causality of this protection effect. I use the mandatory retirement age of 68 years
for Politburo members as the cut-off and find discontinuous jumps in the probability that local
politicians will be investigated when their connected Politburo members step down at the
retirement age cut-off.

Foreign Exchange Intervention and Inelastic Financial Market (F3, F4)

Chang He
,
University of California-Los Angeles
Paula Beltran
,
International Monetary Fund

Abstract

How large should open market operations be to stabilize exchange rates in foreign exchange interventions? In this paper, we leverage the mechanical rebalancings of the largest local-currency government bonds index for emerging countries (GBI-EM Global Diversified Index) to provide a valid identification on the required amount of foreign reserves an emerging market central bank should buy (or sell) in foreign exchange interventions. The rebalancings of index create demand shocks on the currency composition of government bonds that are orthogonal to the macroeconomic fundamentals of the sovereign. We show that the rebalancings resemble the noise trader shocks in a segmented market model (Itskhoki-Mukhin 2021) and identify the required size of the open market operations to stabilize exchange rates. We find that in order to achieve a 1 percentage point exchange rate appreciation, the required intervention is 0.4% of annual GDP for a median country in our sample.

Foreign Exchange Risk Management across the Production Network (F3, F4)

Wentong Chen
,
Cornell University
Jisu Hwang
,
Cornell University

Abstract

In the context of international trade, firms are exposed to foreign exchange risk due to both import and export channels. This study employs firm-level data to examine how firms manage foreign exchange risk through financial hedging, as well as the distribution of such risk management strategies across the production network. Our empirical analysis reveals that large firms, more centralized firms, as well as those situated at extreme upstream and downstream positions in the production network, are more likely to utilize financial hedging. Moreover, we find that firms' natural hedging and hedging decisions are influenced by their production network positions and their attention to other firms' hedging activities. To better understand the potential positive externalities of hedging in the production network, we develop a model that considers the impact of various hedging allocations. Our investigation demonstrates that suboptimal distributions of hedging activities across the production network can result in inefficiencies.

Gene-Environment Interactions with Essential Heterogeneity (I1, I2)

Johannes Hollenbach
,
RWI - Leibniz Institute for Economic Research
Hendrik Schmitz
,
University of Paderborn
Matthias Westphal
,
TU Dortmund and FernUniversität in Hagen

Abstract

Cognitive decline in old age has far-reaching consequences for human interactions, economic decisions, and quality of life. The rate of decline varies among individuals and depends on both genetic and environmental factors, such as education. While traditionally unobservable, the addition of genetic information to representative surveys has made it possible to conduct research using genetic information directly and in ways that can inform policy analysis. This study aims to determine (i) the effect of education on cognitive performance in later life, (ii) how education interacts with genetic differences to determine cognitive functioning, and (iii) whether increasing compulsory schooling can compensate for an important source of inequality: the "gene lottery".
We examine the effect of education on cognitive performance using a regression discontinuity design with data from the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing. To account for selection into education, we exploit a 1947 UK schooling reform that raised the minimum school leaving age from 14 to 15. We then add gene-by-environment interactions to assess whether the reform could compensate for genetic disadvantages. However, traditional two-stage least squares estimators conflate two different things into a single estimate of the interaction effect: potentially different effects of education by genetic endowment and potentially different complier groups by genetic endowment. To obtain effects for well-defined subgroups, we use the marginal treatment effect (MTE) framework. This allows us to control for differences in observed and unobserved characteristics between complier groups with different genetic endowments, thus disentangling the returns to education from underlying selection patterns based on genetic types.
The reform disproportionately increased schooling for individuals with a lower genetic index of predicted cognitive performance. Using MTE estimation, we find that the positive effect of education on cognition in old age is larger for individuals with an unfavorable genetic makeup.

Global Political Ties and the Global Financial Cycle (F3, E4)

Gene Paul Gerard Ambrocio
,
Bank of Finland
Iftekhar Hasan
,
Fordham University
Xiang Li
,
Halle Institute for Economic Research

Abstract

We study the implications of forging stronger political ties with the US on the sensitivities of stock returns around the world to a global common factor - the global financial cycle. Using voting patterns at the United Nations as a measure of political ties with the US along with various measures of the global financial cycle, we document evidence indicating that stronger political ties with the US amplify the sensitivities of stock returns in developing countries to the global financial cycle. We explore several channels and find that a deepening of financial linkages along with a reduction in information asymmetries and an amplification of sentiment are potentially important factors behind this result.

Go Global, Act Digital: The Impact of Digitalization on Chinese Global Value Chain Position (F1, O3)

Wei Xue
,
Xi'an Jiaotong University
Yi Zhang
,
Xi'an Jiaotong University

Abstract

Despite the rapid advancements in digital technologies, the connection between digitalization and trade, particularly with respect to global value chain participation, remains unclear. This study investigates the causal effect of digitalization on global value chain position of Chinese firms. We first establish a theoretical model to integrate data as a new factor of production and consider the role of digitalization in enhancing firm productivity and mitigating information costs. We then test the derived hypotheses using data on Chinese exporters and employing the instrumental variable estimation method to tackle endogeneity concerns. Our analysis reveals that digitalization enables firms to broaden their span of production stages in global value chains by augmenting their imports on more upstream intermediates and shifting their exports towards the final demand. In line with our theoretical predictions, the results of the mechanism analysis indicate that this impact can be attributed to the direct effect of utilizing data as a production factor as well as the indirect effects of digitalization on productivity and costs. These findings provide valuable insights into comprehending the importance of technology in promoting trade and reducing global income inequality.

Government Contract Transparency and Payoffs from Political Connections (D8, H5)

Ethan Yao
,
University of Minnesota

Abstract

I examine how government contract information disclosed following the Federal Funding Accountability and Transparency Act (FFATA) affects firms' political campaign contributions. I find that increased government contract transparency allows firms to learn about politicians' influence on the contracts and increase contributions to politicians who are more influential in contract allocations. Additional analysis suggests that politicians engage more in contract allocations following FFATA to gain firms' political support. Compared to firms with a better knowledge of politicians' influence, firms with relatively poor information sets are more impacted by the contract information revealed by FFATA. This study highlights how government contract transparency determines firms’ political connections and enhances the likelihood of increased payoffs from their political contributions. As such, the paper furthers our understanding of the unintended consequences of government contract disclosures.

Growing Peace: Impacts of Agricultural Development Interventions on Recovery and Resilience in Conflict-Affected Nigeria (Q1, D9)

Dena Bunnel
,
Kansas State University
Ian Schwenke
,
Nuru International
Thomas Boswell
,
University of Texas

Abstract

Northeast Nigeria is characterized by small-scale farming and high levels of poverty. From 2014-2016 large areas of the region were overtaken by the Boko Haram Islamic insurgent group, driving people from their homes and burning villages, farms, and markets in their wake, before being pushed back by Nigerian security forces. Though Boko Haram, and its splinter group the Islamic State West Africa Province, continue to engage in sporadic attacks, there territory is much diminished and many people have to their villages and farms. The area is also subject to increasing environmental shocks caused by climate change and economic shocks from the highly unstable Nigerian economy, as well as ongoing clashes between farmers and nomadic herders. This study uses a mixed-methods approach to assess the impact of agricultural interventions on well-being and resilience of households recovering from conflict shocks, while coping with enduring and dynamic shocks and stressors. Starting with results from a four-year impact evaluation using a randomized controlled trial to assess the impact of an agricultural development program on well-being and resiliency outcomes of rural households in a recovering area in northeast Nigeria, this paper expands the analysis by including regional secondary data on violent conflict incidence, staple food prices, and governance perceptions to assess recovery and resiliency for rural communities under volatile conflict and economic situations. The study uses detailed survey data to measure well-being and resilience and focus group analysis to identify trends in perceptions of community social cohesion and resilience.

Heterogeneity in Returns to Wealth and Consumption Inequality (G5, E2)

Claudio Daminato
,
Lund University
Luigi Pistaferri
,
Stanford University

Abstract

A recent literature (Benhabib and Bisin (2018); Gabaix et al., 2016) argues that features of the distribution of stochastic wealth returns (persistent heterogeneity, or type dependence, and a positive correlation with wealth, or scale dependence) may play an important role for explaining features of the wealth distribution, such as the increase in top shares over time. Several papers show empirically that stochastic wealth returns indeed display type and scale dependence (Fagereng et al., 2020 and Bach et al., 2020).
In this paper we make two contributions. The first is to embed return heterogeneity within an otherwise standard life-cycle model of consumer behavior. The second is to allow persistent heterogeneity in wealth returns to be correlated with (the more frequently documented) persistent heterogeneity in wages. We argue that such correlation may arise from common factors (cognitive and non-cognitive unobserved skills or abilities) driving both. We estimate the parameters of interest (extent of persistent heterogeneity in wealth returns and earnings, as well as preference parameters) using panel data from the PSID. The data confirm findings from other countries that both type and scale dependence characterize the behavior of returns from assets. The data also show that a common component (which we identify as the stock of endowed cognitive skills) appears to drive persistent heterogeneity in wealth returns and earnings: individuals who do persistently well in labor markets appear to do persistently better in asset markets as well. The estimated model replicates well the rise over the life cycle of the wealth-income ratios and of consumption inequality. In counterfactual exercises, we document that eliminating persistent return heterogeneity or common factors in both earnings and returns would dramatically understate average returns for people at the top of the wealth distribution as well as the level and rise of consumption inequality over the life cycle.

Heterogeneity in State Solar and Wind Deployments: Trade-Offs between Technology-Neutral and Technology-Specific Renewable Energy Policies (Q5, Q4)

Jian Chen
,
Iowa State University
Hongli Feng
,
Iowa State University

Abstract

There are large heterogeneities among U.S. states regarding solar and wind energy development and natural endowment. We examine the roles of renewable portfolio standards (RPS) without or with solar carve-outs (SRPS) in the uneven solar and wind development across states. We first develop a theoretical framework that differentiates between renewables and nonrenewables and between two types of renewables (solar and wind) to evaluate the impacts of technology-neutral or specific renewable energy policies. Our results with state-level data from 2001 to 2019 suggest that adopting a solar carve-out within RPS boosts solar share by 0.65 percentage points but decreases wind share by 2.02 percentage points. Our results also indicate that the decreasing cost of solar and wind electricity during our study period contributed to solar and wind development by 0.48 and 8.67 percentage points, respectively. We also examine the role of credit trading, costs of SRPS, heterogeneous impacts across time periods, operator scales, and treatment timing.

Heterogeneity in What? Cognitive Skills, Beliefs and the Liquid Wealth Distribution (E7, E2)

Oliver Pfäuti
,
University of Texas-Austin
Fabian Seyrich
,
DIW Berlin
Jonathan Zinman
,
Dartmouth College

Abstract

We show that households with lower cognitive skills are persistently: (i) overconfident about their abilities, (ii) overly optimistic about their future financial situations, and (iii) more likely to be hand-to-mouth. We introduce permanent heterogeneity in households' cognitive skills and beliefs about their skills in a heterogeneous-agent New Keynesian model to match these findings. Our model jointly matches the average marginal propensities to consume and the average wealth in the U.S. even when all wealth is liquid. Heterogeneity in skills and overconfidence matters for fiscal policy: providing liquidity is less effective in bringing households away from the borrowing constraint and the optimal level of public debt is substantially lower than in standard models.

High-Speed Rail and Structural Transformation: Evidence from the Experimental High-Speed Rail Project in China (R1, O1)

Xiao Ke
,
Hubei University of Economics and Peking University

Abstract

This study investigates the economic impacts of High Speed Rail projects (HSR) for targeted city locations with heavy-industry-based economy, taking the first HSR project in China, Qinhuangdao-Shenyang HSR line, as a case study. Using the synthetic control method by Abadie et al. (2003, 2010, 2015) to construct appropriate counterfactuals, we find that within our policy evaluation period in 1999-2013, most of the HSR cities have experienced sustained increase in real GDP per capita. However, the magnitudes of such HSR impacts are very heterogeneous. As for some locations, the local income level increased between 4.6% and 28.1% on average when compared with the counterfactual non-HSR cities. The rest of the locations received negligible impacts. By further examining the local labor market, we find that the targeted locations have experienced structural transformation toward the service sector and industry diversification. This in turn have mitigated policy burden in the industry sector. First, as HSR projects greatly reduce travel time cost and increase punctuality, employment increase in tourism and business related sectors. Second, HSR connection breaks through bottlenecks for freight transport capacity on the existing railway lines and brings gains to bulk commodity industry. Besides, increase in employment and income in tradable sectors generates demand for non-tradable local good and services. Finally, for heavy industry cities in Northeast China with large amount of redundant workers, expansion of the service sector helps reallocate the low skilled labor from heavy industry to labor intensive service sector which used to be suppressed, hence further facilitate structural transformation. The results suggest that the HSR infrastructure project in China can help heavy-industry-based cities along the line take comparative advantage-following (CAF) approach to facilitate industry structural transformation and diversification thus contribute to inclusive growth.

History’s Chokehold: Realities and Economic Development Options of the Small Post-Socialist Economies (O1, P2)

Aleksandr V. Gevorkyan
,
St. John's University

Abstract

This paper is a comprehensive exploration of the macroeconomic trends across the post-socialist economies of Central and Eastern Europe and Former Soviet Union (CEE and FSU) between 2018 and 2023. The emphasis is on historical continuity in the background of the complex mix of the latest external and domestic shocks. The situation is dynamic yet ushering a fundamental change in economic paradigm in the region, calling for re-assessment of the post-socialist economic development models that have been evolving over the past three decades. The small CEE and FSU economies’ policy framework is defined by the accumulation of directly impacting regional and global political risks, accompanied by the latest transformation of the macroeconomic foundations, rising internal social and economic underdevelopment, global value chains repositioning, as well as acute capital and foreign exchange markets pressures. As a result, this paper advances and further explores several probable macroeconomic scenarios that may play out in the smallest CEE and FSU economies. These scenarios are relevant for future research in economic development and are more urgent for policy decision-making, while region’s history continues to remind of itself.

How Competition Shapes Peer Effects: Evidence from a University in China (M5, J0)

Zihan Hu
,
Singapore Management University
Siyu Chen
,
Jinan University

Abstract

Competition is widely used to motivate efforts and increase performance. However, in many domains, performance is aided by cooperation between agents in addition to their own efforts. In this case, competition may impose costs on cooperation since the chance of winning is decreasing in the success of peers. Education is a natural setting where peer interactions and help from others enhance individual performance. This paper uses administrative data from a university in China to examine how competition changes peer effects and peer interactions. Exploiting randomly assigned roommates, we find that high-ability students have detrimental effects on their high-ability roommates' academic performance. More importantly, this negative peer effect increases significantly along multiple competition intensity dimensions within a dorm room. The follow-up survey we conduct reveals that this is likely driven by competition discouraging help and interactions among roommates.

How Do Tom and Jerry Play? A Simple Application of Convex Geometry in Hide-and-Seek Games (C7)

Xinmi Li
,
Tsinghua University
Jie Zheng
,
Tsinghua University

Abstract

We propose a simultaneous-move hide-and-seek game, where one player wins by matching the other player, while the other player wins by mismatching in a connected space X in Euclidean space. We provide a complete characterization of Type 1 Nash Equilibrium where the seeker plays a pure strategy. We show that the center of mass of the hider's strategy coincides with the seeker's strategy at the center of the minimal cover ball of X. We also characterize Type 2 Nash Equilibrium where both players randomize their strategies. We show that the shape of X matters and the players only allocate their probability weights along a straight line. Some alternative settings are discussed and the equilibrium analysis is conducted. These results can be applied to a large number of scenarios, characterizing the behavior of two players in a zero-sum game, where one player aims to maximize the distance between them, while the other aims to minimize it.

How Export Performance is Mediated by Varieties of Innovation, Owner Characteristics, and Location (O3, F1)

Luyi Han
,
Pennsylvania State University
Zheng Tian
,
Pennsylvania State University
Timothy R. Wojan
,
National Science Foundation
Stephan J. Goetz
,
Pennsylvania State University

Abstract

Agricultural exports have been the focus of both policy and research regarding the possible contribution of rural areas to reduction of the US trade deficit. However, rural exports from the nonfarm economy are more than an order of magnitude larger. This paper contributes to our understanding of the role that rural nonfarm exports play and the possible policy lever of promoting rural innovation. Previous work from Europe show firms with R&D expenditure and patented innovation are more likely to export. However, due to data constraints, similar firm-level studies in the US are scant. In this study, we merge confidential firm-level international trade data from Longitudinal Firm Trade Transactions Database (LFTTD) and Annual Business Survey (ABS) data to examine the relationship between innovation and exports. The LFTTD data links individual trade transactions to US firms that report the trade value, date, and quantity, among other variables. The ABS data collect information on firm innovation, such as marketing, product innovation, and process innovations. The ABS-LFTTD linkage will allow us to estimate if there are any potential causal effects of innovation on export. As we only observe exporting behaviors for firms that choose to export, the self-selection into exporting could be endogenous. We use a two-stage selection model to address the potential endogeneities. In the first stage, we use a set of firm, firm owner, and community characteristics to estimate the probability of exporting, and in the second stage, we use an outcome equation to estimate the export growth. The implications of the findings for trade policy, rural innovation policy, and economic development issues are discussed.

How Student Perception of Their Well-Being Was Impacted by COVID-19 (A2, I3)

Elena Antoniadou
,
Auburn University
Aselia N. Urmanbetova
,
Georgia Institute of Technology
Apueela Wekulom
,
Georgia Institute of Technology
Maggi Xia
,
Georgia Institute of Technology

Abstract

The goals of this study are to analyze student self-reported perceptions of well-being collected in a large-enrollment course during the years affected by the Covid-19 pandemic and right after. The study contributes to the current literature on the academic subjective well-being by using both objective and behavioral explanatory variables, experimenting with a variety of measures to proxy motivation, and incorporating a more extensive empirical framework. We find that optimistic outlook has a strong positive impact on self-reported sense of well-being and course performance; online environment has positive impact on sense of well-being, but not on student performance; students who reported being more anxious on average had better performance; higher GPA had a strong positive impact on students’ sense of well-being, but not on their performance; lastly, race and identity had mixed results.

How, When, and Where Does the Opportunity Gap in the Netherlands Open Up (H0, J0)

Bastian Ravesteijn
,
Erasmus School of Economics

Abstract

The Netherlands is considered an egalitarian Northern European country, with a strong social safety net, employment protection, and universal health insurance with broad basic coverage. But to what extent are the outcomes of individuals associated with the circumstances in which they grew up?

We use rich administrative data on the full Dutch population to explore how differences in opportunity arise in terms of health, education, housing, and economic activity in five birth cohorts. These data allow us to trace back the origins of inequality of economic opportunity, in terms of labor market outcomes when people have reached the age of 35, to educational test scores outcomes by the end of primary school, educational track enrolment at the age of 16, and educational attainment at the ages of 21 and 35. In addition to these 23 outcome measures, we create a publicly available dataset with results for an additional 20 outcomes such as birth weight, preterm birth, infant mortality, living space, home ownership, involvement of child protective services, health care use, and disability insurance.

We document three sets of results and compare these to existing evidence from other countries. We first explore the outcomes of our five cohorts, by sex, migration background, and parental income, wealth, education, and single parenthood. We show that differences in opportunity are strong and persistent in terms of test scores and educational track enrolment, and that the Netherlands has the strongest known persistence of economic inequality of all OECD countries, except for the U.S. where intergenerational mobility is lowest.

Second, we estimate relative and absolute mobility for all 43 outcome by the municpality and postcode area where children grew up. Third, we show which local characteristics are correlated with spatial variation in upward intergenerational mobility. We created https://opportunitymap.nl and https://opportunitygap.nl where these results can be explored.

Identification and Estimation of Binary Choices with Hidden Information Diffusion (C4, D8)

Wan Zhang
,
University of California-Los Angeles

Abstract

This paper studies the hidden information diffusion and consumer preferences for a new product, where adoption decisions are made if consumers have received product information originating from initially informed ones (``seeds'') through social ties. The hidden information diffusion creates abundant latent awareness variables, which results in complicated dependence among observations. We show the nonparametric identification of diffusion and utility parameters using a subset of observations: seeds' decisions across time and behaviors of seeds' neighbors in the second period, which do not directly depend on latent awareness variables. We propose a two-step estimation procedure: in the first stage, we estimate diffusion and utility parameters using the subset of observations that yields identification; in the second stage, we re-estimate utility parameters using all the observations and plug-in estimates of diffusion parameters from the first stage. With regularity conditions on decaying dependence with distance and network structure, we establish consistency of the two-step estimator. Monte Carlo simulations demonstrate the efficiency gain from the two-step estimator over the first-step estimator. As a counterfactual analysis, we present a greedy seeding strategy employing network structure and consumer preferences to select seeds. Simulation studies indicate the proposed strategy yields higher adoption rates than many existing strategies uniformly across seed set sizes.

Immigration Enforcement and Gender Gap in Inventor Productivity (K4, O3)

Fangfang Du
,
California State University-Fullerton
Yinghua Li
,
Arizona State University
Jessie Jiaxu Wang
,
Federal Reserve Board and Arizona State University

Abstract

Exploiting the staggered rollout of the Security Communities (SC) program, we examine the impact of immigration enforcement on the gender gap in inventor productivity. Immigration enforcement, by reducing the labor supply of low-skill immigrants in household services, could disproportionally affect the labor supply and time use of female inventors, and thus widen the gender gap in inventor productivity. Combining the county-level rollout dates of the SC program with inventor-level patent data, we implement a difference-in-difference approach and find that the immigration enforcement is associated with significant declines in both innovation quantity and innovation quality of female inventors. Our results are weaker among male inventors and female inventors employed by female-friendly firms, but are particularly pronounced for female inventors who possibly have small children. An analysis exploiting undocumented labor supply as an instrumental variable (IV) suggests that the documented SCP effect is likely causal. Our results shed important light on both the externality of immigration enforcement policies and the drivers of the gender gap in the productivity of skilled workers.

Incentivizing Demand Response using Auctions: Evidence from Steel Producers in Taiwan (L2, Q4)

Chia-Wen Chen
,
Academia Sinica
Jian-Da Zhu
,
Fu Jen Catholic University

Abstract

This paper examines the effects of incentivizing industrial users to reduce their electricity consumption using demand response auctions, in which the opportunity costs of electricity consumption depend on auction outcomes. Using data on bids, auction outcomes, and hourly electricity consumption from steel producers in Taiwan, this paper shows that failing to consider firms' strategic bidding behavior can lead to an overestimation of electricity reduction by at least 50%. We show that the overestimation works mainly through an adverse selection effect, in which firms bid low to win auctions when they anticipate low electricity consumption.

Increasing Returns to Scale and Markups (D2, L1)

Olga Shanks
,
George Mason University

Abstract

I estimate the aggregate and industry-specific elasticities of scale and markups for the U.S. economy over the period from the 1980s to 2019 using data on publicly traded companies. I apply Olley-Pakes and Ackerberg-Caves-Frazer estimation methods and find that the aggregate elasticity of scale for the U.S. economy is 1.1 and has been rising. The elasticity of scale in turn serves as an input for calculating industry markups. Increasing returns to scale help explain observed increases in markups over the last decades for broad sectors of the economy. My estimate of 1.2 for the aggregate markup is significantly lower than the estimate of 1.6 found in recent literature. The large disparity in markup estimates stems from differences in the treatment of fixed and variable costs and the methodological approach to the calculation of markups.

India's Road to Prosperity: Reforms Agenda for Sustainable and Inclusive Development (O1, O5)

Debesh Roy
,
Inspire
Bijetri Roy
,
Inspire

Abstract

India is the fastest growing large economy in the world. However, while the top 10 percent and 1 percent of the population hold 57 percent and 22 percent of national income, respectively, the share of the bottom 50 percent is only 13 percent. Nevertheless, India has the potential to create 600 million new jobs and increase per capita income sixfold, while significantly reducing inequality by 2047. Drawing extensively on existing literature and data sources, the paper proposes six major policy reforms, which could enable India to attain a GDP of $25 trillion and per capita income of $13,000 by 2047, while also achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). First, India can attain energy security and achieve net-zero emissions by 2070, by an aggressive push for renewable power generation and energy efficiency, through concerted research and development efforts. Second, there is a need for comprehensive policy reforms and enormous amount of investment across sectors and regions of the country for creating world class infrastructure, to significantly raise productivity, efficiency and growth across sectors. Third, harnessing opportunities in Fourth Industrial Revolution would require concerted actions to channelize India’s strength in digital technologies to develop smart manufacturing, and transform the country into a global manufacturing and e-commerce hub. Fourth, it is imperative for India to adopt an export-led development strategy, to take advantage of the China Plus One strategy adopted by global businesses. Fifth, for the Indian economy to grow at 7-8 percent consistently for the next 25 years, it is pertinent that the agriculture sector grows annually at 5 percent, through comprehensive reforms and a technology-driven agriculture-value chains, to make the sector globally competitive, while significantly raising income of farmers. Finally, an inclusive growth and reforms agenda should promote nutrition, education, health and gender equality.

Inflation Anchoring and Markets’ Perception about the ECB’s Aggressiveness toward Inflation (E5, E4)

Vincenzo Cuciniello
,
Bank of Italy

Abstract

This study examines the role of perceived monetary policy aggressiveness in anchoring inflation expectations and proposes a methodology to estimate its impact on inflation pass-through in the euro area. I use market data reactions to inflation flash releases since 2013 to determine the expected increase in key rates per unit of expected inflation. Positive inflation surprises during flash release dates increase the perceived monetary policy aggressiveness and lead to expectations of higher policy rates. I find that financial markets have perceived an increase in monetary aggressiveness against inflation since the beginning of 2022, which has halved the positive estimated pass-through of short to medium-to-long-term inflation expectations, indicating well-anchored inflation expectations. However, higher perceived monetary policy aggressiveness can reduce inflation expectation pass-through levels further and even turn it into negative values, making it crucial to monitor perceived monetary policy aggressiveness to avoid overestimating the risk of de-anchoring and ensure appropriate monetary policy decisions and communication.

Inflation Literacy, Inflation Expectations, and Trust in the Central Bank: A Survey Experiment (E5, E3)

Lena Draeger
,
Leibniz University Hannover and CESifo
Giang Nghiem
,
Leibniz University Hannover

Abstract

This paper studies the causal effect of inflation literacy on inflation expectations using a randomized control trial (RCT) on a representative sample of the German population. We find that general and non-numerical information about inflation and monetary policy improves respondents' inflation literacy and their trust in the central bank relative to the control group. It also causes a higher likelihood that respondents provide inflation predictions, but does not affect the quantitative levels of the predictions. In the second step, respondents are randomly provided with different quantitative information treatments about inflation. Those who received the initial literacy treatment do not react differently to the quantitative information in terms of the level of their inflation forecasts, but they react more strongly to some treatments regarding their reported forecast uncertainty and trust in the central bank. This suggests that general knowledge about inflation and monetary policy is relevant for inflation expectations via indirect factors such as uncertainty and trust.

Institutional Origin of Market Power in Modern World (L1, R3)

Joy Das
,
Cornell University

Abstract

This study has twofold purposes: first, to propose a trade general equilibrium model in which the institution is modeled within the framework of international market concentration, and second, to empirically test our theoretical findings on the optimizing integration strategies by firms given the institution of a country.
The study delves into the scope to which the institutional quality of a country affects the bilateral industry-level trade flows of manufacturing goods and services. Based on the interactive general equilibrium trade model of country-specific and industry-specific institutionally intensive variables, including the traditional control variables in bilateral trade, we analyze the six-digit NAICS classified industry-level bilateral trade flows from 220 countries and 389 industries for the year 1997. Corresponding to the Dixit-Stiglitz differentiated product solution, the theoretical portion of the study confirms that the new differentiated product solution is also a functional form of the institution.
The causal relationship is established by addressing the econometric challenges and endogeneity problems first with the Ordinary Least Squares (OLS) method of estimation and then with the Tobit model and Poisson Pseudo Maximum Likelihood (PPML) method of estimation with several robustness checks. Results indicate that countries with stronger institutions shift industries from highly concentrated markets with lower trade shares to lower concentrated markets with higher trade shares. Moreover, the institutions of the exporting countries are causal factors that manipulate the market structures for bilateral trade. This outcome is robust across industries that are non-agricultural manufacturing rather than agricultural manufacturing within the manufacturing sector and across all the quartiles of the volumes of bilateral trade flows. The results are also robust across model selection and other robustness checks within the model specification, including established control variables standard in prior studies on the influence of institutions on trade patterns.

International Monetary Policy Transmission, Risk Spillovers and the UIP Deviation of Emerging Economies (F3, E4)

Jingting Liu
,
National University of Singapore
Joseph D. Alba
,
Nanyang Technological University
Wai Mun Chia
,
Nanyang Technological University

Abstract

This paper studies the transmission mechanism of US monetary and global financial risk spillover into emerging economies using panel VAR. It finds that one standard deviation increase in the US interest rate reduces output and investment in emerging economies by 0.1% and 1%. These variables drop by 0.5% and 1.8% following a global financial risk (proxied by CBOE Volatility Index, or VIX) shock. The paper provides evidence that global financial risk spillover and US monetary shock transmission into emerging economies occur partly through the movement in UIP deviation. In terms of US monetary spillover, an increase in the US interest rate reduces the UIP deviation of emerging countries on impact because emerging countries’ domestic interest rate responds by less than the US rate. This initial more muted increase in emerging countries’ interest rate is due to an initial drop in the VIX response. In other words, global financial risk proxied by VIX does not increase immediately following contractionary US monetary shocks. Over time, however, the VIX picks up and emerging countries enter a risk-off phase in which credit inflows drop and UIP deviation increases in emerging economies. This mechanism can explain Engel’s predictability reversal puzzle as it creates a positive correlation between UIP deviation and the initial period interest rate differential between the emerging country and the US in the short term while in the longer term, this correlation reverses sign.

Intervening against the Fed (E4, F3)

Naoki Yago
,
University of Cambridge
Alexander Rodnyansky
,
University of Cambridge
Yannick Timmer
,
Federal Reserve Board

Abstract

By identifying unexpected foreign exchange intervention (FXI) through deviations from estimated FXI rules, we study the interaction between US monetary policy surprises and FXI for exchange rates and stock prices across firms. We find that, without intervention, an unexpected Fed funds rate hike depreciates local currencies and decreases the stock price of firms, especially those whose debt is disproportionately denominated in US Dollars, consistent with the Global Financial Cycle literature. However, if central banks counteract by selling the US Dollar, the US monetary shock has a limited effect on the exchange rate and stock prices even for firms with US Dollar debt. These results suggest that FXI is a successful tool in muting the impact of the Global Financial Cycle.

Is This Recession Different for the Housing Market? (R2, R3)

Azhar Iqbal
,
Wells Fargo
Sam Bullard
,
Wells Fargo
Nicole Cervi
,
Wells Fargo

Abstract

Our study analyzes home price indices (HPIs) across different markets to determine which markets depict a leading or lagging behavior overtime. Furthermore, 20 MSAs’ HPIs are characterized by the business cycle to examine which MSA’s HPI shows a consistent behavior overtime. Our work helps decision makers closely watch activities in the leading markets to gauge and the path of the national housing market.
The pandemic accelerated shifts in the housing market, such as sharp outmigration from urban areas to suburban areas, as many individuals sought more living space. The national HPI enjoyed double-digit growth during most of the 2021-2022 period. However, decades-high inflation and the rapid pace of monetary policy tightening are key drivers of the recent HPI bust.
Our statistical analysis does confirm a structural break in some regional HPIs. That is, some historically leading markets, such as New York City and San Francisco, lost their leading status in the post-pandemic era. On the other hand, Miami’s label as a leading market remains intact. Our business cycle analysis suggests that the anticipated recession will paint a different housing recovery picture than those of the past 4 cycles. A pandemic-related structural break and higher inflation are potential drivers of the difference. Assuming regulators will be able to contain the current banking crisis, tighter credit conditions are headwinds for the housing market in the foreseeable future.
Our framework is forward looking, as decision makers can update it using recent data or their forecast to gauge the current and near-term outlook of the housing market. In our view, identifying leading regional housing markets is critical for decision makers. That is, the extent to which conditions overheat or slowdown in these leading markets may provide important clues about how much home prices will overshoot or bust nationally.

Knowledge Path Dependence, External Connection, and Radical Inventions: Evidence from Chinese Academy of Sciences (O3, P2)

Ningning Zhang
,
University of Chinese Academy of Sciences
Dingyi You
,
Chinese Academy of Sciences
Le Tang
,
Suffolk University
Ke Wen
,
University of Chinese Academy of Sciences

Abstract

Public research institutes (PRIs) have played an increasingly prominent role in leading radical inventions, which are considered as a major source of long-term economic growth. However, there is little empirical evidence on the factors affecting radical inventions in PRIs, which have been at the forefront of scientific research and technological development. This study fills this gap by providing an empirical analysis of radical inventions at the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), a conglomerate of PRIs in China. Based on a newly compiled data set on CAS patents, we identify radical invention applications, and construct measures on knowledge path dependence and external network connection. Further, we explore the effects of knowledge path dependence, external network connections, and their interactions on radical inventions in PRIs. Our empirical findings reveal that knowledge path dependence negatively affects radical inventions; there is an inverse U-shaped relationship between external network connections and radical inventions, and weak external connections can alleviate the hindrance originating from knowledge path dependence, thus prompting radical inventions.

Labor Income Targeting (E5)

Aryaman Bhatnagar
,
University of Kansas

Abstract

In this paper, we examine a new monetary policy rule: Labor Income Targeting (LIT). First, we evaluate the performance of this rule in a small New Keynesian model by comparing it with the Taylor Rule (TR), Inflation Targeting (IT), Nominal GDP Targeting (NGDPT), and Output Gap Targeting (GT). We find that LIT is the second-best rule after output gap targeting. In contrast to gap targeting however, LIT does not suffer from determinacy issues and does not rely upon unobservable variables, thus making it a desirable policy rule. These results are robust to changes in parameter values. Next, we estimate a medium scale model using Bayesian techniques for the US economy and compare the performance of labor income targeting with the estimated Taylor rule. We find that LIT works better in the full sample as well in all the sub samples by generating lower variance for output gap, price inflation and wage inflation. Our findings suggest that labor income targeting possesses desirable properties and could be a viable monetary policy alternative.

Labor Market Implications and Perceptions of Basic Income in Light of COVID-19 Pandemic Relief Programs (I3, D6)

Annabella España-Najera
,
California State University Fresno
Kevin Capehart
,
California State University Fresno
David Rene Vera
,
CALIFORNIA STATE UNIV-FRESNO

Abstract

This study utilizes survey data from a large California survey (CALSPEAKS) to examine the impacts of Covid-19 relief programs and Universal Basic Income (UBI) on labor market decisions. The survey asked respondents about their work status before and after the pandemic, their satisfaction with their work, and the types of pandemic-related benefits they received. In addition, the study includes two experimental treatments related to UBI, where respondents are randomly assigned to either a control group or one of two treatment groups.
In the first experiment, the first treatment group asks respondents about their support for UBI if social support programs such as unemployment benefits and child tax credits are cut to fund it. The second treatment group asks respondents about their support for UBI if additional taxes are raised to fund it. Results suggest that there is greater public support for UBI when it is emphasized that the Federal and California Governments will raise additional revenue through taxes to fund it, as compared to a control group that received neutral information on UBI funding and an alternative treatment group that highlighted cutting spending on existing social support programs.
We also include a second experiment to examine how UBI affects labor market decisions on time use and labor market engagement. Our findings indicate that respondents allocate more time to Volunteering when it is specified that either UBI would cover the vast majority or half of their current living expenses, compared to the Control group. These findings have important implications for policymakers considering UBI as a policy response to future economic shocks.

Lebanese Diaspora and Economic Development: New Survey-Based Analysis (O5, F6)

Aleksandr V. Gevorkyan
,
St. John's University
Samar Issa
,
Saint Peter's University

Abstract

This paper relies on original Lebanese Diaspora Online Survey to advance a comprehensive diaspora for economic development conceptual framework in emerging markets. The survey informs on diaspora’s demographic trends, home-country economic and financial attachments, as well as perceptions during the periods of economic growth and crisis in Lebanon’s recent history. Empirically, the paper investigates how the magnitude of diaspora’s development involvement and financial assistance are related to demographic characteristics and perceptions of Lebanese expatriates as well as to any country specific and global institutional factors. Methodologically, the econometric analysis employed cluster and factor analysis of the survey data. The results show that financial involvement is positively related to a diaspora member’s income, connection with Lebanon, and age. We also conjecture that education level has a marginal positive effect on monetary donations but has strong effect on non-monetary relationship with the country. The results also suggest that other demographic information (accounting for Lebanon’s diverse religious and cultural background) matters. The consequences of the 2019 crisis (mildly or severely) do not seem to influence financial involvement, pointing instead to more structural determinants and role of personal informal networks. Given the current social and economic crisis in Lebanon, this paper attempts to explore opportunities for the Lebanese diaspora’s systemic contributions to the country’s sustainable economic development. A successful integration of the diaspora’s overall potential may help develop an effective policy response in the short term and develop institutional stability in the future. As such, this paper contributes to the literature on diaspora and economic development across emerging markets.

Lighthouse in the Dark: Search in Marketplace Lending (L0, G5)

Shasha Li
,
Halle Institute for Economic Research

Abstract

Technology has brought numerous unsophisticated individuals to marketplaces. This paper sheds light on search frictions in a two-sided online personal loan market. Empirical evidence reveals that borrowers encounter a concave demand curve in this market. However, due to limited knowledge, borrowers fail to propose optimal interest rates near average. Exploiting the staggered introduction of private lending registration service centers (PLcenters) in Chinese cities, I demonstrate the role of public information services in mitigating frictions and improving market outcomes. These PLcenters aim to disseminate financial knowledge and enhance transparency. Using staggered difference-in-differences (DID) analysis, I find PLcenters effectively boost marketplace lending and increase match rates. Remarkably, PLcenters help borrowers, especially those less sophisticated, propose better interest rates, leading to lower costs and reduced interest rate dispersion. In addition, I present a directed search model to explain economic mechanisms and provide welfare implications.

Local Marriage Markets and Assortative Mating (J0, A1)

Congying Yuan
,
Stanford University

Abstract

A primary focus of empirical studies on assortative mating is to isolate it from the shifting marginal distribution of each gender's type. This is typically executed at the national level, which may lead to upward bias under geographic sorting. This paper studies assortative mating by taking into account the substantial spacial difference across local marriage markets. Using various measures, we first quantify local assortativeness from 1980 to 2010 for 217 MSAs. Although matching in all MSAs are ubiquitously assortative, there is significant heterogeneity cross-sectionally and over time. These local measures are then aggregated to track the national trend of assortative mating, controlling for the local distributions. Exploiting variations of local marriage markets, we find MSAs tend to have higher assortativeness with higher inequality, smaller gender wage gap, and higher skill premium.

Lockdown Effects on Rural-Urban Educational Disparities for Students: Evidence from Four-Wave Surveys in China (I0, H0)

Tianyang Liu
,
China Agricultural University and Stanford University
Lingran Yuan
,
Zhejiang University and Stanford University
Baozhong Su
,
China Agricultural University

Abstract

The growing disparities among school-aged children arising from the obligatory stay-at-home period has attracted considerable scholarly attention. While prior research has examined the impact of school breaks, few studies have focused on the effect during the academic semester with a valid identification strategy. With the sudden shock of COVID-19, this paper examines the immediate effects of the Chinese government's lockdown policies on the disparities in development between urban and rural children during their formative years. Using a nationwide dataset of 7392 children from 2014 to 2020, we show that the lockdown measures implemented in response to COVID-19 have exacerbated the pre-existing gap in intellectual and psychological development between urban and rural children. Compared to the unaffected counterparts, children who experienced lockdown exhibited a 3.2% wider intelligence gap and a 1.5% wider mental health gap within the first six months of the outbreak of the COVID-19. These findings are robust for various model settings including using the number of locally confirmed cases of COVID-19 as an instrumental variable. The observed potential mechanisms are that the gap in family endowments and access to learning resources explains the disparities in intellectual development, while the negative impact brought by unemployment pressure outweighs the positive effect of parental companionship on children. Further analysis revealed that rural children whose parents engaged in long-distance migrant work prior to the COVID-19 exhibited better development outcomes than those from families with short-distance migrant parents.

Making Use of the Wisdom of Crowds: Stuck in the Majority Rule (D8, C9)

Yunwen He
,
Tsinghua University
Jaimie Lien
,
Shandong University
Jie Zheng
,
Shandong University

Abstract

When does the "wisdom of crowds" help cultivate factual information and when is it harmful? In a laboratory experiment, we ask subjects to answer 50 True/ False questions, with the opportunity to revise their answers after receiving different levels of information about other subjects' answers, incentivized confidence levels and higher order beliefs. We verify that in the True/False setting, the "wisdom of crowds" is most beneficial for easy questions and for less knowledgeable subjects, while performance on difficult questions is harmed by it. Based on treatments of varying information provision levels, we find that subjects in the Moderate-Information treatment outperform those in either the Low-Information or Full-Information treatments, indicating an intermediate optimal level of social information for decision-making. We then examine three commonly discussed decision-heuristics in the context of our True/False task: the simple Majority Rule (majority of others' choice), the Maximum Confidence rule (others' incentivized self-confidence levels), and the Surprising Popularity rule (relative popularity compared to the expected popularity). Although in the context of our True/False task, the Maximum Confidence rule yields the best performance, subjects tend to neglect the information about other decision-makers' confidence levels, instead opting to rely heavily on Majority Rule. Our findings also indicate that decision-makers more generally have difficulty making use of higher-order information about others' choices and beliefs. Our study documents the tendency to over-rely on majority opinion and suggests a possibility that confidence-weighted rating systems can potentially offer improvements when trying to cultivate factual knowledge.

Managing Financial Flexibility: Firm-Level Political Risk & Capital Structure Dynamics (G3)

Ivan F. Julio
,
Boston University
Alex P. Becker
,
Boston University
Jing Wen
,
Boston University

Abstract

Higher firm-level political risk leads to a greater speed of adjustment toward a target leverage ratio. First, we show that a firm that faces its highest-ever political risk adjusts about 27% faster than a firm without political risk. When distinguishing between over- and underleveraged firms, the former increases their adjustment speed due to higher political risk. Further, big and small firms are both impacted by political risk. Second, we show that firms exposed to higher political risk retrench hiring and investment while actively lobbying and donating to politicians to mitigate the impact of political risk, an endeavor mostly undertaken by big firms. In a related exercise, we examine the role that corporate lobbying by the firm's institutional investors play in cushioning the impact of political risk. Fourth, we study how the firm-level political risk suffered by the the bank is transmitted to the borrower-level by affecting their adjustment to optimal capital structures. Lastly, we use congressional redistricting to uncover plausibly exogenous variation in firm-level political risk.

Mandatory Pension Saving and Homeownership (G5, E2)

Marcel Fischer
,
Copenhagen Business School and University of Konstanz
Bjarne Astrup Jensen
,
Copenhagen Business School
Marlene Koch
,
University of Konstanz

Abstract

We explore the implications of mandatory minimum contributions to tax-deferred retirement accounts over the life cycle. These contributions defer housing market entry and increase loan-to-value ratios. We propose a flexible retirement saving scheme that does not force individuals to build up savings in a tax-deferred retirement account and only requires them to save in either a taxable account, a tax-deferred retirement account, or through home equity if they are undersaving. This flexible retirement saving scheme largely alleviates the unintended side effects of mandatory minimum contributions and simultaneously ensures that individuals build up sufficient savings for retirement.

Measuring Present Bias in Choices over Food and Money: Evidence from a Framed Field Experiment (D9, C9)

Helen Zeidler
,
Catholic University Eichstaett-Ingolstadt
Alexander Danzer
,
Catholic University Eichstaett-Ingolstadt

Abstract

In this paper we take the experimental literature on dynamic inconsistencies in time preferences one step further and provide a test of dynamically inconsistent behavior for a continuous convex non-monetary budget in an entirely natural environment: food consumption decisions in a real canteen set-up. Our framed field experiment features over 3,600 different real consumption choices out of 213,525 different possible combinations (merely focusing on three-item lunch menus). Compared to earlier studies, we not only allow for a full continuum of healthy or unhealthy foods without choice restrictions; we also explicitly design the consumption stage to comply with the consume-on-receipt assumption which has often been disregarded in the existing literature. The paper also sheds light on consumers‘ tendency to utilize different types of control devices to commit to personal consumption plans. In a second step, we compare inconsistent behavior between convex food and convex money choices to investigate the applicability of monetary reward studies to natural behavior.
Utility estimates from food choices suggest that dynamically consistent individuals substitute internal self-control with commitment take-up. These subjects seem to be control-enforcing: They apply an internal self-control strategy before the commitment is offered and choose the external commitment device as soon as it becomes available. The behavioral pattern is consistent with a mental accounting strategy to meet self-imposed dietary goals. Non-committing individuals tend to be dynamically inconsistent and naive about their inconsistency: This group displays repeated present-biased behavior over single food categories. This result suggests a negative relation between self-control problems and beliefs thereof.
Second, we compare within-individual choices from the food and money task at the individual level. We find no significant correlation between time parameters in food vs. money tasks. We further find that the distribution of the food inconsistency measure is more dispersed than the distribution of the money inconsistency measure.

Megaprojects, Digital Platforms, and Research Productivity: Evidence from the Human Brain Project (O3, I1)

Lucy Xiaolu Wang
,
University of Massachusetts-Amherst; Max Planck Institute for Innovation and Competition and CCHE
Ann-Christin Kreyer
,
Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich and Max Planck Institute for Innovation and Competition

Abstract

Neurological diseases are one of the leading causes of death globally. The economic costs of dementia were estimated to be €800 billion in Europe in 2010 and $1.5 trillion in the US in 2013. Meanwhile, artificial intelligence (AI) is found to speed up pre-clinical drug discovery. Given the decline in productivity in biomedical science and increasing challenges to reach the frontier of knowledge, creating non-market incentives to accelerate collaboration and pushing the frontiers are particularly important.

To enhance brain science with AI, the Human Brain Project (HBP) was launched in 2013 as a ten-year, €1 billion flagship initiative in the European Commission's Future and Emerging Technologies program. The HBP seeks to build cutting-edge information technology infrastructure to advance brain science with high-power computing and to facilitate collaborations between scientific and industrial researchers. Specifically, the HBP builds super-computer-powered online research platforms, provides funding for partnership institutions, and offers educational training and an online discussion forum. The HBP is one of the largest brain research projects in the world.

How does the HBP influence the rate and direction of R&D in brain science? How does the resource allocation between digital infrastructure and grant matter for different types of research? To investigate these questions, we construct a new dataset that tracks the set of individuals involved in the HBP, the timing of grants and infrastructure access, and research output (publications, datasets, and software). We exploit plausible exogenous variation based on the staged nature of the HBP, institutional details, and sudden revamp in the evolution of the HBP. We use new methods in the difference-in-difference (DiD) literature, including staggered DiD and synthetic DiD. Preliminary results show that HBP increases productivity, mainly through platform access rather than grant allocation, and the effects are heterogeneity across seniority and the level of multidisciplinarity of the focal work.

Micro-Foundations of Macroeconomics: Labour Share of Income in Chinese Listed Firms (E2, J3)

Zehua Jiang
,
Queen Mary University of London

Abstract

This paper studies labour share of income in Chinese listed firms. I present an increasing trend of labour share from 1998-2021 using CSMAR data for public firms listed in China, which is a reversed result compared with the documented decreasing trend in developed economies. During the same period, market concentration decreased in major sectors. The empirical evidence therefore supports the superstar model in which falling concentration correlates with rising labour shares. I also test the role of technology in determining labour share and find higher intangible assets growth leads to lower labour share, and the result is robust to an instrument variable approach. This paper contributes to the rich literature in labour share, which is currently still limited in developing or transitional economies.

Monetary Policy and Inequality: the Role of Hand-to-Mouth Households and Imperfect Insurance (E5, E1)

Luzie Thiel
,
University of Kassel

Abstract

We study the transmission of monetary policy in the presence of heterogeneous households and examine the implications when the share of constrained households is a function of monetary policy. We build an analytically tractable heterogeneous agent New Keynesian (THANK) model with an endogenous share of hand-to-mouth households. This paper combines the THANK model of Bilbiie (2020) with an endogenous Markov switching process to capture the link between monetary policy shaping the tightness of financial conditions and the share of households living hand-to-mouth. Higher interest rates increase the tightness of financial conditions making it harder for saver households to stay unconstrained. Contractionary interest rate shocks increase income inequality and the number of households in financial distress. The transmission of monetary policy on aggregate demand is amplified in this setup by inequality between saver and hand-to-mouth households. The amplification effect depends on monopolistic rents (enhancing) and redistribution (mitigating). Additionally, we show that the implementation of an endogenous share of constrained households is neutral for the transmission of monetary policy in case of a THANK framework with steady state equality. Unlike most THANK models, we refrain from the assumption of a full insurance steady state and implement steady state inequality.

Natural Disasters and Creative Destruction: Evidence from Indonesian Firms (O4, Q5)

Marina Dodlova
,
University of Passau
Anna Kochanova
,
Cardiff University
Krisztina Kis-Katos
,
University of Geottingen

Abstract

This paper assesses the impact of earthquakes on firm performance in Indonesia. Indonesia provides a great laboratory to analyse the impact of natural disasters due to its geographical location along the Pacific Ring of Fire. Relying on yearly balance sheet data from a census of manufacturing medium- to large-scale firms over 16 years, we show the presence of “creative destruction” in the aftermath of earthquakes, leading to market exit for the least productive and smaller firms and improving firm productivity among the remaining firms. We investigate heterogeneous responses to shocks to highlight the channels of such “creative destruction”. We distinguish between firm types by size, ownership, and capital intensity. In addition, we investigate the dynamics of market structure and competition caused by disaster shocks. Finally, we explore the role of political mechanisms – political connections of firms and electoral business cycles – for explaining the improvements in firm productivity.
The identification in our empirical analysis comes from within-firm variation of outcomes before and in the aftermath of earthquakes in districts with various incidence and intensity of disaster events. While the likelihood to suffer from a natural disaster is not random, the exact timing of a disaster is exogenous. Our main estimation strategy is the event-study difference-in-difference approach that deliver consistent and robust estimates when the treatment varies over time (Borusyak et al., 2021, de Chaisemartin and D'Haultfoeuille, 2020). This enables to study the parallel trend assumption and to observe the evolution of the effects.
The results of this paper contribute to understanding of firm performance in the aftermath of natural disasters in a developing country context, which can help to shape recovery and adaptation policies.

Natural Disasters and Real Estate Prices in Hawaii (R3, Q5)

Sadichchha Shrestha
,
University of Hawaii-Manoa
Peter Fuleky
,
University of Hawaii-Manoa
Nori Tarui
,
University of Hawaii-Manoa
Makena Coffman
,
University of Hawaii-Manoa
Victoria Keener
,
East West Center

Abstract

We employ a hedonic price model to examine the impact of floods on real estate prices in Hawaii using FEMA’s flood insurance claims data and Black Knight’s property-level transaction data from 1994-2022. Our unique real-estate data provides the tax map key of each property which allows us to determine the distance of the property from the nearest coastline point, its elevation and the flood-zone location.
Using FEMA’s data, we compute the total amount paid on claims at the census-tract level for each flood event. We focus on flood events that lie above the 80th percentile in the distribution of total claims paid, resulting in 31 flood events. The impact of floods on real estate prices is identified using temporal and spatial variation of treatment. The results suggest a negative effect of floods on real estate prices.
We make three contributions to the literature. First, this is the first study that exploits FEMA’s data to define flood events at the census tract level. This is important because Hawaii’s weather is very localized, and thus the distribution of claims across census tracts could be heterogeneous. Second, in contrast to previous studies that focus on selected US counties and floods, we examine the effects of multiple flood events across all census tracts in Hawaii. Third, this is the first study to analyze the impact of flooding on real estate prices in Hawaii, a unique location since most of the state’s population resides in coastal areas.

News Shocks and Sudden Stops (E3, F4)

Jin Lau
,
Rutgers University

Abstract

Motivated by news of a positive future outlook before Sudden Stop episodes, this paper investigates
the impact of news shocks. Today’s positive news shock about TFP likely being high
tomorrow leads to more borrowing to finance additional consumption and capital investment.
Borrowing based on a current value collateral constraint incorporating the price of capital generates
a pecuniary externality, which the social planner internalizes. The results show that news
shocks cause financial instability with a higher Sudden Stops probability for current or future
value collateral specification. During normal times, false positive news, where tomorrow’s
higher TFP is not realized, increases the likelihood of a future binding constraint. Although,
positive news in bad times aids in faster recovery. The optimal policy that decentralizes the
planner’s allocation is a tax on capital in normal times and a subsidy on capital in bad times.
Finally, news shocks provide greater emphasis for policy intervention.

Not All Energy Transitions Are Alike: Disentangling the Effects of Demand- and Supply-Side Climate Policies on Future Oil Prices (Q4, C5)

Lukas Boer
,
International Monetary Fund
Martin Stuermer
,
International Monetary Fund
Andrea Pescatori
,
International Monetary Fund

Abstract

We use structural scenario analysis to show that the climate policy mix---supply-side versus demand-side policies---leads to different oil price paths in a net-zero emissions scenario. If emission reductions were only driven by demand-side climate policies, oil prices would decline to 25 USD per barrel by 2030, benefiting consuming countries. Vice versa, if there were only supply-side climate policies to curb oil production, prices would increase to 130 USD per barrel, benefiting countries that keep on producing. As policies are formulated at the country level and hard to predict, the transition raises uncertainty about the price outlook.

On Robustness of Average Inflation Targeting (E5, E3)

Nigel McClung
,
Bank of Finland
Seppo Honkapohja
,
Aalto University

Abstract

This paper considers average inflation targeting (AIT) policy in a New Keynesian model with adaptive learning agents. Our analysis raises concerns regarding robustness of AIT when agents have imperfect knowledge. In particular, the target steady state may not be robustly stable under learning if the length of the averaging window is not public knowledge. Near the low steady state with interest rates at the zero lower bound, AIT does not necessarily outperform standard inflation targeting policy. Policymakers can improve outcomes under AIT by communicating the averaging window, or using an asymmetric rule that responds more aggressively to below-target average inflation.

On the Distributional Effects of Conventional Monetary Policy and Forward Guidance (E5, E2)

Pascal Meichtry
,
Banque de France
Giacomo Mangiante
,
University of Lausanne

Abstract

This paper compares the distributional effects of conventional monetary policy and forward guidance. Adopting a structural VAR model, we first estimate the impact of both policies on the macroeconomy and on consumption inequality in the United States. We find similar responses of aggregate real and financial variables. In contrast, consumption inequality is countercyclical after a monetary policy shock, but responds procyclically to forward guidance, due to the diverse reactions of households at the top and bottom of the consumption distribution. We build a New Keynesian model with household heterogeneity to rationalize these differences. Motivated by the empirical evidence, we highlight the government’s response via a fiscal transfer scheme that reacts to changes in the debt burden and to cyclical variations. A fiscal adjustment differing in timing and magnitude leads to a relatively larger decline in consumption among financially constrained agents under conventional monetary policy, but a smaller decline under forward guidance. Our findings emphasize the importance of considering the negative second-order effects that different central bank tools might entail and the crucial role of fiscal adjustments in mitigating these effects.

Ownership Chains in Multinational Enterprises (F2, L2)

Stefania Miricola
,
IMT School for Advanced Studies
Armando Rungi
,
IMT School for Advanced Studies
Gianluca Santoni
,
CEPII

Abstract

This contribution investigates the role of complex ownership structures developed by multinational enterprises across national borders. First, we document that multinational enterprises control a majority (58%) of foreign subsidiaries through indirect control relationships involving at least two countries along an ownership chain. Therefore, we hypothesize that locations along ownership chains are driven by the existence of communication costs to transmit management decisions. In line with motivating evidence, we develop a theoretical model for competition on corporate control that considers the possibility that parent companies in the origin countries can delegate their monitoring activities to middlemen subsidiaries that are located in intermediate jurisdictions. Our model returns us a system of simultaneous gravity equations: i) a triangular gravity for establishing a middleman by the parent, conditional on final investments' locations; ii) a classical gravity for the location of final investments. Structural estimates confirm the predictions that ease of communication at the country level shapes the heterogeneous organization of subsidiaries along global ownership chains.

Participatory Persuasion (P0, P5)

Yufeng Sun
,
Shanghai university of Finance and Economics
Liuchun Deng
,
Yale-NUS College

Abstract

In recent years, participatory persuasion becomes increasingly popular among informational autocracies. Different from traditional forms of information manipulation such as speech control and propaganda, participatory persuasion takes the form of (limited) communication among the citizens: in particular, individuals who benefit from the public policies of authoritarian states persuade the individuals who suffer losses to restore their confidence in the authoritarian regime. Because participatory persuasion requires the state to grant a certain degree of freedom of communication between the citizens, and thus the citizens may also gain more insights about the true state of the economy, the authoritarian state is faced with a tradeoff between the informational gains through participatory persuasion and the risk of revealing too much information. This paper develops an overlapping-generation model with Bayesian persuasion to formalize this tradeoff. We characterize how the state designs its optimal participatory persuasion scheme in a dynamic environment. In our analysis, we distinguish and compare two types of participatory persuasion: horizontal persuasion which takes place among the citizens of the same generation, and vertical persuasion, which takes place across different generations within a household. We discuss their implications on the long-term social welfare and offer various extensions.

Payment Technology, Entrepreneurship, and Racial Disparities: Evidence from Money Service Business (G3, O2)

Hieu Tran
,
University of Georgia

Abstract

I examine how the advancements in payment technology facilitated by money service businesses (MSBs) affect new business creations. Using the staggered introduction of Multistate Licensing Agreement among US states, my result shows that this agreement leads to exogenous increase in the number of MSBs in a state. Advancements in MSBs facilitates better customer access to small businesses, which lead to increase in small business creations. There is, however, a significant disparity in the number of small business growth in counties with above and below-median Black populations. Overall, my result suggests that entrepreneurs in communities with predominantly high Black population do not benefit from the advancements of payment technology as much as those in other communities.

Policies of Criminal Records in Frictional Labor Markets (E2, J7)

Shiyun Zhang
,
Aarhus University
Dingyu Li
,
Aarhus University

Abstract

About 40% of employers in the US would like access the criminal records of their employee and make hiring decisions according to their criminal records. To eliminate the difficulty of employment of ex-offenders, the “Ban-the-Box” (BTB) policy has been implemented in most US states since 2010. This paper studies the effects of the BTB policy on labor market outcomes, crime rates, and recidivism rates. We construct a model based on labor search and matching framework with workers’ criminal behaviour. Before the BTB policy is implemented, the labor market is segmented into two sub-markets for workers with and without criminal records. Firms that ask about criminal records in the application process exclude workers with criminal records, while firms that do not ask crime-related questions possibly match with both workers with and without criminal records. After the BTB implementation, these two sub-markets merge into one. No firms run background checks after the BTB policy is implemented at the steady state equilibrium. The BTB policy reduces the cost of committing crimes and it only benefits the unemployed ex offenders. Therefore, the overall crime rate and the recidivism rate increases after the BTB policy implementation. We also extend the model with criminal records that only remain for certain years as a policy alternative. This policy reduces the unemployment rate of workers without criminal records but raises the unemployment rate of ex-offenders and the crime rate. Ex offenders have fewer incentives to commit crimes and the recidivism rate declines because they may become “normal” by not committing crimes.

Political Consequences of Trade Liberalization: Evidence from India's Tariff Reforms (P4, F1)

Subrata Kumar Ritadhi
,
Ashoka University
Pavel Chakraborty
,
University of Lancaster
Abhay Aneja
,
University of California-Berkeley

Abstract

What are the political consequences of trade liberalization? We examine this question in the context of India's extensive but unanticipated tariff liberalization episode in 1991. Exploiting pre-liberalization employment patterns across regions, we construct regional exposure to tariff liberalization akin to Topalova (2010). Our empirical findings document a sizeable decline in the vote share of the centre-left Congress Party -- the federal ruling party associated with trade liberalization -- in regions with higher exposure to tariff reforms. The reduction in popular support to the Congress is driven by areas with low urbanization, low educational attainment, and higher concentration of marginalized populations. The decline of the Congress in these areas is matched by an increase in popular support to caste-based parties promising wider political representation and public redistribution to historically marginalized low caste groups. Examining mechanisms, we find that workers from low caste backgrounds had a significantly higher likelihood of being negatively affected by trade liberalization. In areas with higher exposure to tariff reforms, marginalized workers were less likely to be employed in salaried jobs, or in manufacturing and service occupations. The empirical findings are consistent with the explanation that trade liberalization disproportionately affected citizens with limited shock coping abilities, who in turn voted against the party associated with the reforms.

Pollution Abatement Investment under Financial Frictions and Policy Uncertainty (Q5, G3)

Min Fang
,
University of Florida
Po-Hsuan Hsu
,
National Tsing Hua University
Chi-Yang Tsou
,
University of Manchester

Abstract

This paper examines how financial frictions and policy uncertainty jointly influence firms' investments in pollution abatement. Our data analyses suggest that financially constrained firms are less likely to invest in pollution abatement and are more likely to release toxic pollutants, with this pattern intensified by policy uncertainty surrounding future environmental regulations, as measured by "close" gubernatorial elections or uncertainty revealed in firms' earnings conference calls. We then develop a general equilibrium model with heterogeneous firms, including both financially constrained and unconstrained firms, in which financially constrained firms face increased marginal costs of finance from pollution abatement. These costs are further amplified by policy uncertainty, reducing firms' incentives to prevent pollution. Therefore, the aggregate effect of environmental policies depends on the distribution of financial frictions and policy uncertainty.

Population Aging and Economic Growth: From Demographic Dividend to Demographic Drag? (O4, J1)

Rainer Kotschy
,
Harvard University
David E. Bloom
,
Harvard University

Abstract

This paper examines the extent to which changes in working-age shares associated with population aging will plausibly slow economic growth in upcoming years. The analysis proceeds in two steps. We first analyze the economic effects of changing working-age shares in a prototype empirical growth model in a country panel over 1950–2015. We then juxtapose the estimates with predicted shifts in population age structure to project growth over 2020–2050. Our results document a new stylized fact: A demographic drag will be the norm among countries whose working-age shares contract. Extending working ages with longevity can cushion a significant portion of this demographic drag.

Product Variety, Licensing and Vertical Integration in Two-Sided Market (L1, D4)

Zheyu Ni
,
Ohio State University

Abstract

The paper evaluates vertical integration in two-sided markets. Vertical integration can have anti-competitive effects driven by foreclosure and can have pro-competitive effects by eliminating double marginalization. In the two-sided market, vertical integration facilitates the expansion of product variety and the growth of the consumer base through indirect network effects. I show theoretically that the impact of vertical integration on consumer welfare highly depends on the consumer installed base which affects the indirect network effects. I develop a model of platform’s optimal pricing, third-party firms’ entry and pricing, consumer adoption and purchasing, and estimate using data on the single-serve coffee industry. Counterfactual simulations show that, in the absence of indirect network effects, the platform’s optimal decision would be setting a ten times higher licensing fee where foreclosure effects dominate. Accounting for the indirect network effect and firms’ entry, vertical integration increases consumer welfare by 0.14% due to increased product variety.

Productivity Cost of Distortions in China (O5, O4)

Xiaoyue Zhang
,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Junjie Xia
,
University of Finance and Economics and Peking University

Abstract

Predicted total factor productivity (TFP) gains in China from removing the distortions in the allocation of production factor under Hsieh and Klenow (2009)'s framework are, in theory, sensitive to the assumption that demand elasticity is 3 for all the firms and that Chinese firms have the same technology as American firms. However, there is little empirical evidence on how the predicted TFP gains would change if these assumptions are relaxed. Using the framework developed by Zhang and Xia (2023), we find that the average demand elasticity is around 8 with large dispersion and that American firms are more capital-intensive than Chinese firms. 20% of the TFP gains found by Hsieh and Klenow (2009) are caused by replacing the Chinese production technology with US technology instead of distortions. Allowing heterogeneous demand elasticities reduce the predicted gains by about 60 percentage points.

Protecting Private Property Rights under State Ownership: Evidence from Chinese Occupational Choice (K0, J0)

Linghui Han
,
George Mason University and Westmont College

Abstract

Monopoly is the de facto private property rights protection institution in the absence of a formal one. At the grassroots level, workers who choose to work in monopolistic industries share the monopoly rents. Using the Chinese data from 1992 to 2006, we find that high-skilled workers work for the state sector much less for wage differentials (even not at all for high-skilled managers) than the low-skilled workers but more for rent differentials which can be as high as 25.6 percent for high-skilled managers. Higher-skilled workers join the state sector for better positions with richer rents accessible and higher capacity in protecting them from being taken away.

Provider-Targeted Nudges and Primary Care Appointment Availability (I1, J1)

Brigham Walker
,
Tulane University
Janna Wisniewski
,
Tulane University
Sarah Tinkler
,
Portland State University
Wei-Cheng Tsai
,
Tulane University
Rajiv Sharma
,
Portland State University

Abstract

A nationally representative randomized field experiment was conducted to evaluate whether provider-targeted nudges can reduce discrimination in primary care appointments. Research assistants (RAs) made calls to randomly assigned primary care practices seeking an appointment. Nudges were mailed to providers across three Southern States noting that discrimination has been documented in their market. We collected data before and after the assigned nudge in all states. We then estimated a difference-in-differences model to evaluate the effectiveness of the nudges in reducing discrimination. After the intervention, Black simulated patients were offered appointments 17 percentage points more often (95% CI: 0.03 to 0.31, p=0.02); though, this came at a cost to White simulated patients who were offered 20 percentage points fewer appointments (95% CI: -0.32 to -0.08; p<0.01). These findings suggest that nudges may be effective in redistributing access towards disadvantaged groups.

Quantifying Financial Stability Trade-Offs for Monetary Policy (E5, E3)

Manfred Kremer
,
European Central Bank
Sulkhan Chavleishvili
,
Aarhus University
Frederik Ole Lund Thomsen
,
European Central Bank

Abstract

The global financial crisis has reopened the debate on how monetary policy should take financial stability considerations into account. Recent theoretical and empirical research suggests that central banks should reconsider their apparent reluctance to "lean" against credit and asset price booms to reduce the risks of a subsequent financial crisis and the associated high welfare costs. However, there have been few attempts in the literature to quantify the intertemporal costs and benefits of such countercyclical monetary policy in an integrated empirical model framework. Our paper proposes a novel empirical approach to inform monetary policymakers about the potential effects of alternative courses of policy action when facing trade-offs between financial and macroeconomic stability. The intertemporal costs and benefits are represented as projected paths of the conditional, potentially asymmetric distributions of inflation and economic growth, enabling us to take a risk management perspective (“balance of risks”) in the policy evaluation. Specifically, we estimate a quantile VAR with five endogenous variables: inflation and real GDP growth as target variables; a short-term interest rate as the policy instrument; and a composite measure of financial imbalances and asset price booms (systemic risk ex ante) and a financial stress index (systemic risk ex post) representing financial stability conditions. Including commodity prices as an exogenous variable allows modelling cost-push factors of inflation. Policy implications are derived from scenario analyses. The first exercise addresses the intertemporal credit-bites-back trade-off by running counterfactual simulations in the time context of the global financial crisis. We indeed find evidence supporting countercyclical monetary policy in both the upswing and the downswing. The second exercise considers what we call an intratemporal or short-run financial stability (financial stress)-inflation-growth trade-off that central banks are currently facing when deciding on the appropriate speed of monetary policy tightening to combat inflationary pressures (“front-loading versus gradualism”).

Quantitative Effects of Trade Shocks Under Global Supply Chains (F1, F4)

Shihangyin Zhang
,
Capital One

Abstract

This paper studies the role of supply chain reallocations in the transmission of trade shocks across countries and sectors. When producers have the flexibility to switch their input sources, they can exploit cost advantages from their upstream suppliers. This feature results in larger supply chain adjustments in response to trade policy changes. Based on an augmented multi-country and multi-sector global sourcing framework, this paper conducts two counterfactual analyses to study the policy implications on trade flows and welfare. First, in a scenario when both the US and China increase import tariffs by 25% on input trade against each other, the model with flexible input choices amplifies the response of US input purchase from China by 18% and increases the real income loss faced by upstream Chinese input suppliers from -0.04% to -0.75%. Second, considering a global disintegration event that removes all existing preferential trade agreements (PTAs), the model suggests that the setback of market entry barriers generates 2-3 times more significant real income loss than the setback of import tariffs. These findings highlight the importance of cross-country policy coordination in securing gains from global specialization, especially for upstream producers along the supply chain.

Racial Bias in Property Taxation in Atlanta: The Difficulty in Reversing Structural Racism (H2, R3)

Syed Fuad
,
Texas Tech University
Michael Farmer
,
Texas Tech University

Abstract

Jim Crow laws historically targeted African Americans with discriminatorily high property taxes. Reforms in the 1970s and 1980s attempted to reverse this coincident with the rise of black leadership. Several works used public tax assessment-to-sales price records to examine this bias and concluded the bias disappeared. Makovi (2022), in particular, examined Atlanta where a protracted suit by the NAACP over discriminatory taxation persisted until 1991. Notably, Jim Crow era rules deliberately excluded square footage from public property records, which created obstacles to challenge assessments. Further, records of the actual real estate tax charged are recorded elsewhere from tax assessments, coded differently, and must be extracted one by one.

Using census block group-level demographic data, and updated housing characteristics with actual property taxes charged, we analyzed sales in 2015 and 2016 across Atlanta to compare tax-to-sales price and tax-to-assessments with assessment-to-sales for each sale. Like prior works, we find no bias in the assessment-to-sales price; yet we find persistent and significant differences in the taxes charged-to-sales price and taxes charged-to-assessments that are discriminatory to African Americans. Our results are robust to multiple types of analyses. Even after sorting households into submarkets with distinct income and demographics, beyond neighborhood fixed effects, that systemic over-taxation grows even larger. The result is robust across range: discriminatory tax-to-sales and tax-to-assessment increase systematically with the percentage of African American in each census block group.

This may be instructive as one example of structural racism. Though Fulton County, in which nearly all of Atlanta lies, conducts assessments, city leaders and many county officials include some of the leading lights and their scions of the civil rights movement. Yet institutional legacies that strategically withhold data or are extremely difficult to extract from public record continue to disadvantage African Americans. Despite contentious reforms, these prove to be persistent.

Range-Based Subsidies and Product Upgrading of Electric Vehicles in China (L5, O3)

Xiaoyue Zhang
,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Abstract

This paper estimates the impact of notched driving-range-based (DRB) subsidies to consumers on Chinese electric-vehicle (EV) manufacturers' incentives to reduce their production costs of driving ranges. Chinese consumers received generous subsidies if the driving ranges were above certain thresholds. Using a dynamic structural model to infer unobserved investment decisions on the cost reduction of driving ranges by manufacturers, I find that the discontinuous incentives around the range thresholds of Chinese DRB subsidies increased the low-end EV manufacturers' probability of investing in reducing the production costs of driving ranges in 2019 by about 30 percentage points. This dynamic impact on production costs implies that the environmental benefits and welfare gains of notched DRB subsidies are very likely larger than the estimates of existing literature. It also implies that notched subsidies can be used to induce technological adoption or product upgrading.

Recurring Auctions with Costly Entry: Theory and Evidence (D4, L0)

Shanglyu Deng
,
University of Maryland
Qiyao Zhou
,
University of Maryland

Abstract

Recurring auctions are ubiquitous for selling durable assets, such as land, home, or artwork: When the seller cannot sell the item in the initial auction, she often holds a subsequent auction in the near future. This paper characterizes the design of recurring auctions, both theoretically and empirically. On the theoretical side, we show that recurring auctions outperform static auctions in efficiency and revenue when potential buyers face costly entry. This occurs because recurring auctions allow potential buyers with different values to enter at different times, which generates savings in entry costs and increases the overall probability of sale. We further derive the optimal sequence of reserve prices in recurring auctions, depending on whether the seller aims to maximize efficiency or revenue. On the empirical side, we apply the theory to home foreclosure auctions in China, where a foreclosed home is auctioned up to three times in a row. After identifying structural parameters in a recurring auction model, we compare the observed recurring auctions to the counterfactual static auctions. We show that the recurring auction design leads to an annual efficiency gain of 3.5 billion USD (16.5%) and an annual revenue gain of 2.9 billion USD (15.7%), relative to static auctions. Using the optimal reserve price sequences derived from our model can further improve efficiency by 1.0 billion USD (3.96%) and revenue by 0.8 billion USD (3.61), respectively.

Reference Price Updating in the Housing Market (D9, R3)

Shengwei Guo
,
University of Wisconsin-Madison

Abstract

What reference price do home sellers use when deciding on listing prices? This paper revisits this question using a model of seller listing behavior and a novel dataset that traces the transaction, refinancing, and listing history of over 97,000 U.S. residential properties. The structural model includes reference points, financial constraints, sale and mortgage default decisions, and matches key data moments. I find that sellers exhibit 2.5 higher degree of loss aversion to an observed "historical peak", measured by the appraised price of a refinance mortgage, compared to the original purchase price in a housing boom period. Model decomposition shows that using the historical peak as a reference price helps explain the observed listing premium and the correlation between aggregate house prices and volume to a greater extent, relative to the original purchase price. Collectively, these findings suggest that the historical peak during sellers' homeownership period serves as an updated and salient reference point influencing their pricing strategy, which, in turn, explains the aggregate dynamics of the housing market.

Regional Market Integration and Household Welfare: Spatial Evidence from the East African Community (O1, F1)

Frederik Wild
,
University of Bayreuth

Abstract

The distributional consequences of trade liberalization in Africa are under-researched. In this paper, I investigate the differential impact of the East African Community (EAC) on household welfare using three distinct sets of longitudinal, geo-referenced household-level surveys from the three founding members Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda. I thereby treat the re-establishment of the EAC in 2001 – and the expansion to a customs union and common market in 2005 and 2010, respectively – as a regional policy intervention having differential effects on individual households governed by their geo-spatial location within the countries, a prediction I derive formally from a canonical New Economic Geography (NEG) model, i.e. from a quantitative spatial equilibrium with heterogenous intra-national space. To test this hypothesis, I employ a difference-in-differences specification with treatment intensity given by households’ road distance to internal EAC border crossings, effectively comparing outcomes between ‘interior’ and ‘border’ households (first difference) before and after the intervention (second difference). Results reveal that households located closer to the internal EAC border did not experience positive welfare effects following the re-establishment. Rather, the results hint at the concentration of economic activity, as measured by increased consumption as well as extensive and intensive labor market opportunities in pre-existing agglomerations.

Regulator Preferences and Underinvestment in Water Infrastructure (L9, R5)

Chunyu Guo
,
SUNY-Albany

Abstract

Public water systems are facing a significant challenge due to underinvestment in water infrastructure, resulting in a large amount of water leakage and potential public health crises. Being a natural monopoly, the investment decisions made by local water regulators are based on the tradeoff between profit earned from water customers and residents' satisfaction. Failure to provide high-quality water or charging high prices can directly lead to negative electoral consequences in the next term. However, the managers' preferences regarding this tradeoff can deviate their investment decision from the profit-optimal level. This paper explores the reasons for underinvestment by developing a dynamic framework to specify and estimate the local manager's preference over water utility investment. I recover the intertemporal consequences of water infrastructure investment decisions, recognizing water price adjustments and changes in water quality. I find that the municipal regulator assigns less weight to consumer surplus over profit, leading to a reduction in investment in water infrastructure. My findings show that underinvestment in water treatment and distribution infrastructure, aimed at improving drinking water quality and reducing water leakage, is a result of this preference. I use the estimated model to quantify the welfare improvement resulting from the manager's preference in inducing higher investment. The counterfactual analysis results indicate that programs such as subsidizing the water utility and offering water rate assistance to consumers can help improve the investment level and social welfare.

Regulatory Collateral Requirements and Delinquency Rate in a Two-Agent New Keynesian Model (E5, E3)

Aicha Kharazi
,
University of Exeter
Francesco Ravazzolo
,
Free University of Bozen-Bolzano

Abstract

In light of the high levels of systemic risks and the elevated probability of a crisis occurring, understanding the effectiveness of macro-prudential policies is becoming increasingly crucial. We incorporate a collateral-based macro-prudential policy into a two-agent New Keynesian model, this policy adjusts counter cyclically to the state of the borrowing sector. We show that regulators accommodate high delinquency rates by allowing for tighter collateral requirements. An active macro-prudential policy amplifies the impact of a monetary policy shock on output and labor supply, and this policy emerges as a potential tool to prevent the risk of delinquency in the short run.

Regulatory Heterogeneity and Credit Allocation (G2)

Maximilian Jager
,
Frankfurt School of Finance and Management

Abstract

This paper investigates the macroeconomic implications of the co-existence of two regimes of bank credit risk regulation: i) the internal ratings-based approach (IRBA) giving banks discretion to set their own regulatory capital charge for each loan; ii) the standardized approach (SA) giving a fixed capital charge to every loan independent of the borrower’s credit risk. Using German credit register data, I document that the different regulation regimes translate into heterogeneous lending incentives across banks for the same borrower. I aggregate the extent of this heterogeneity in credit supply to the sector level and link it to measures of capital misallocation. My results show a more efficient credit allocation in sectors whose lending is dominated by IRBA banks. I rule out that sorting, by banks or firms, drives these differences. This suggests that the IRBA, criticized by many stakeholders due to its inherent moral hazard problem of risk underestimation, improves capital allocation in the economy. That is, in exercising their hazardous behaviour, banks generate a positive externality.

Remittances and Household Dependence: Evidence from Bangladesh (D1, F2)

Adesola Olumayowa Sunmoni
,
University of Reading
Md Shahadath Hossain
,
SUNY-Binghamton
Estiaque Bari
,
East West University

Abstract

Economic theory predicts that an unexpected windfall should reduce the labour
supply of an adult through the income effect. This underscores the notion that
cash transfers (both public and private) create work disincentives and can make
the recipients lazy. This study investigates whether remittances – a private
cash transfer – leads to dependence at the receiving household level. The main
hypothesis is that remittances reduce the likelihood and amount of non-remittance
income generated by households. We use data from the Bangladesh Survey on
the Use of Remittance 2013 and instrumental variables approach to account
for endogeneity concerns. Our results show that remittances do not lead to
dependence at both the extensive and intensive margins. The results are robust
to different model specifications, different definitions of the treatment and outcome
variables and violations of the exclusion restriction. We also present important
channels through which remittances affects households’ dependence other than
the income effect.

Research on the Effect of Digital Transformation on Female Employment (M1, J2)

Aolin Leng
,
Northwestern Polytechnical University
Fuli Kang
,
Northwestern Polytechnical University

Abstract

The digital transformation of enterprises is the core of driving the development of the digital economy and the key to ensuring the sustainable development of enterprises. The application of digital technology will not only change the mode of production and optimize the structure of the industry, but also have a profound impact on the structure and demand of the labor force. Although many studies have paid attention to the impact of digital technology on employment, the effect and mechanism of enterprises' digital transformation on female employees are still unclear. This study used female employment data disclosed by Chinese listed companies from 2010 to 2020, constructed a two-way fixed-effect model of time and industry, and empirically tested the impact and mechanism of corporate digital transformation on female employment from an empirical perspective. The study finds that the digital transformation of enterprises contributes to the increase in the proportion of female employees, and the impact on different regions and enterprises with different natures is different. By testing the influence mechanism, we find that the digital transformation of enterprises promotes female employment through two paths: increasing the labor income share of employees and the number of female executives. The results show that: first, the digital transformation of enterprises can not only promote female employees, but also increase the number of female executives, indicating that the digital transformation of enterprises can help break the glass ceiling effect on women. Second, the digital transformation of enterprises will increase the labor income share of employees. This paper expands the research on the impact of the application of digital technology on the employment of the female labor force and also provides a reference for population and employment policies under the digital transformation.

Risk-Averse or Pro-Social? Evidence from the Early-Life Experience during the Great Famine in China (G3, G1)

Yong Chen
,
Southwestern University of Finance and Economics
Yun-Ching Chang
,
Shih Chien University
Guan-Ying Huang
,
National Chung Cheng University

Abstract

This study explores the relationship between board chairs' early-life experience in the Great Chinese Famine and the debt maturity choices made by Chinese listed firms between 2000 and 2017. Our findings indicate that board chairs with famine experience exhibit a propensity towards long-term debt usage. We argue that this finding can be attributed to a risk-averse rather than pro-social orientation among board chairs who have experienced famine. Our results are particularly salient for firms with lower asset redeployability, higher distress risk, no political affiliations, and those that are not state-owned enterprises. Moreover, we observe that board chairs with famine experience tend to underestimate the profitability of their firms, suggesting that their early-life disaster experiences shape their decision-making processes in a risk-averse rather than overconfident manner. By extending the maturity of their debt, firms could enhance investment and mitigate the underinvestment problem.

Roe v. Rates: Reproductive Healthcare and Public Financing Costs (H7, I1)

Runjing Lu
,
University of Alberta
Zihan Ye
,
University of Tennessee

Abstract

After the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, states with abortion "trigger" bans tied to the decision see an increase in municipal bond yields relative to states with preexisting laws protecting abortion. The effects are stronger in counties where access to abortion services decrease more after the court ruling, where residents are more accepting of abortion, and which rely more on female workforce. Using the stock market’s reaction following the Court’s decision and the staggered state-level adoption of laws targeting abortion providers, we identify deteriorated firm value, worsening business dynamism, and lower net in-migration as key factors underlying the rise in municipal bond yields. Together, our results highlight the importance of reproductive healthcare policies in driving local economies and public financing costs.

Rural-Urban Water Sale and Urban Growth (R1, O1)

Arpita Nehra
,
North Carolina State University
Reza Oladi
,
Utah State University
Sherzod B. Akhundjanov
,
Utah State University
Arthur J. Caplan
,
Utah State University

Abstract

We study economic effects of a rural-urban water transfer on an urban economy using the 1920’s Owens Valley water transfer to Los Angeles (LA) County---one of the largest and most controversial rural-urban water transfers ever undertaken in the United States---as an empirical case. We first develop a growth-theoretic model incorporating a water transfer, and explore the transfer’s impact on urban economic growth. The model serves as a theoretical foundation for our empirical analysis. We then apply both synthetic control and difference-in-differences methods to a newly constructed dataset to examine the transfer’s overall effect on the water-importing county's gross domestic product per capita (GDP), as well as its effects on GDP's two main components---the value of agricultural and manufacturing output per capita. We also assess the water transfer’s associated impact on urban sprawl. We find a positive effect overall, i.e., the 1920’s Owens Valley water transfer impelled decades-long GDP growth in LA County. The county’s overall growth has in turn been driven by growth in its per-capita value of manufacturing output, at the expense of agricultural output. We also find a positive transfer effect on urban sprawl within the county.

Salience Bias in Belief Formation (C9, D8)

Busra Eroglu
,
University of Mannheim
Martin Weber
,
University of Mannheim

Abstract

Our study introduces an experimental framework to examine the role of attention in the decision-making process, with a particular focus on its impact on learning and belief formation. In order to identify attention, we draw upon the Salient Theory developed by Bordalo, Gennaioli, and Shleifer (2012b). We conduct a two-stage online experiment and uncover several noteworthy findings. Firstly, slightly more than half of the participants show salient thinking characteristics, indicating a proclivity to overweight the standout option among a set of alternatives. Secondly, our results reveal that participants tend to overreact to salient signals and, more importantly, that overreaction is mainly driven by salient thinkers. Additionally, salient thinkers exhibit a greater degree of optimism than others when they receive positive signals, which is further amplified when these signals are infrequent. Lastly, while the salience anomaly is more pronounced in the short term, it disappears over an extended estimation period.

Scars of the Gestapo: Remembrance and Privacy Concerns (N4, N9)

Florencia Mercedes Hnilo
,
Stanford University
Sebastian Dario Bauer
,
Stanford University

Abstract

We study how the remembrance of an authoritarian regime impacts privacy concerns. Our main hypothesis is that Germany's culture of Holocaust remembrance (Erinnerungskultur) focuses Germans’ attention on the risks associated with private data ending up in the wrong hands. One example of this culture of remembrance are the Stolpersteine, plaques on the sidewalk signaling that a victim of Nazi persecution lived at a given address. We use a detailed street-level imagery dataset of Berlin to relate the location of the Stolpersteine to a novel geolocated measure of privacy concerns: whether a person asks for their building to be blurred on a street-level imagery provider. We show that there exists a positive relationship between the amount of Stolpersteine near a person's house or workplace and the probability that this person will ask the imagery provider to blur the front of their house. This relationship is very localized, as most of the effect concentrates on Stolpersteine that are less than 10 meters away.

Sectoral Linkages and the Costs and Benefits of Negotiating Free-Trade Agreements (F1, F5)

Gunnar Heins
,
University of Florida
Hamid Firooz
,
University of Rochester
Shubhi Agarwal
,
University of Florida

Abstract

This paper develops a model to quantify the costs and benefits of free-trade agreements as well as their history-dependence in the presence of intermediate goods, input-output linkages, and sectoral heterogeneity. We first evaluate the welfare effects for the universe of free trade agreements that were signed since 1988 using a version of Caliendo and Parro (2015) and compare their consequences to counterfactual agreements that did not come into effect. We first document several facts based on these estimates: (1) Despite a large increase in the number of newly signed FTAs, the average welfare gain has been steadily declining, (2) the difference between signed and non-signed FTAs is small, and (3) the impact of a signed FTA on the benefit of future agreements is ambiguous and positive in about 40% of cases. Based on these insights we develop a structural dynamic model of negotiating FTAs and quantify the relative importance of falling negotiating costs, welfare gains, and history in the recent rise in the number of new FTAs.

Speaking a Common Technical Language: ISO Membership and Non-Tariff Trade Barriers (O1, F6)

Zhixiao Yao
,
Dresden University of Technology
Christian Lessmann
,
Dresden University of Technology

Abstract

We study the impact of a country’s membership in the International Standardization Organization (ISO)
on trade flows in a gravity model from 1980-2019. Difference-in-difference estimates reveal that bilateral
trade increases by approximately 52% on average once both countries receive full member status. This
is particularly important to trade in less developed countries as exporters. Event study estimates suggest
that the effects build up gradually and that the parallel trends assumption holds. Concerning different
industries, we find that trade-promoting effects of standards are more robust in the beverage and tobacco
sector, chemicals and related products sector. Firms’ increased uptake of standards drives our results
once countries join ISO. For policymakers, our results highlight the importance of standard diffusion and
the role of shaping standards in emerging countries.

Spillover Effects of Offshore Leaks (H3, H2)

Miroslav Palansky
,
Charles University

Abstract

Leaks of confidential documents from companies that facilitate the creation of secretive corporate structures in offshore jurisdictions have become a major source of information about the world of financial secrecy, with far-reaching consequences for the individuals involved. In this paper I look at the effects of the leaks on individuals not directly involved in the leaks, but using schemes and tax havens exposed by the leaks. I use the leaks in a fixed-effects model at the bilateral level to assess their impact on cross-border bank deposits and portfolio investment. I find that offshore leaks negatively influence the use of the implicated offshore jurisdictions: the more pronounced is the presence of a given offshore jurisdiction in an offshore leak, the higher is the effect on inward cross-border financial flows to that jurisdiction. I find a higher negative effect of leaks on financial flows from less-developed countries, in which control mechanisms are weaker, and thereby the costs of setting up a simple offshore structure are lower (via lower detection probabilities).

Stable Market Segmentation against Price Discrimination (D4, D8)

Sanxi Li
,
Renmin University of China
Zhonghong kuang
,
Renmin University of China
Yi Liu
,
Tsinghua University
Yang Yu
,
Tsinghua University

Abstract

According to current data regulations, consumers are mobile among different markets, which endogenizes market segmentation. Considering such strategic interactions, we say that a market segmentation is stable if no consumer has an incentive to deviate to another market. We show that in every stable market segmentation, the producer surplus remains at the uniform monopoly level, and the consumer surplus takes a value between the buyer-optimal level and the uniform monopoly level. Remarkably, no consumer is worse off than in the case of uniform monopoly. Therefore, our results justify the Pareto optimum of price discrimination and reveal the welfare implications of current regulations.

Standing in the Way: Barriers to Entry for Immigrants and Entrepreneurial Engagement (J6, F2)

Joshua Kanwar Bedi
,
Copenhagen Business School
José Mata
,
Copenhagen Business School

Abstract

Focusing on the whole population residing in Denmark from 1986-2016, we study how migration and citizenship statuses affect engagement in entrepreneurship. The probability of being self-employed is highest for immigrants (people born abroad), followed by returnee emigrants (those born in Denmark who spent time residing abroad), and then non-migrants (people born in Denmark but who have never lived abroad). When focusing on immigrants, we find the probability of being self-employed is highest for those born in countries lacking open borders with Denmark. At the same time, we find foreign citizenship heavily moderates the positive relationship between migration status and the probability of being an entrepreneur but in a nonuniform way. Having foreign citizenship is associated with a lower probability of becoming an entrepreneur when that citizenship entails real labor market restrictions, but the opposite is true when foreign citizenship does not restrict labor market participation. When studying the incomes of entrepreneurs, we find the incomes of return emigrant entrepreneurs to be lower compared to the incomes of non-migrant entrepreneurs, and the incomes of immigrant entrepreneurs is lower than both groups on average. Finally, we also find foreign citizenship is negatively associated with income for entrepreneurs, and the negative association between foreign citizenship and income is highest for immigrants, followed by return emigrants. However, while we find foreign citizenship is generally associated with less income, we do not necessarily find that immigrant entrepreneurs with marginally more restrictive foreign citizenship earn marginally less income compared to those with marginally less restrictive citizenship statuses. Our results carry two special implications for immigrant entrepreneurship: international mobility per se is associated with an increased probability of engaging in entrepreneurship as well as decreased income for entrepreneurs, and legal status seems to be a major impediment for entrepreneurs.

Staying Afloat: The Impact of Flooding on UK Firms (Q5, R3)

Benjamin Crampton
,
Bank of England
Rebecca Maria Mari
,
Bank of England
Rupert-Hu Gilman
,
Bank of England

Abstract

Flooding is the most frequent prolonged and extreme weather-related event experienced by the UK from which there are significant damages and disruption. Climate change has increased the frequency and intensity of flooding events and this is expected to continue, making an assessment of the risk from flooding on the UK economy pressing. This paper investigates the impact of flooding events on UK firms. Empirically we study the impact of the associated disruption on their revenue, productivity and employment through the use of annual company balance sheet information for medium-large firms and monthly bank account records for SMEs. We also examine the impact of flooding on the location decisions of firms through the use of a novel dataset comprising business premise addresses. These empirical findings, together with stylised facts on the current geography of production and floods, are used to calibrate a general equilibrium model providing insights on the consequences of an increase in flooding from climate change on aggregate productivity.

Stores Going Online: Market Expansion or Cannibalization? (L1, L8)

Chenyang Li
,
Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
Si Zuo
,
Cornell University
Yangguang Huang
,
Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

Abstract

The growth of e-commerce has led to concerns about the impact of online stores on brick-and-mortar (B&M) stores. While some argue that online sales can expand the market for B&M stores by increasing consumer awareness and transmitting product information, others fear that they may cannibalize sales. In this study, we use a unique dataset of 308 B&M stores and their online stores on Taobao to investigate this debate. We utilize rainy days and Covid outbreaks as offline-only demand shocks to identify the negative effect of online sales on B&M stores (i.e., cannibalization) and live streaming and online-exclusive shopping festivals to identify the positive effect (i.e., informative). Our findings reveal that home, clothing, cosmetics, and jewelry suffer the most from the opening of online stores, while amusement and personal care stores are not affected. We also find that local stores experience both large negative and small positive effects. Using offline surveys, we uncover the main mechanisms behind these heterogeneous results and provide managerial suggestions for B&M store and shopping mall managers. Overall, our study sheds light on the complex relationship between online and offline sales and can inform strategies to optimize the operations of B&M stores and shopping malls in the digital age.

Strategic Cross-Voting in U.S. Primary Elections (P0, D7)

Shreya Mathur
,
University of Pennsylvania

Abstract

Primary elections are the first-stage of local, state and federal elections in the United States of America and decide who is the party's nominee in the general election. With rising political polarization, voters have taken to strategically voting in their non-preferred party’s primary to keep out candidates they dislike or elect unpopular candidates. This can be when a party has captured the state and therefore, the chances of the voter’s preferred candidate winning are low. Therefore, the voter tries her best to keep out the candidate they dislike. Alternatively, this could happen in states with close races where voters might want a candidate who is likely to win partisan voters but unlikely to win over undecided voters. Therefore, they would “sabotage” the other party’s process. The drawback is that states generally do not allow voters to vote in both party primaries and hence, the voter loses the opportunity to decide her party’s candidate. In order to vote strategically, a voter has beliefs about the eventual election outcomes, voting shares of candidates in the primary and makes her decision accordingly. In this paper, I study under what conditions a voter engages in cross-party voting, how they depend on a voter's beliefs and what the voter preference distribution in these scenarios looks like.

Strategic Decisions of Multinational and Domestic Corporations in Response to Economic Sanctions (G3, F2)

Shumi Akhtar
,
University of Sydney
Farida Akhtar
,
Macquarie University
Maria Jahromi
,
Australian National University

Abstract

We examine how sanctions affect the internalization processes of Multinational corporations (MNEs) and Domestic Corporations (DCs) in ‘sender’ (sanctioning) and ‘target’ (sanctioned) countries. To this end, we apply panel analysis techniques to granular firm-level data from 1995 to 2022 in 86 countries. Sanctions have become a pivotal tool of foreign policy which has enormous economic impacts on corporations and positions them in a complex discourse. Relying on resource based and globalization theory and sophisticated machine learning techniques, we find that the type of sanction (e.g., import or export sanction, financial sanction) play a critical role in how corporations allocate and diversify their resources in both sender and target countries. Export sanctions elicit the largest effects on performance and diversification strategies of firms in sender countries. We also find that there is heterogeneous behavior in how MNEs and DCs reshuffle their tangible and intangible resources to remain competitive in response to the imposition of sanctions. DCs are often hampered more than MNEs. DCs reduce geographical diversification, while MNCs tend to increase diversification. Our results have direct implications for government policy and for strategic decisions and diversification choices of MNEs and DCs in response to economic sanctions.

Strength in Numbers: Ethnic Group Size and Economic Development (N0, O4)

Victoria Klarosk
,
Insper
Rogerio Santarrosa
,
Insper

Abstract

We use the partition of ethnic groups across adjacent countries, caused by the Scramble for Africa, to study the effect of group size on economic development. The arbitrariness of the border design caused exogenous variation in the population size of split groups within countries and thus works as a natural experiment. We combine information on the historical homeland of ethnic groups, gridded geo-referenced estimates of population on the eve of colonization, and a measure of ethnic contemporary economic performance, as proxied by satellite images of light density at night. Using within group variation plus country fixed effects, we find that larger groups are currently more developed. We exploit several channels that can potentially mediate these effects. We show that these results are driven by the number of people and not simply by the amount of natural resources. Larger groups are more urban, more likely to have big cities in their homelands, and have more access to transportation infrastructure. We use contemporary African Demographic Surveys and find that individuals living in homelands of larger groups are more educated, have moved from agriculture to service sector, and are more likely to hold permanent working positions and skilled jobs. Finally, we also find that large groups are more likely to be politically organized and represented in the highest executive political positions in the country.

Sustainable Investing and Public Goods Provision (G1, H4)

Xuan Wang
,
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam and Tinbergen Institute
Joel Shapiro
,
University of Oxford
Ilaria Piatti
,
Queen Mary University of London

Abstract

We model investors who are consequentialists - they take into account the amount of public good firms produce (e.g., carbon emission reductions). In an asset pricing model with production and public goods, we find that more environmentally conscious investors invest more overall, invest more in clean firms, and may invest more in dirty firms. Whether clean firms exhibit CAPM alphas depends on a comparison between the firm's systematic risk and its relative public good contribution. There is underprovision of the public good in equilibrium. Lower government provision may lead to a surge in investment and government provision may be dominated by green subsidies.

Systemic Influence in Systematic Break: Granular Time Series Detection (C3, C5)

So Jin Lee
,
University of Mannheim

Abstract

We propose a simple new method of detecting individuals of system-wide importance, exploiting a systematic break in panel data. This paper relates to the literature on granular economies and systemic risk, which provides vital characteristics of systemic individuals in various systems of economic agents; firms, banks, trading countries, et cetera. The fundamental characteristic of systemic individuals (granular units) is described in terms of the impact of individual idiosyncratic volatilities on system volatility. We model the systemic influence as a force driving the covariance dynamics of a given system. In particular, a substantial change in correlation structure will be the relevant covariance dynamics, as it indicates changes in strategic behaviors through an underlying latent network. Based on a simple factor model, such covariance dynamics can be depicted by a change in factor space. The systemic influence will be analyzed by employing a proper distance measure between factor spaces, from which one can easily calculate the contribution of idiosyncratic volatilities. The granular units are the main contributors to a systematic break, the change in factor space. In an empirical exercise, we apply our framework to S&P 100 return data assuming the systematic breakpoints are known.
This paper has three factors of contribution. First, our detection is one of the simplest among the methods considering covariance dynamics. Systemic influence can be analyzed based on existing factor models and PCA methods, which leads to simple modeling and implementation. Second, we provide a clear interpretation of a standard factor model in terms of a simple network model. Third, our method provides a conservative measure of systemic influence by finding its effect on a considerable event of a systematic break. In the application, we find our detection scheme promptly informative by capturing valid sources of well-known economic crises from reasonably early stages.

Testing and Risk Attitude under Incomplete Information: A Game Theory Perspective (D8, D9)

Madhuri Saripalle
,
Krea University
Vijaya Chebolu Subramanian
,
Krea University

Abstract

Bayesian game with information asymmetry. We assume that there are two types of individuals in the economy: high immune (type 1) and low immune (type 2); this is known only to the individuals, but unknown to the government; it only has a prior belief given by a probability distribution of the immunity status. The government is faced with the strategic decision of whether to conduct universal, hybrid, or no testing, each of which has its respective expected cost. Individuals engage in two types of activities: risk-prone or risk-averse, each of which has its expected benefits. We calculate the expected payoffs in terms of the costs and benefits and analyze the dominant strategies for both players. We find that some testing is a dominant strategy compared to no testing as long as the cost of testing type 2 is less than the cost of not testing type 2. Further, the universal testing strategy is a dominant strategy as long as the odds ratio of immunity status is less than one. We also show that the expected benefits of risk-averse behavior are higher than that of risk-prone behavior if the odds ratio of immunity status in the economy is greater than one. In terms of policy implication, the distribution of immunity status in the economy is an important determinant of the costs and benefits of the strategies. This is because the proportion of high immune type to low immune type influences the reproduction rate, thereby impacting healthcare costs. To contain the epidemic, there should be a two-pronged approach to test as well as influence people’s risk attitudes.

The (Un)intended Consequences of Preferential Trade Agreements: Evidence from Patent Grant Rates at the USPTO (O3, F1)

David Angenendt
,
Technical University of Munich

Abstract

Bilateral preferential trade agreements often include comprehensive intellectual property rights protections beyond the minimum standards required by WTO membership. By improving patent enforcement, lowering costs, and lowering import barriers, such "IPA" agreements increase foreigners' incentive to patent in the partner country. However, they may also violate the "most-favored nation" principle of WTO norms if their IP provisions do not apply equally to patent application origins outside the IPAs.

Howard et al. (2023) report increased bilateral patenting between IPA parties. Relating this finding with the recent literature on patent office discrimination against foreigners, we examine the US Patent Office's grant rates for non-US patent applications. Consistent with prior research, we find that non-US applicants are granted patents at a rate ten percentage points lower than US applicants. However, when the applicant's (inventor's) country signs an IPA with the US, the grant rate rises by 4pp (2pp), suggesting the potential for a "Strategic Patent Policy."

Our identification strategy relies on time variation in the nature of trade relations with the US and therefore allows assessing heterogeneity beyond the simple "foreigner" dummy common in the literature. Importantly, we find that the higher grant rate only benefits assignees from relatively high-income countries, possibly due to their greater resources and efforts in interacting with the USPTO. In contrast, the grant rate drops by another 2.5pp for non-OECD inventors, and fewer future patent citations indicate comparably low-quality inventions.

Overall, our study contributes to the ongoing discussion on the effectiveness and fairness of international IP systems. Our results suggest that preferential trade agreements may have unintended consequences for patent systems, particularly for inventors from lower-income countries. Finally, we note that the grant rate for patent applications with a majority of female inventors does not increase, which highlights the need for further investigation.

The ACA Medicaid Expansion Removed a Benefit Cliff, Increasing Work Effort in Expansion States (H2, H3)

Ellyn Terry
,
University of Washington and Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta

Abstract

Nearly all of the studies examining the labor supply effects of the 2014 Affordable Care Act (ACA) have found no evidence that the ACA Medicaid expansion decreased work effort in expansion states relative to non-expansion states. These null findings are surprising because several studies examining state-specific Medicaid expansions/contractions prior to the 2014 ACA found reduced work effort among new Medicaid recipients and losers of Medicaid, as expected by economic theory.
In this paper, we argue that the reason for the null effect studies is misidentification of the treatment group; the most commonly studied treatment groups (e.g. low-income and low-educated in expansion states) do not face unambiguously positive or negative incentives when the ACA passes. To investigate this claim, we begin by re-examining the effect of the ACA Medicaid expansion on the commonly studied populations using a DiD research design and a dataset that has not yet been used to answer this research question – the Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP). We too find no evidence that the ACA reduced work effort for any of the most commonly studied populations. We then redefine the treatment group as a subset of the population with unambiguously positive labor supply incentives - those who were receiving Medicaid in 2013. People in this group in all states had incentives to strategically keep their income low in order to qualify for Medicaid. When the ACA passes, those in expansion states were released from the benefits cliff - allowing them to increase their income without losing Medicaid. We find that this treatment group increases their hours by 1.5 hours and their total income increases $141, on average, relative to those in non-expansion states.

The Distributional Effects of Electric Vehicle Subsidies in China (L1, H2)

Junji Xiao
,
Lingnan University
Jing Liang
,
Lingnan University

Abstract

Many countries have introduced incentives to encourage the adoption of electric vehicles (EVs). To promote innovation, incentives such as subsidies are usually based on the vehicles' attributes. However, EVs that feature more advanced technologies are more expensive and thus are usually purchased by high-income individuals, who are actually less sensitive to subsidies. The progressive feature of the subsidy may reduce its effectiveness. Moreover, the manufacturers can take advantage of high-income consumers' lower price sensitivity and pass through less subsidy to them, which further undermines the effectiveness of the subsidy.
This paper examines the distributional effects of EV subsidies in two dimensions---subsidy pass-through (or distribution between manufacturers and consumers) and progressivity (or distribution over consumers of different incomes)---and analyzes the impact of these distributional effects on market equilibrium and welfare. The empirical findings suggest that pass-through of EV subsidies to consumers is more than complete and high-income consumers get more subsidies. We also propose an equal-size subsidy scheme that is progressive on technology and regressive on income and compare it with the current scheme. Surprisingly, our empirical findings suggest that the alternative subsidy scheme lowers the consumer surplus because producers will further exploit the regressive design of the subsidy and transfer the consumer surplus to producer surplus, leading to further distortion and social welfare loss owing to higher producer power.

The Dual Local Markets: Family, Jobs, and the Spatial Distribution of Skills (R1, J1)

Jingting Fan
,
Pennsylvania State University
Ben Zou
,
Purdue University

Abstract

We study how interactions between the local labor market and the local marriage market determine the spatial distribution of skills and economic activities. We develop the first spatial equilibrium model with endogenous marriage formation. In the model, young, single agents choose which city to live in taking into consideration their labor market and marriage market prospects in each city. A high share of the skilled population pushes up productivity through agglomeration and drives up the local rental price. Marrying a skilled spouse brings higher household income, so both skilled and unskilled singles are incentivized to move to skilled cities for a better chance to marry a skilled spouse. However, returns from a specific type of marriage are endogenously determined by the local marriage conditions via a transferrable utility framework. Calibrating the model to U.S. cities, we find that despite strong positive assortative matching, marriage is a force of spatial dispersion---without the incentive to marry, the spatial distribution of skills and economic activity will be even more unequal. Endogenous and heterogeneous returns from local marriage markets are key drivers of this result. Through the lens of the model, the secular decline in the preference for marriage, the increase in labor force participation among women, and the narrowing gender pay gap together explain between a third and a half of the spatial divergence in skills in the U.S. between 1960 and 2000.

The Economic Effect of Discrimination: Evidence from Restaurant Sector (J1, P1)

Guanting Yi
,
Ohio State University

Abstract

Pandemics are recurring throughout history, and discrimination toward certain social groups often coexists. I study the causal effect of early Covid pandemic events led by the national first case on Chinese cuisine visits to approximate the effect of consumer discrimination toward Chinese cuisine in the U.S. from December 2019 to April 2020. I find sizeable relative declines of about -8% in Chinese cuisine visits and a larger negative spillover effect of about -14% on Japanese and Korean cuisine visits. Additionally, I find a remarkable amount of heterogeneity in the causal effect along county political affiliation and diversity in race and ethnicity: a county being one-standard-deviation more republican supporting in 2016 was associated with an additional 10% relative drop in Chinese cuisine visits; a county being one-standard-deviation more diverse in race and ethnicity was associated with an additional 7% relative increase in Chinese cuisine visits.

The Economic Growth in the World from 2007 to 2018: Secular Stagnation? (O4, O5)

Andrew Schein
,
Netanya Academic College

Abstract

In a series of a papers, Lawrence Summers has argued that the economies in the US, Europe and Japan entered a period of secular stagnation after the Great Recession of 2007-09. The basis for this claim is the “disappointing” economic growth in these countries after the Great Recession. Is this true for the world economy? Was the economic growth throughout the world also “disappointing” after the Great Recession?
In this study we will analyze growth rates of per capita GDP of 166 countries (data from Bolt and van Zanden 2020 of the Maddison Project) to determine how did the economic growth in the world after the Great Recession through 2018 (the end of the data set) compare with the economic growth in the world prior to the Great Recession. We show that the annual growth of per capita GDP in the world from 2010 to 2018 was 1.81%, which was a large fall from the growth rate in the world in the first decade of the 21st century, 2.89%, but still the growth rate from 2010 to 2018 was greater than in the 1980s (1.29%) and just slightly less than in the 1990s (1.89%). If one examines the annual growth rates of individual countries, then it is true that there was a decline in the annual growth rate of the US economy from 2007 to 2018 as compared with the period from 1990 to 2007 (from 1.9% to 0.76%), as well as for the economies of twenty countries in Europe that did not have communist economies prior to 1990 and for the Japanese economy (from 1.07% to 0.68%), but there were sixty-six countries (40% of the countries in the data set), whose economies had superior growth from 2007-2018 as compared with 1990-2007.

The Effect of Highway Accessibility on Corporate Investment in China (R4, G3)

Yanyu Zhou
,
University of Glasgow

Abstract

This paper investigates whether and how highway accessibility affects corporate investment using a geo-coded micro-level panel dataset for Chinese manufacturing firms. To identify the causal effect, we construct three sets of instruments for highway variables, that is, the least cost paths, straight line network and historical courier routes. We find that better access to highways promotes firms' investment, supporting the crowding-in effect of public investment. Since firms may have endogenous location choices, the endogeneity problem is further controlled by including only those firms that have existed since 1999 and have never switched locations. Highway proximity is found to stimulate corporate investment through at least three mechanisms, that is, by reducing firms' financial constraints, releasing additional internal funds via inventory reduction, and mitigating the negative impact of uncertainties. Our results are robust when different highway measures and instruments are adopted.

The Effect of Large Firm Entry on Local Skill Demand and Wage Distribution (J2, L1)

Alaa Abdelfattah
,
University of California-Davis
Layla O'Kane
,
Lightcast

Abstract

This paper studies the effect of successfully bidding for a million dollar project, relative to bidding and losing, on local firms' skill demand and posted wages. Using real estate magazines and internet searches, we construct a dataset of million-dollar projects' opening year, location and runner-up sites. We then match winner and runner-up county pairs to corresponding job ads in Lightcast posting data. Utilizing a difference-in-difference research design, we find that, on average, a million-dollar project entry significantly shifts the wage distribution downward by 2.7\%, but has no significant impact on the number of firms and postings in the local area. With respect to skill demand, million-dollar projects entry does not affect demand for cognitive, computer, or social skills, but significantly increases the demand for a high school degree as a minimum education requirement. These findings cast a new light on the equity impacts of large firms' entry, which seem to improve job prospects of workers without college degrees.

The Effect of Limiting Antidepressant Prescriptions in Non-Psychiatric Clinics on Suicide Thoughts and Attempts in South Korea (I1, H5)

Haewon Oh
,
University of Georgia
Travis Alan Smith
,
University of Georgia

Abstract

South Korea has the highest suicide rate in the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development. In 2002, the Ministry of Health and Welfare of South Korea implemented a drug policy that limits antidepressant prescriptions to 60 days in non-psychiatric clinics in order to prevent drug abuse. Our objective is to assess whether the drug policy in Korea led to an increase in suicidal thoughts and/or attempts among patients with chronic disease such as neurological disorders, cardiac disease, or cancer as a result of untreated depression. Using a difference-in-differences design, we find following the regulatory action, restriction of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors in non-psychiatric clinics increased suicidal behavior and healthcare costs among patients with chronic diseases in South Korea. We observe heterogeneity in treatment effects based on age, with older individuals who had medical disorders experiencing increased suicidal thoughts in the post-policy period. We also use a synthetic control method to provide robust evidence of causal effects. Here, we find suicidal thoughts increase exceptionally in South Korea as compared to synthetic counterpart countries after the policy was implemented. This study provides empirical evidence to help resolve the ongoing debate over whether the policy is associated with the suicide in South Korea.

The Effects of Exposure to a Large-Scale Recession on Higher Education and Early Labor Market Outcomes (E3, I2)

Eleanor Jawon Choi
,
Hanyang University and IZA
Jisoo Hwang
,
Seoul National University
Hyelim Son
,
University of Seoul

Abstract

This study examines the effects of timing of exposure to the Asian financial crisis on higher education and early labor market outcomes. We estimate an extended difference-in-differences model exploiting variation in age at exposure and regional severity of the recession in South Korea. Using data from the Census and Youth Panel, we find that individuals from hard-hit regions are less likely to graduate from college, tend to shift away from humanities to STEM majors, and have lower-quality first jobs, than their peers in the same cohort. These effects are more pronounced among individuals who experienced the recession at younger ages.

The Effects of Immigration Shocks on Pre-existing Immigrants: Evidence from Early 20th Century America (F2, J3)

Hugh Cassidy
,
Kansas State University

Abstract

Most literature on the impacts of immigration focus on the effects of immigrant inflows on natives. In this paper, I use linked full-count U.S. Census data from 1900-1940 to study the effects of immigrant inflows on pre-existing immigrant populations across 180 cities. Crucially, I distinguish between the overall fraction of recently arrived immigrants and the fraction of recently arrived immigrants from the same birthplace. I employ a shift-share instrumental variable approach, exploiting pre-existing immigrant distributions, to predict the both the total level of immigration as well as the level of immigration by birthplace into each city. I find that the effects of immigration shocks on the labor market outcomes and mobility of pre-existing immigrants differ critically depending on whether new immigrants are from the same or a different birthplace as the existing immigrants.

The Effects of Mandatory FAFSA Completion Policy in Texas (I2)

Sie Won Kim
,
Texas Tech University

Abstract

This study examines the impact of a mandatory Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) completion policy on Texas high school students' FAFSA submission rates and the heterogeneous effects of the policy across racial groups and family income levels. FAFSA form is a requirement to apply for federal student aid, including Pell Grants, as well as state and institutional aid such as grants, loans, and scholarships. In 2021-22, Texas implemented a new high school graduate requirement mandating FAFSA completion. Using a sample 1,339 public high schools in Texas from the school years 2018-19 to 2021-22, I find that FAFSA submission rates increased in Texas after the policy implementation, with the highest poverty quartile schools having the largest increase after the policy implementation. Schools with relatively high shares of Black and Hispanic students (between 55.3% and 88.3%) had similar FAFSA completion rates to schools with lowest shares of Black and Hispanic students. Also, the rise in FAFSA rates after policy implementation was consistent across all schools, regardless of their baseline FAFSA rates. Heterogeneous results suggest that the state could target specific school districts, such as those with high poverty level or low baseline FAFSA completion rates and provide tailored support. In addition, I use the state-level data to estimate a difference-in-differences model and find that mandatory FAFSA policies (currently required in four states) have positive effects on submitting financial aid applications. While college enrollment data for Fall 2022 is not yet available, I expect an increase in college enrollment in 2022-2023 due to the positive correlation between the number of FAFSA applications and Texas high school graduates' enrollment in Texas higher education.

The Failures of Neoliberalism and the Future of the World Economy (B2, N4)

Alan Green
,
Stetson University

Abstract

Since 1980, the world economy has followed a Neoliberal Order with the United States as the dominant country and free-market liberalism within democracies as the overarching political/economic ideology. This Order was solidified with the end of the Cold War, after which point all major competing ideologies appeared to have failed. However, neoliberalism was not successful in becoming the single dominant political economic system expected by many in 1989 due to some key flaws in the neoliberal world economy: financial instability and the success of petro-states. These occurrences made room for non-liberal government approaches to succeed, at least in the medium term and most notably in Russia, and their success has once again led to conflict and new threats millions of people as the Neoliberal Order fades. This paper will examine these flaws in detail and make the case for a new liberal order that addresses them, which is crucial as China and India become the world’s leading economies.

The Impact of Adult Awareness about Climate Change on Renewable Energy Consumption in the United States (Q5, Q2)

Mohammad Ismayl Al Masud
,
Texas Tech University

Abstract

In this study, we investigate the impact of awareness levels about climate change on renewable energy consumption (REC). Ostensibly, we explore whether the awareness level influences willingness to pay more for renewable energy. Using a rich time series data set, we adopt internet searching about climate change as an instrumental variable (IV) to tackle endogeneity issues, we find that a 1% increase in awareness level would lead to an increase in REC by 5.9%. An increase of 1% increase average gasoline price would lead to a rise in REC by 3.3%. Regarding control variables, the total number of light vehicles and education have a statistically significant impact on REC. However, the Palmer Drought Severity Index (PDSI) has no statistically significant impact on REC. Seeking an answer to whether we are willing to pay more for cleaner energy if we are aware of climate change, we conduct an extensive survey in Texas among college students to measure their willingness to pay for renewable energy. From the survey analysis, we find that at least 80% of students are aware of environmental issues and renewable energy, 87% believe the state should educate citizens about climate change, renewable energy, and environmental protection, and around 50% want to pay up to $0.20/gallon more for gasoline. Furthermore, we use logistic analysis to confirm a positive impact on their awareness level and willingness to pay for renewable energy. Finally, we analyze the Global Trade Analysis Project (GTAP) to analyze the economic and environmental impacts of increased renewable energy consumption from a demand shock.

The Impact of an Early Childhood Intervention on Maternal Labor Supply: Evidence from India (J2, O2)

Uttara Balakrishnan
,
American Institutes of Research
Kartik Misra
,
Sewanee-University of the South

Abstract

Governments across the world have implemented early childhood development (ECD)
interventions to tackle problems of undernutrition and poverty. These interventions have shown to
be instrumental in improving both short and medium-term educational and health outcomes for
children. Most of these interventions are complex multi-layered programs, also involving active
participation of caregivers, mainly mothers. However, there is very limited evidence on the impact
of these ECD interventions on mother’s time use and other outcomes including overall well-being.
In this study, using data from the Indian Human Development Survey (IHDS) we study the impacts
of one of the largest ECD interventions in the world – the Integrated Child Development Scheme
(ICDS) in India – on maternal labor supply. We find that for mothers participating in the ICDS,
time spent in private non-agricultural wage labor significantly declines and time spent in family
farm work and private agricultural wage labor increases. Impacts are strongest for the food
supplementation and immunization components of the program, which require active and regular
participation by mothers. Existing research on the ICDS has shown large nutrition and education
impacts on children but has so far failed to account for impacts on mothers. Our findings have
significant policy implications since incorporating costs and benefits to mothers would most likely
change the return-on-investment calculations of the ICDS and related ECD programs in India,
thereby paving the way for a more holistic cost-effective program which accounts for impacts on
all stakeholders.

The Impact of PTAs on Trade in Indonesia (F1, F4)

Gohar S. Sedrakyan
,
United States International Trade Commission

Abstract

We focus on the question whether signing preferential trade agreements was a solution to improve the balance of trade, specifically applied to the case of Indonesia’s trade, a member of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), with forty-two other countries over 1989-2019. The framework of this study uses the gravity model of bilateral trade. The Poisson pseudo-maximum likelihood econometric technique is utilized to run the analysis. This research estimates negative effects of some of the preferential agreements on both the aggregate flows of trade and their disaggregation by nine product groups. The analysis suggests that partial scope agreements, and collaboration with the WTO member countries were beneficial form of integration for Indonesia. The Indonesian exports increased due to the countries with a higher level of internet penetration. The analysis disaggregated by products generates similar results. Pursuit of strategies based on comparative advantage could improve Indonesia’s trade balance within the ASEAN-Plus-One and ASEAN free trade area (AFTA) partnerships.

The Measuring Tape: Diminishing Distance Effect Across Three Waves of Trade Globalization (F1, F6)

Anupa Sharma
,
North Dakota State University

Abstract

We develop a search and trade model rooted in the idea that firms follow sequential searches, and searching in concentric ring patterns is the least costly way to do so. We combine tools from discrete geometry with relaxed controls to solve firms' large-scale combinatorial problems in the search process. Given the search and transportation costs in the sequential search, open trade equilibrium is the efficient outcome, and thus this general equilibrium model leapfrogs the autarky equilibrium. We apply a variant of this model and resolve the long-standing so-called "distance puzzle" in international trade. A counterfactual analysis using modern-day trade data and historical distance sailor ships navigated between ports from 1762 to 1810 reveals that distance has become less relevant over time. If the distance effect remained constant despite globalization, international trade wouldn't be possible for 49 of 52 countries. Trade prohibition emanates from a huge increase in outward multilateral resistances that translate into adverse shocks to factory-gate prices and GDPs.

The Promise and Peril of Entrepreneurship: Job Creation and Survival among U.S. Startups (J2, H0)

Robert Fairlie
,
University of California-Los Angeles and NBER
Zachary Kroff
,
U.S. Census Bureau
Javier Miranda
,
Halle Institute for Economic Research and Friedrich Schiller University
Nikolas Zolas
,
U.S. Census Bureau

Abstract

Entrepreneurship is promoted around the world by governments and policymakers, but surprisingly, we do not know the answers to three fundamental questions important for basic economic welfare and policy calculations: i) How many jobs does an entrepreneur create?, ii) Do these jobs disappear quickly?, and iii) How many entrepreneurial firms survive each year after startup? We provide the first answers to these questions using a new compilation of administrative data that captures the universe of U.S. startups. Using the broadest definition possible, we find that the average entrepreneur creates 0.74 jobs at the first year after startup and continues to employ 0.63 workers five years after startup (using the broadest definition possible). In total, the average annual cohort of 4.1 million startups in the United States creates 3.0 million jobs in the first year after startup. These jobs are important because net job creation by all other businesses is negative on average. We also find low survival rates – only 47 percent of startups survive two years and only 33 percent survive five years, with no industries being immune. We also find that non-employer startups make sizeable contributions to employment several years after startup (one seventh of jobs seven years later). Using a more restrictive definition of startups (which excludes sole proprietors without EIN startups) we find an upper-bound job creation rate of 2.6 jobs per startup after one year and a survival rate of 45 percent five years later. Even with this more restrictive definition we find job creation per startup and survival rates that are notably lower and less optimistic than the oft-cited numbers released by the federal government that focus exclusively on new employer businesses.

The Startup Performance Disadvantage in Europe: Evidence from Startups Migrating to the U.S. (F2, M1)

Stefan Weik
,
Technical University of Munich

Abstract

The rapid growth of venture capital-backed startups into global technology companies is one of the defining economic trends of our era, yet Europe is largely missing out on this trend. This paper examines the startup performance disadvantage in Europe by analyzing European startups that have migrated to the U.S. We compare the differential development of migrants and stayers in five key performance areas: fundraising, innovation, commercial success, exit probability, and scale at the exit. We find that U.S. migrants raise much more venture capital (VC) funding, and innovate more, than European stayers. Surprisingly, U.S. migrants do not experience an increase in revenue and even incur higher net losses in the years subsequent to their migration. Additionally, U.S. migrants are not any more likely than European stayers to achieve a successful exit, but if they do, they are worth many times more and have more employees, more revenue, and are older than startups that exit in Europe. The financing advantage of the U.S. can explain a large part of the performance difference in the areas of innovation and scale at exit. These results suggest that the VC funding market is the main European obstacle to start-up performance, and that European startups are hindered only to a lesser degree, if at all, by European product and exit markets.

The Strength of Weak Ties as a Strategy to Allocate Research Funds: Making a Research Network More Productive (O3, Q2)

Syed Fuad
,
Texas Tech University
Michael Farmer
,
Texas Tech University

Abstract

The famous analysis of calling crickets proposed an answer to a conundrum that had puzzled biologists - how do crickets conform calls so quickly? A very small number of crickets (maybe one in 10,000) reacting to a distant call, in addition to an immediate neighbor, could accelerate harmonization greatly. We test this small-world phenomenon in what is close to the universe of all publications on Black Liquor Gasification (BLG) at papermills. BLG can more than double electric power beyond the 2.1% of all US electric output already sold from BLG boilers.

We collected the universe of published work from 1994 to 2008, author information, funding sources, and the number of publications in this field. Using limited dependent variable methods, we estimate distributions of the number of publications and the entry or exit of active researchers within the network. We simulate each funding strategy over five cycles and update the network to create an outcome distribution.

Three funding strategies were compared for this experiment and all provide 22% more funding to the network overall. Direct Optimization funds author pairs with highest number of expected publications, and on average, increases publications by 92% and researcher recruitment by 17%; the Smart Small World Rule funds author pairs that, once paired, maximize the number of other researchers who have collaborated with either coauthor, and this increases publication rates by 113% and researcher recruitment by 18%; the Fair Small World Rule, which funds author pairs that reduce the average number of steps between any two researchers across the entire network, increases publication rates by 111% and researcher recruitment by 22%. Finally, providing no additional funding reduces publications and the number of researchers.

Overall, this experiment suggests that research funding that strengthens overall research community connectivity generates the highest levels of research productivity and researcher recruitment.

The Value Added-Exports Puzzle and Global Value Chains (F1, F4)

Zhe Chen
,
University of International Business and Economics
Yoshinori Kurokawa
,
University of Tsukuba

Abstract

While most OECD countries experienced declines in manufacturing value added relative to GDP over 1970-2001, they have experienced increases in manufacturing exports relative to GDP during the same period. Bergoeing, Kehoe, Strauss-Kahn, and Yi (AER 2004) documented this "value added-exports puzzle" and predicted that vertical specialization can explain it. Using the 1995-2018 data for 22 OECD countries and 17 manufacturing industries, we investigate whether vertical specialization, or global value chain (GVC) participation, and GVC position (up/downstreamness) can explain the puzzle. Our regressions show (1) vertical specialization, measured by the GVC backward linkage, increases gross exports and decreases value added at the country-industry level; (2) that measured by the GVC forward linkage has the opposite effects; and (3) less upstreamness (more downstreamness) also contributes to the puzzle.

The Value of Weather Forecasts: Evidence from Labor Responses to Accurate Versus Inaccurate Temperature Forecasts in China (Q0)

Yuqi Song
,
University of Chicago

Abstract

This paper evaluates the economic value of the accurate information of weather forecasts, a common and popular public good continuously invested by the government in modern societies. Labor decisions of hours worked per day are found to respond to day-ahead temperature forecasts, and only forecasts that are perceived as accurate are incorporated. From this, improvements in weather forecast accuracy generate large social benefits. With the setting in China, where the developing economy provides a trusted uniform source of national weather forecasts to its large population, I collect a novel dataset of the city-level day-ahead weather forecasts directly broadcast to the general public through video transcription for over 2000 days of the country's popular weather forecasts TV program. Constructing the metric of perceived forecast accuracy based on the medium-run root mean squared errors of historical temperature forecasts, I run a regression with the interaction of forecasts and forecast accuracy to estimate how labor response to forecast temperatures varies under different levels of forecast accuracy across time and space. My main regression results suggest large reductions of labor supply up to 4.5 and 1.2 hours per day under hot (above 30C) and medium-cold (15C-25C) daily maximum temperature forecasts only when these forecasts are accurate. Instead, when forecasts are inaccurate, those negative labor responses diminish. Using a simple utility maximization model for the next-day labor decision and evaluating with the regression estimates, I estimate a large marginal value of forecast accuracy of 930 2015 Yuan (148 USD) per capita per year. For the entire country, an average 3.9% increase in forecast accuracy from 2011 to 2015 generates a partial social benefit from the labor sector alone at 25.3 billion 2015 Yuan (4.03 billion USD) per year, about covering the annual cost of the national weather forecasting system.

Trend and Cyclical Variation in Markups: Demand-Side Evidence from U.S. Grocery Stores (E3, L8)

Tengda Gong
,
University of California-Davis
Bulat Gafarov
,
University of California-Davis
Jens Hilscher
,
University of California-Davis

Abstract

This paper documents substantial time variations in price elasticities of demand and implied markups for the US food retail sector. First, we employ a Hausman-type price IV to estimate store-level own-price elasticities at the market-good-year level, using scanner data of grocery stores from 2001 to 2020. Then, we efficiently aggregate these data annually to estimate a common trend and cyclical variation in elasticities. Finally, we impute nationwide store-level price-cost markups from annual elasticities under a monopolistic pricing rule. We find (i) a long-run increase in grocery store markups of 3.9% per year in the past two decades and (ii) a short-term decrease of 13.6% per year during aggregate demand contractions. We show the underlying elasticities are largely driven by socioeconomic and market factors, such as real GDP, housing prices, population, and product differentiation.

Trusting the Algorithm: A Decision Under Ambiguity (D8, D9)

Qiong Xia
,
INSEAD
Ahmed Guecioueur
,
INSEAD
Enrico Diecidue
,
INSEAD

Abstract

We measure decision-makers' (DMs') beliefs and ambiguity attitudes, including ambiguity aversion and a-insensitivity, about the accuracy rates of human and machine learning (ML) financial analysts in a laboratory experiment. DMs do not differ in their ambiguity attitudes toward the two analyst types. The subjective beliefs held by DMs predict both self-reported attitudinal trust and their observed trust behavior. We find that a-insensitivity moderates this effect. However, ambiguity aversion does not significantly impact trust. A-insensitivity decreases with greater financial literacy and relative familiarity with an analyst type. Our findings shed light on the determinants of financial DMs' trust in ML algorithms.

Two-Child Policy, Housing Wealth Stratification and Multi-Child Birth Rate (Z1, R0)

Jing Huang
,
Shanghai Normal University
Minrong Zheng
,
Metropolitan State University
Guangcan Cui
,
Shanghai Normal University

Abstract

This study examines the effect of housing wealth stratification on the multi-child birth rate after implementation of the universal two-child policy in China. The primary housing wealth stratification measure used in this paper is a categorical variable representing five strata: no-house stratum and four strata classified by net housing assets. Based on this measure, our analysis on the 2018 data discloses a crowding-out effect in the no-house stratum, and a wealth effect in the highest housing wealth stratum when the wives are highly educated. More interesting, we find that families in the two middle housing wealth strata tend to have one child only. The above findings reflect the two effects of the housing price on the birth rate proposed by Becker and the Chinese societal complexity in birth culture and real estate market. Above findings mainly exist in areas with strong family inheritance concepts. Moreover, the universal two-child policy can increase the multi-child birth rate, but this influence doesn’t vary significantly cross housing wealth strata. This paper is a useful complement to the literature on the nexus between the housing market and birth rate, as well as provides theoretical supports for how to tackle the low birth problem while remaining a stable real estate market.

Unintended Resource Misallocation from Water Supply Forecasts due to Prediction Error and Bounded Rationality: Evidence from Streamflow Forecasts and Cultivation Decisions in Nevada (Q2, D9)

Gi-Eu Lee
,
National Cheng Kung University
Loretta Singletary
,
University of Nevada-Reno

Abstract

With increasingly variable water supply due to climate change, there are advocates for providing more accurate water forecasts so that farmers relying on these waters for irrigation can better manage their production risk and optimize their water resource allocation. As forecast errors are unavoidable due to technological and research capacity constraints, in addition to weather events, reliance on earlier streamflow forecasts can inadvertently bias cultivation decisions. In addition, farmers may exhibit cognitive bias, potentially an anchoring effect, if they perceive the forecasts to be further revised before the irrigation season. While prior studies highlight the benefits of using such forecasts in agricultural production decisions, this paper investigates if and how forecast errors and farmers’ cognitive biases may distort their cultivation decisions. We identify these effects by using a unique farm-level panel dataset from Carson River Valley, Nevada, where farmers face highly heterogenous water supply risks and thus are incentivized to rely upon USDA’s streamflow forecasts. After controlling for farm-level heterogeneity and time fixed effects, we find that an overestimate of streamflow per 1000 acre-feet (K-AF) leads to a 5.94% increase in water used to irrigate that valley’s major commercial crop, alfalfa. Empirical results also verify the existence of cognitive bias in making cultivation decisions. That is, if a later revised forecast, released in March, projects further increased streamflow by 1 K-AF, farmers reduce their irrigated acreage by about 5.2%, resulting in unintended resource misallocation. Our findings imply that there are economic costs associated with reliance upon streamflow forecasts, suggesting the need for policy intervention to improve the accuracy and communication of such forecasts to minimize distorted cultivation decisions.

Unveiling the Dynamic Impact of Protected Areas: An Event Study Analysis to Assess Conservation Effectiveness (Q5, C1)

Thiago Morello
,
Federal University of ABC, LEEP, and University of Exeter
Paula Pereda
,
University of São Paulo
Ana Pessoa
,
Brazilian National Space Research Institute
Liana Anderson
,
National Center for Monitoring and Early Warning of Natural Disasters

Abstract

Previous studies assessing the effectiveness of protected areas (PA) in conserving natural landscapes have seldom explored within variation as means for attenuating the influence of non-observables. That would avoid a bias, as revealed by the post-matching differences-in-differences strategy employed in this paper, of at least 1.8 fold the bias avoided by matching alone, the usual approach in literature. Another source of bias commonly ignored is the staggered implementation of PAs. This was addressed by matching protected land pixels at group-time level with pixels that were never protected, with group defined by the year in which protection began. Which also pointed to a considerable bias. The pixel-level dataset analyzed covered the entire 6 million km² of the Amazon Basin over 18 years. It included two metrics of environmental performance, deforestation and fires, the latter a source of forest degradation. PAs’ effectiveness was attested after mitigating the aforementioned biases. Nevertheless, the impact was small for fires, and both metrics exhibited significant heterogeneity across levels of government and protection stringency. Subnational PAs had a stronger impact on containing fires, but no impact on deforestation. Conversely, national PAs had a larger impact on deforestation and no clear effect on fires. Whereas severely restrictive PAs avoided deforestation but not fires, the moderately restrictive did not avoid any of them. The results were robust to Rosenbaum's hidden bias test. Important policy recommendations follow, whose implementation would avoid large-scale emissions of greenhouse gases. First, enforcement should be strengthened against non-subsistence fires in national PAs and against deforestation in subnational PAs. Second, inside PAs, the replacement of agricultural burnings could be subsidized and fire control requirements be better enforced. Third, policymakers should collect and publish georeferenced information on policies implemented alongside PAs to provide a more accurate evaluation of PAs.

User Entrepreneurship and Firm Employment Growth (M2, L2)

Zheng Tian
,
Pennsylvania State University
Luyi Han
,
Pennsylvania State University
Timothy R. Wojan
,
National Science Foundation
Stephan J. Goetz
,
Pennsylvania State University
Anil Rupasingha
,
U.S. Department of Agriculture Economic Research Service

Abstract

This study examines the employment growth of firms founded by user entrepreneurs in comparison with other types of entrepreneurship. In contrast to conventional entrepreneurship in which individuals start businesses with a process of recognizing, evaluating, and exploiting business opportunities, user entrepreneurs start businesses for themselves by leveraging their own experiences and needs as users of a product or service, and they enter markets after the utility has been demonstrated through community feedbacks. Studying user entrepreneurship has policy significance as a means to promote and “democratize” innovation, and to withstand negative shocks from economic crises. Although recent studies on user entrepreneurship have been proliferated in terms of conceptualization and industry case studies, no prior study uses econometric models to examine the growth performance of firms with user entrepreneurship. In this paper, using the establishment-level microdata from the 2014 Rural Establishment Innovation Survey and the 1990–2019 vintages of the Longitudinal Business Database, we estimate the growth trajectories of firms with various types of entrepreneurship origins using random coefficient growth models and quantile regression models. The results of both econometric models, as well as descriptive analysis, suggest that firms founded by user entrepreneurs have higher employment growth rates in the first five years, and slower growth rates in the ensuing years. Particularly, in the upper quantile regression model, firms founded by user entrepreneurs have statistically significant faster growth in the first five-year period than those with conventional entrepreneurship. We propose three reasons for such results: (1) the contribution of firms founded by professional user entrepreneurs, (2) niche market advantages for formation of a targeted market and limitations for expanding to a wider audience, and (3) a scaling problem that constrains the optimal size of firms founded by end-user user entrepreneurs.

Values for Grandchildren: The Role of Grandparents in Intergenerational Transmission of Income (D1, J6)

Pietro Campa
,
University of Geneva
Giacomo De Giorgi
,
University of Geneva, BGSE, CEPR and IPA
Mauricio Prado
,
Copenhagen Business School
Battista Severgnini
,
Copenhagen Business School

Abstract

Grandparents are fundamental pillars of families and societies. They transmit skills and values to the future generations, invest in parental human capital, provide childcare throughout direct interactions, and are bequest givers. The aim of this paper is to analyze and quantify the impact of grandparents’ socio-economic situation during different periods of their working age on the income of the two subsequent generations. For doing this, we exploit the universe of the Danish population from 1980 to 2019 and their correspondent detailed individual information on demographics, education, income, wealth, and labor history. We focus on dynasties composed by grandparents, parents and children.
Inspired by the theoretical model on inequality transmission across multiple generations introduced by Solon (2014), our empirical model studies whether individual income can be explained by the parents’ and grandparents’ income. Using as instrument the firms’ mass lay-off events in the middle of grandparents’ career (i.e., between the ages of 45-55 years old), we find that grandparents’ income has a positive and significant effect on grandchildren’s one and can be quantified in about 25% of the total effect of the intergenerational transmission. This direct effect is beyond the indirect effect of grandparents through parents’ income. In addition, we identify larger effects once maternal grandmothers or retired grandparents living close to the grandchildren are considered.

Voters' Cognitive Bias and Strategic Candidate Entry (D9, P0)

Xuan Li
,
Boston University

Abstract

This paper studies whether voters' cognitive biases affect the entry decisions of candidates. In down-ballot elections, voters tend to choose the first-listed candidate due to choice fatigue and the primacy effect. Potential candidates with early-alphabet surnames, expecting positional advantages on an alphabetically ordered ballot, may be more likely to run for political office. Using within-state variation in ballot order rules (i.e., from alphabetically ordered ballots to randomized/rotated ballots) and data on 306,808 candidates running for U.S. state legislatures from 1967 to 2016, I show that alphabetically ordered ballots increase (decrease) the share of candidates with early-alphabet surnames (late-alphabet surnames) by 6.5\% (16.3\%). Moreover, alphabetically ordered ballots may unintentionally impact minority candidate entry due to their distinctive distribution of surname initials.

Warm Up by Revelation to Cool Down in Competition: Strategic Provision of Relationship-Sensitive Information (D8, L1)

Xiaokuai Shao
,
Beijing Foreign Studies University
Jie Zheng
,
Tsinghua University

Abstract

In markets where variety-seeking consumers hold horizontally heterogeneous preferences over competing brands, product differentiation enhances brand loyalty while product complementarity stimulates multi-brand purchase. In a world of complete information, when the latter force exceeds the former, firms switch their pricing strategies from being "responsive" as Bertrand competitors, to being "independent" as local monopolies. However, when the information about product complementarity becomes asymmetric, the uninformed firm is unable to price conditional on the above two types of relationships. We characterize the pricing equilibrium and information sharing incentives between rival firms when such relationship-sensitive information is asymmetric. At the pricing stage, the informed seller can choose to charge a monopolistic price independently, or respond to the rival's price --- the latter option is more attractive if a higher price can be induced. We show that, the informed seller is willing to share (resp., conceal) the information if products turn to be substitutes (resp., complements) such that competition (resp., independence) is going to take place. Moreover, the informed seller keeps silent unconditionally if the degree of complementarity is possibly high enough. Consequently, it is socially efficient to make the product complementarity information public. Our study provides new insights on data sharing strategies between platform retail verticals and third-party sellers when they supply complementary services.

What Assets Should the Central Bank Purchase in a Quantitative Easing Program? (E5, E4)

Hongtao Hui
,
McGill University
Francisco Ruge-Murcia
,
McGill University

Abstract

We develop a production network economy with two heterogeneous sectors. Private-owned firms in each sector issue sector private bonds. There are also government bonds issued by the fiscal authority. In a quantitative easing program, the central bank purchases a specific kind of bond to stimulate the economy. Based on a 2-sector DSGE model, this paper finds that government bond purchases have the weakest stimulative effect, but the lowest inflation cost for a constant scale of asset purchase. The model shows that purchases of one specific sector bond should generate identical responses with purchases of the other sector if the steady credit spread is identical in each sector. The production network provides a coordination system that makes the two sectors co-move when bonds from a specific sector are purchased by the central bank. Heterogeneity in credit spread is the reason for differences in purchasing different bonds. Purchasing bonds with higher credit spreads would stimulate higher output and cause higher inflation.

What Happens If You Ask Your Legislator on Police Violence? Experimental Evidence on Political Elites’ Responsiveness before the U.S. 2020 Elections (C9, J1)

Ekkehard Andres Kohler
,
University of Siegen
Marius D May
,
University of Siegen

Abstract

We analyze the effect of an email request from a fake voter who is either black or white and either a BLM supporter or opponent on the legislators' response behaviour during the 2020 United States state legislative elections.
Our experiment is motivated Jones et al. (2022) who show that strategically-minded candidates do not converge to the centre as the Downsian median voter theorem suggests if they are confronted with a polarized electorate.
We test this prediction with fake email information requests from voters who are explicitly stating that they are in support of (or in opposition to) BLM and do (not) believe that blacks are killed disproportionately often in police encounters. In addition to the effect of polarized voter preferences, we are interested in examining its interplay with the racial discrimination behaviour of political elites in this charged context and therefore vary the racial background of the sender and contribute our findings to the discrimination literature (Bertrand and Duflo 2017) and Costa (2017).
We present three main findings. First, legislators do not racially discriminate against black voters in this specific experiment. Second, they are more responsive if the prevalence of fatalities supports the incumbent's partisan stance on BLM. Third, the more salient the topic “Blacks” in the district the more alert its incumbent is to reply to the email.

When Credit Expansions Become Troublesome: The Story of Investor Sentiments (E5, G2)

Eddie Gerba
,
Bank of England and London School of Economics
Johannes Poeschl
,
Danish National Bank
Danilo Leiva-León
,
European Central Bank and Bank of Spain

Abstract

Identifying the underlying driver of credit cycles is crucial for prudential regulation. We show in a model that investor sentiments result in excessive asset price movements, leading to sharp credit reversals. Motivated by this, we decompose fluctuations in stock prices into fundamental and noise shocks and estimate the impulse responses of credit. Both shocks lead to a credit expansion, but only a noise shock results in a reversal if the anticipated shock fails to realize. We partition the transmission in a low-vs-high risk premium environment. We identify a novel debt overhang channel as important for the propagation of noise shocks.

When Do Price Caps Increase Consumer Welfare? Evidence from Uruguayan Retail Data (L1, L5)

Stefan Weiergraeber
,
Indiana University
Jose Manuel Paz y Mino
,
Catholic University of Uruguay

Abstract

We study empirically the impact of price cap policies on equilibrium prices and consumer welfare for a large number of consumer packaged goods (CPG) markets. We develop and estimate a structural search model using a novel and comprehensive data set on daily CPG prices and the locations of all grocery retailers in Uruguay from 2019 to 2021. We find that the distribution of consumer search costs changes significantly over time and that a price cap policy in May 2020 had heterogeneous effects on consumers. While many consumers benefited from the policy, some consumer types, many of which are typically associated with vulnerable demographic groups, suffered under the price caps. Policy makers often consider imposing price caps when they have concerns about exploitative practices by firms. Recently, such concerns existed during the early stages of the Covid-19 pandemic in grocery markets or during the first half of 2022 in many energy markets. Theoretically, the effect of a price cap on equilibrium prices is ambiguous. We show that the total effect of a price cap policy depends on the exact shape of the search cost distribution, and is therefore an important empirical question. We contribute to a better understanding of the effects of price caps and highlight how such policies can have unintended negative consequences. Our model extends the classical search framework by incorporating the effects of price caps on search effort and firms’ pricing. In a series of counterfactuals, we investigate a period of voluntary and temporary price caps that were agreed on by the several of the largest retailers in May 2020. We simulate how equilibrium prices and consumer search would have evolved, if the price caps had been implemented differently or not at all.

When It Hurts the Most: Timing of Parental Job Loss and a Child’s Education (J1, D1)

Marco Ovidi
,
Catholic University of the Sacred Heart
Paul Bingley
,
VIVE Copenhagen
Lorenzo Cappellari
,
Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

Abstract

We investigate the stages of childhood at which parental job loss is more consequential for child's end-of-school achievement. Using three decades of Danish registry data, we link plant closures to children of displaced workers and their test scores at the end of compulsory schooling. Exposed children are compared to peers of the same cohort and gender with similar parental working histories in the pre-closure year, selected through a matching algorithm. For matched control children, we define “placebo” plant closure events as the same age and calendar year in which the treated peer is exposed to parental plant closure. In addition, we use children above school-leaving age at the time of real or placebo parental closure to control for age-invariant selection into parental displacement. The negative effects of parental job loss on education are largest among children exposed to the shock during infancy (age 0-1), reducing their probability of taking tests and their achievement conditional on test-taking. While disappearing in middle childhood, negative effects are observed with weaker magnitudes among children exposed in adolescence (age 12-16). Results are driven by children with below-median family income at baseline and are concentrated in the lower part of the achievement distribution. Investigating potential mechanisms, we show that treatment effects are strongly correlated with family income drops for children exposed before age 5. We additionally provide suggestive evidence that increased parental time investment may partly compensate for income shocks. Our results imply that, even in a country with generous benefits and a strong safety net, parental job loss may hinder children’s human capital and increase concerns about the intergenerational transmission of economic inequality. Special attention from policymakers should be devoted to workers with young children that are at risk of displacement and to less-resourced children at risk of experiencing family income shocks.

Who Bears Climate-Related Physical Risk? (R0)

Natee Amornsiripanitch
,
Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia
David Wylie
,
Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia

Abstract

This paper combines data on current and future property-level physical risk from major climate-related perils (storms, floods, hurricanes, and wildfires) that owner-occupied single-family residences face with data on local economic characteristics to study the geographic and demographic distribution of such risks in the contiguous United States. Current expected damage from climate-related perils is approximately $19 billion per year. Severe convective storms and inland floods account for almost half of the expected damage. The central and southern parts of the U.S. are most exposed to climate-related physical risk, with hurricane-exposed areas on the Gulf and South Atlantic coasts being the riskiest areas. Relative to currently low-risk areas, currently high-risk areas have lower household incomes, lower labor market participation rates, and lower education attainment, suggesting that the distribution of climate-related physical risk is correlated with economic inequality. By 2050, under business-as-usual emissions, average expected damage is projected to increase monotonically with current average expected damage, which implies that long-term policies that aim to mitigate climate-related physical risk are likely to be progressive.

Why Participate? Understanding the Drivers of Citizen Complaints during China’s Environmental Inspections (Q5, H7)

Mengying Wu
,
Carnegie Mellon University

Abstract

This paper identifies drivers of citizen engagement in the bottom-up monitoring program and how past contact with local bureaucrats influences future citizen participation in a dynamic setting. Exploring regional differences at the prefecture-city level, I discover city and plant characteristics that affect citizen participation. During environmental inspections, cities with low environmental performance at baseline receive more complaints per capita. However, citizens’ complaints can not successfully pinpoint the dirtier polluters. Due to the knowledge-intensive nature of identifying pollution, if the central authorities wish to promote transparency and employ bottom-up monitoring as an information-gathering tool, additional training and resources may need to be supplied to individuals to ensure accurate and appropriate reporting. I also test if citizens’ participation in environmental monitoring programs is “path-dependent”. I ask if citizens’ willingness to file complaints is dependent on the environmental effectiveness of the original round. Exploiting the natural experiment of the two rounds, I observe a decrease in air-related com- plaints received in the look-back round if measured air pollutants return to baseline levels after the original round concludes. This suggests the long-term effectiveness of the environmental protection program is necessary for the central government to be perceived as responsive to environmental concerns raised by citizens. If the complaint channels cease to provide individuals with agency, the central government may not be able to reap the legitimacy benefits in the long run.

Will Low-Carbon Transformation Cause Income Inequality? Empirical Evidence from the Low-Carbon City Pilot Policy (Q5, O1)

Boyang Chen
,
China Agricultural University and University of Edinburgh
Dong Liang
,
China Agricultural University
Yu Liu
,
Peking University

Abstract

As a profound systemic economic and social transformation, the deepening of China’s low-carbon transformation will inevitably have a remarkable impact on social issues such as income and equity. Based on panel data of China’s prefecture-level cities from 2007 to 2020, this study calculates the income inequality index of cities in China using county and district-level nightlight data and empirically estimates the impact of China’s low-carbon city pilot policy on income inequality through the difference-in-differences model. The study shows that the low-carbon city pilot policy can substantially alleviate the income inequality in cities, mechanistic analysis reveals that the alleviating effect of policy on income inequality is mainly sourced by the increasing employment, whereas the skill premium mechanism promotes the income inequality in cities. Further research found a heterogeneous impact of the pilot policy on income inequality, and its mitigation effect on income inequality was more significant in eastern and high-human-capital cities. Findings remain valid after a series of robustness tests, such as parallel trends and placebo tests These results provide insightful empirical evidence for reducing income inequality in cities and promoting sustainable development goals in the process of low-carbon transformation.

Working from Home and Durable Good Consumption Dynamics (E2, J2)

Yuanzhe Liu
,
University of California-Santa Barbara

Abstract

In the past, economic recessions have typically resulted in a decrease or slowdown in durable goods consumption. However, during and after the COVID-19 pandemic, durable goods consumption was surprisingly strong. In this paper, I demonstrate that this increase cannot be explained solely by the substitution between market nondurable consumption and household production, as many nondurable goods and services are highly specialized and cannot be easily replaced by household production. The pandemic led to a significant increase in the number of people working from home and the average hours spent doing so, a trend that is expected to persist even after the pandemic. There is a strong link between working from home and durable goods consumption. To capture this relationship, I propose a new model that allows households to endogenously allocate their time between working from home, working in the office, and household production. Using a Bayesian approach and Kalman smoother, I estimate the model and decompose the durable goods consumption increase in 2020-2021 into different channels. I find that working from home can account for up to one-third of the increase, while substitution between nondurable and durable goods can account for another one-third. The COVID-19 pandemic has permanently altered how households consume and allocate their time, and a significant portion of workers will continue to work from home or in hybrid models. Therefore, working from home is likely to remain an important factor driving durable goods consumption.