National Bureau of Economic Research
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From the NBER Bulletin on Health

Additional Educational Attainment Reduces Alzheimer’s Risk
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Alzheimer's Disease and Related Dementias (ADRD) represent a growing global health crisis, with cases projected to reach 131.5 million by 2050. The economic burden is substantial: In 2020, ADRD cost the United States $305 billion, with forecasts suggesting a threefold increase over the next 35 years in the absence of effective interventions. While previous research has associated lower educational attainment with increased ADRD risk, establishing causality has proved challenging due to potential confounding factors including childhood circumstances, socioeconomic background, and genetic predisposition.
In Education and Dementia Risk (NBER Working Paper 33430), researchers Silvia H. Barcellos, Leandro Carvalho, Kenneth Langa, Sneha Nimmagadda, and Patrick Turley leverage a natural experiment to investigate...

Measuring and Accounting for Environmental Public Goods: A National Accounts Perspective
news article
Nicholas Z. Muller, Eli Fenichel, and Mary Bohman, editors.
While the importance of natural resources and the contributions of the environment to welfare are apparent, traditional national income and wealth accounting practices do not measure or value environmental public goods.
This volume examines the conceptual and empirical basis for integrating natural capital — forests, oceans, and air — into the economic and environmental statistics that inform public policy. It offers innovative…
A research summary from the monthly NBER Digest

Government Support and Corporate Debt Restructuring
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Since the global financial crisis of 2008, policymakers have increasingly turned to unconventional stabilization policies when confronting large macroeconomic shocks. When the COVID-19 shock hit in 2020 and capital flows retrenched, such tools took center stage, especially across emerging markets with limited fiscal space.
In Firm Financing During Sudden Stops: Can Governments Substitute Markets? (NBER Working Paper 33283), Miguel Acosta-Henao, Andrés Fernández, Patricia Gomez-Gonzalez, and Şebnem Kalemli-Özcan study the effectiveness of new...
From the NBER Reporter: Research, program, and conference summaries

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

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

Immigrant Entrepreneurship in the US
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Immigrants to the US are more entrepreneurial than the native population and overrepresented among high-growth startups and venture-backed tech firms. In Immigrant Entrepreneurship: New Estimates and a Research Agenda (NBER Working Paper 32400), Saheel Chodavadia, Sari Pekkala Kerr, William Kerr, and Louis Maiden use business surveys and administrative employment records to provide new evidence on the prevalence and predictors of immigrant...
Featured Working Papers
Gillian Brunet, Eric Hilt, and Matthew S. Jaremski find that households residing in counties that had high World War I Liberty Bond participation had greater stock and bond ownership rates in later decades, and held more favorable opinions towards retirement saving and stock investment.
A study of promotion of academic economists by Donna K. Ginther, Shulamit Kahn, and Daria Milakhina finds persistent gender penalties, not explained by productivity, in promotion to both associate and full professorship.
The rollback of Mexico’s conditional cash transfer program Progresa led to immediate reductions in school enrollment, especially among high school boys, according to research by Fernanda Marquez-Padilla, Susan W. Parker, and Tom S. Vogl.
Zhengyang Jiang finds that countries more reliant on China’s lending are less exposed to the global financial cycle in exchange rates, asset prices, and capital flows than those that rely on the US and other nations, even though China primarily lends in US dollars.
For student loan borrowers without a college degree, suspending student debt payments in 2020 reduced average weekly hours worked by 1.34 (4 percent) over the March-to-December 2020 period, Diego A. Briones and Sarah Turner find. They do not find any effect on hours worked for borrowers with a college degree.
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