The NBER Digest
Women Who Matriculate at Highly Selective Schools
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New NBER Research
17 April 2019
Political Parties Matter ... for their Unfunded Pensions
Unfunded pension benefits, especially those for police and fire-fighters, grow faster under mayors who are members of the Democratic than the Republican Party, according to a study by Christian Dippel.
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16 April 2019
School Finance Equalization Increases Mobility
Policies that equalize revenues-per-student across school districts significantly increase the upward mobility of low-income students, Barbara Biasi. These effects are due in part to a narrowing gap in college attendance between high and low income students.
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15 April 2019
Wage Equalization and Regional Misallocation
If Italy, where wages are based on nationwide collective bargaining, adopted the German system, which allows for local bargaining, aggregate employment would rise by 11 percent, and earnings would increase by more than 7 percent, according to estimates by Tito Boeri, Andrea Ichino, Enrico Moretti, and Johanna Posch.
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NBER in the News
Warning people off tainted drinking water may have killed children
Vox
April 15, 2019
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Yes, Abortion Restrictions Can Reduce Abortion Rates
National Review
April 15, 2019
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Math Field Least Expensive to Teach, Electrical Engineering the Highest
Campus Technology: Campus Enterprise Networking & Infrastructure
April 15, 2019
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It makes sense to lend to governments
MoneyWeek
April 14, 2019
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Kartje: Should the Rams trade out of the first round of the NFL draft?
Orange County Register
April 13, 2019
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Vox
April 15, 2019
Read the Research
Yes, Abortion Restrictions Can Reduce Abortion Rates
National Review
April 15, 2019
Read the Research
Math Field Least Expensive to Teach, Electrical Engineering the Highest
Campus Technology: Campus Enterprise Networking & Infrastructure
April 15, 2019
Read the Research
It makes sense to lend to governments
MoneyWeek
April 14, 2019
Read the Research or a non-technical summary
Kartje: Should the Rams trade out of the first round of the NFL draft?
Orange County Register
April 13, 2019
Read the Research
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Control of Infectious Diseases Benefited Both Genders;
Research Explores Why Women's Gains Were Greater
Before the 20th century, women in the United States did not live as long as men; today they live significantly longer, here and in most of the world. Control of infectious diseases extended life expectancy for both genders, but appears to have benefited women more. Research by Adriana Lleras-Muney of UCLA and Claudia Goldin of Harvard, both NBER research associates, identifies a possible reason.
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The NBER Reporter
A Central Focus of the NBER's Program on Education:
Exploring the Productivity of of American Universities
When earnings are used to measure benefits, the productivity of a dollar is fairly similar across a wide array of selective postsecondary institutions in the United States, suggesting that market forces compel some amount of efficiency among selective institutions, according to research discussed in a new report on the NBER's program on Education. In contrast, market forces appear to exert little productivity discipline on nonselective schools, possibly because those schools' students are poorly informed investors or rely greatly on third parties to pay their tuition. The full report is in the new edition of the quarterly NBER Reporter. Also featured in this issue are articles on financial misconduct, survey expectations, patents and innovation, and charitable-giving behaviors.
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The NBER Bulletin on Health
First Edition of Free Bulletin on Health Features Study
of Medicare Advantage Effects on the Use of Opioids
Researchers exploring the role of health insurance design in reducing prescription opioid use in the United States find that Medicare Advantage plans are structured in a way that gives them greater opportunity than stand-alone Part D plans to affect opioid prescription rates. Counties with higher Medicare Advantage enrollment have lower opioid prescription rates, particularly from high-volume prescribers. The findings are featured in the new NBER Bulletin on Health. Also featured are studies of intergenerational wounds from the Civil War and the effects of air pollution on dementia. Another new bulletin, on retirement and disability research, is coming soon.
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A Look at What People Actually Are Consuming
Provides an Alternative Perspective on Inequality
Concern over sharp increases in income inequality has risen in recent years. But NBER Research Associate Bruce D. Meyer of the University of Chicago says income is not a good measure of real inequality and well-being. His research shows that — when measured in terms of consumption, what people actually have — inequality has declined for the lowest 20 percent of the distribution since 2005.
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