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Cash Transfers, Behavioral Changes, and Cognitive Development in Early Childhood: Evidence from a Randomized Experiment

By Karen Macours, Norbert Schady, and Renos Vakis

American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, April 2012

Cash transfer programs have become extremely popular in the developing world. A large literature analyzes their effects on schooling, health and nutrition, but relatively little is known about possible impacts on child development. This paper analyzes the...

Optimal Taxation in Theory and Practice

By N. Gregory Mankiw, Matthew Weinzierl, and Danny Yagan

Journal of Economic Perspectives, Fall 2009

The optimal design of a tax system is a topic that has long fascinated economic theorists and flummoxed economic policymakers. This paper explores the interplay between tax theory and tax policy. It identifies key lessons policymakers might take from the ...

Retrospectives: A Dismal Romantic

By Joseph Persky

Journal of Economic Perspectives, Fall 1990

Economists like to think of their discipline as queen of the social sciences. Unfortunately, our vocation is more likely to be berated as "the dismal science." This witticism has a checkered history. In the popular mind, economists are viewed as "dismal" ...

Validating Migration Responses to Flooding Using Satellite and Vital Registration Data

By Joyce J. Chen, Valerie Mueller, Yuanyuan Jia, and Steven Kuo-Hsin Tseng

American Economic Review, May 2017

Rainfall measures may be imperfect proxies for floods, given factors such as upstream water balance, proximity to rivers, and topography. We check the robustness of flooding-migration relationships by combining nationally-representative survey data with m...

Externalities in the Classroom: How Children Exposed to Domestic Violence Affect Everyone's Kids

By Scott E. Carrell and Mark L. Hoekstra

American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, January 2010

There is a widespread perception that externalities from troubled children are significant, though measuring them is difficult due to data and methodological limitations. We estimate the negative spillovers caused by children from troubled families by ...

Altruistic Capital

By Nava Ashraf and Oriana Bandiera

American Economic Review, May 2017

To understand altruistic behavior, we must understand the process through which altruism develops and is shaped by the agents' own choices and exogenous factors. We introduce the concept of altruistic capital, which grows with effort devoted to altruistic...