Search

Showing 6,661-6,680 of 17,591 items.

The Returns to Medical School: Evidence from Admission Lotteries

By Nadine Ketel, Edwin Leuven, Hessel Oosterbeek, and Bas van der Klaauw

American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, April 2016

We exploit admission lotteries to estimate the returns to medical school in the Netherlands. Using data from up to 22 years after the lottery, we find that in every single year after graduation doctors earn at least 20 percent more than people who end up ...

Giving Credit Where It Is Due

[Symposium: The Agenda for Development Economics]

By Abhijit V. Banerjee and Esther Duflo

Journal of Economic Perspectives, Summer 2010

In the last few years, field experiments have emerged as an attractive new tool in the effort to elaborate our understanding of economic issues relevant to poor countries and poor people. By enabling the researcher to precisely control the variation in th...

Nominal Exchange Rate Determinacy under the Threat of Currency Counterfeiting

By Pedro Gomis-Porqueras, Timothy Kam, and Christopher Waller

American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics, April 2017

We study the endogenous choice to accept fiat objects as media of exchange and their implications for nominal exchange rate determination. We consider a two-country environment with two currencies that can be used to settle any transactions. However, curr...

Does Tax-Collection Invariance Hold? Evasion and the Pass-Through of State Diesel Taxes

By Wojciech Kopczuk, Justin Marion, Erich Muehlegger, and Joel Slemrod

American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, May 2016

In simple models, the incidence of a tax is independent of the identity of the remitting party. We illustrate that this prediction fails to hold if opportunities for evasion differ across economic agents. Second, we estimate how the incidence of state ...