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Mental Retirement

[Symposium: Retirement and Work Choices]

By Susann Rohwedder and Robert J. Willis

Journal of Economic Perspectives, Winter 2010

Early retirement appears to have a significant negative impact on the cognitive ability of people in their early 60s that is both quantitatively important and causal. We obtain this finding using cross-nationally comparable survey data from the United Sta...

The New Economics of Religion

By Sriya Iyer

Journal of Economic Literature, June 2016

The economics of religion is a relatively new field of research in economics. This survey serves two purposes--it is backward-looking in that it traces the historical and sociological origins of this field, and it is forward-looking in that it examines th...

The Lessons of Limited Market-Oriented Reform

[Symposium: Economic Transition in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe]

By Thomas A. Wolf

Journal of Economic Perspectives, Fall 1991

The waves of reform and restructuring now engulfing most of Eastern Europe did not begin from the same starting point in each country. While they all share a common economic legacy—the traditional Soviet-type centrally planned economy—some cou...

The Credibility Revolution in Empirical Economics: How Better Research Design Is Taking the Con out of Econometrics

[Symposium: Con out of Economics]

By Joshua D. Angrist and Jörn-Steffen Pischke

Journal of Economic Perspectives, Spring 2010

Since Edward Leamer's memorable 1983 paper, "Let's Take the Con out of Econometrics," empirical microeconomics has experienced a credibility revolution. While Leamer's suggested remedy, sensitivity analysis, has played a role in this, we argue that the pr...

Clientelism in Indian Villages

By Siwan Anderson, Patrick Francois, and Ashok Kotwal

American Economic Review, June 2015

We study the operation of local governments (Panchayats) in rural Maharashtra, India, using a survey that we designed for this end. Elections are freely contested, fairly tallied, highly participatory, non-coerced, and lead to appointment of representativ...

Retrospectives: X-Efficiency

By Michael Perelman

Journal of Economic Perspectives, Fall 2011

In a 1966 article in the American Economic Review, Harvey Leibenstein introduced the concept of "X-efficiency": the gap between ideal allocative efficiency and actually existing efficiency. Leibenstein insisted that absent strong competitive pre...

Slicing Up Global Value Chains

[Symposium: Global Supply Chains]

By Marcel P. Timmer, Abdul Azeez Erumban, Bart Los, Robert Stehrer, and Gaaitzen J. de Vries

Journal of Economic Perspectives, Spring 2014

In this paper, we "slice up the global value chain" using a decomposition technique that has recently become feasible due to the development of the World Input-Output Database. We trace the value added by all labor and capital that is directly and indirec...