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Media Competition and News Diets

By Charles Angelucci, Julia Cagé, and Michael Sinkinson

American Economic Journal: Microeconomics, May 2024

Technological innovations like broadcast television and the internet challenge local newspapers' business model of bundling their local content with third-party content, such as wire national news. We examine how the entry of television affected newspaper...

Equity Concerns Are Narrowly Framed

By Christine L. Exley and Judd B. Kessler

American Economic Journal: Microeconomics, May 2024

Distributional decisions regularly involve multiple payoff components. In a series of experiments, we show that individuals sometimes exhibit narrow equity concerns: applying fairness preferences narrowly on a specific component of payoffs rather than on ...

Creating Moves to Opportunity: Experimental Evidence on Barriers to Neighborhood Choice

By Peter Bergman, Raj Chetty, Stefanie DeLuca, Nathaniel Hendren, Lawrence F. Katz, and Christopher Palmer

American Economic Review, May 2024

Low-income families often live in low-upward-mobility neighborhoods. We study why by using a randomized trial with housing voucher recipients that provided information, financial support, and customized search assistance to move to high-opportunity neighb...

On Binscatter

By Matias D. Cattaneo, Richard K. Crump, Max H. Farrell, and Yingjie Feng

American Economic Review, May 2024

Binscatter is a popular method for visualizing bivariate relationships and conducting informal specification testing. We study the properties of this method formally and develop enhanced visualization and econometric binscatter tools. These include estima...

The Returns to Public Library Investment

By Gregory Gilpin, Ezra Karger, and Peter Nencka

American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, May 2024

Local governments spend over $12 billion annually funding the operation of 15,427 public libraries in the United States, yet we know little about their effects. We use data describing the near universe of public libraries to show that public library capit...

Do Family Policies Reduce Gender Inequality? Evidence from 60 Years of Policy Experimentation

By Henrik Kleven, Camille Landais, Johanna Posch, Andreas Steinhauer, and Josef Zweimüller

American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, May 2024

Do family policies reduce gender inequality in the labor market? We contribute to this debate by investigating the joint impact of parental leave and childcare, using administrative data covering Austrian workers over more than half a century. We start by...

Hospital Queues, Patient Health, and Labor Supply

By Anna Godøy, Venke F. Haaland, Ingrid Huitfeldt, and Mark Votruba

American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, May 2024

Long waits for health care raise concerns about the consequences of delayed treatment. We use variation in queue congestion to estimate effects of wait time for orthopedic surgery. We do not find that longer wait times lead to increased health care utiliz...

The Gender Application Gap: Do Men and Women Apply for the Same Jobs?

By Jonas Fluchtmann, Anita M. Glenny, Nikolaj A. Harmon, and Jonas Maibom

American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, May 2024

Men and women tend to hold different jobs. Are these differences present already in the types of jobs men and women apply for? Using administrative data on job applications made by the universe of Danish unemployment insurance recipients, we provide evide...

Killing Prescriptions Softly: Low Emission Zones and Child Health from Birth to School

By Hannah Klauber, Felix Holub, Nicolas Koch, Nico Pestel, Nolan Ritter, and Alexander Rohlf

American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, May 2024

We examine the persistence of the impact of early-life exposure to air pollution on children's health from birth to school enrollment using administrative public health insurance records covering one-third of all children in Germany. For identification, w...