The Review of Economic Studies (unofficial) Profile
The Review of Economic Studies (unofficial)

@RevEconStud

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The Review of Economic Studies (REStud) is a leading economics journal published by the OUP. This is a feed of the latest REStud accepted papers. Paused.

United Kingdom
Joined December 2021
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@RevEconStud
The Review of Economic Studies (unofficial)
2 years
Selfish Corporations. We study how perceptions of corporate responsibility influence policy preferences and the effectiveness of corporate communication when agents have imperfect memory recall. Using a new large-scale survey of U.S. citizens on…
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@RevEconStud
The Review of Economic Studies (unofficial)
2 years
Deadly Debt Crises: COVID-19 in Emerging Markets. Emerging markets have experienced large human and economic costs from COVID- 19, and their tight fiscal space has limited the support extended to their citizens. We study the impact of an epidemi…
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@RevEconStud
The Review of Economic Studies (unofficial)
2 years
Vacancy Durations and Entry Wages: Evidence from Linked Vacancy-Employer-Employee Data. This paper explores the relationship between the duration of a vacancy and the starting wage of a new job, using linked data on vacancies, the posting establ…
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@RevEconStud
The Review of Economic Studies (unofficial)
2 years
Bilateral Trade Imbalances. If sectoral trade flows obey structural gravity, countries’ bilateral trade imbalances are the result of macro trade imbalances, “triangular trade”, or pairwise asymmetric trade barriers. Using data for 40 major econo…
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@RevEconStud
The Review of Economic Studies (unofficial)
2 years
Optimal Long-Term Health Insurance Contracts: Characterization, Computation, and Welfare Effects. Reclassification risk is a major concern in health insurance where contracts are typically one year in length but health shocks often persist for m…
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@RevEconStud
The Review of Economic Studies (unofficial)
2 years
Mortgage Design and Slow Recoveries. The Role of Recourse and Default. We show that mortgage recourse systems, by discouraging default, magnify the impact of nominal rigidities. They cause deeper and more persistent recessions. This mechanism …
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@RevEconStud
The Review of Economic Studies (unofficial)
2 years
Demand and Welfare Analysis in Discrete Choice Models with Social Interactions. Many real-life settings of individual choice involve social interactions, causing targeted policies to have spillover effects. This paper develops novel empirical to…
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@RevEconStud
The Review of Economic Studies (unofficial)
2 years
Income growth and the distributional effects of urban spatial sorting. We explore the impact of rising incomes at the top of the distribution on spatial sorting patterns within large U.S. cities. We develop and quantify a spatial model of a city w…
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@RevEconStud
The Review of Economic Studies (unofficial)
2 years
Fair Matching under Constraints: Theory and Applications. This paper studies a general model of matching with constraints. Observing that a stable matching typically does not exist, we focus on feasible, individually rational, and fair matchings. …
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@RevEconStud
The Review of Economic Studies (unofficial)
2 years
Diversity in Schools: Immigrants and the Educational Performance of U.S.-Born Students. We study the effect of exposure to immigrants on the educational outcomes of U.S.-born students, using a unique dataset combining population-level birth and sc…
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@RevEconStud
The Review of Economic Studies (unofficial)
2 years
The 2000s Housing Cycle With 2020 Hindsight: A Neo-Kindlebergerian View. With “2020 hindsight,” the 2000s housing cycle is not a boom-bust but a boom-bust- rebound. Using a spatial equilibrium regression in which house prices are determined by inc…
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@RevEconStud
The Review of Economic Studies (unofficial)
2 years
The Value of Data Records. Many e-commerce platforms use buyers’ personal data to intermediate their transactions with sellers. How much value do such intermediaries derive from the data record of each single individual?. #economics
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@RevEconStud
The Review of Economic Studies (unofficial)
2 years
Beyond Dividing the Pie: Multi-Issue Bargaining in the Laboratory. Olivier Bochet, New York University Abu Dhabi, Manshu Khanna, Peking University HSBC, and Simon Siegenthaler, University of Texas at Dallas. #economics
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@RevEconStud
The Review of Economic Studies (unofficial)
2 years
Liberty, Security, and Accountability: The Rise and Fall of Illiberal Democracies. Gabriele Gratton, UNSW Business School and Barton E. Lee, ETH Zurich. #economics
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@RevEconStud
The Review of Economic Studies (unofficial)
2 years
Job Matching with Subsidy and Taxation. Fuhito Kojima, University of Tokyo, Ning Sun, Southern University of Science and Technology and Nanjing Audit University, and Ning Neil Yu, Nanjing Audit University. #economics
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@RevEconStud
The Review of Economic Studies (unofficial)
2 years
Are Executives in Short Supply? Evidence from Death Events. Julien Sauvagnat, Bocconi University and CEPR and Fabiano Schivardi, Luiss University, EIEF and CEPR. #economics
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@RevEconStud
The Review of Economic Studies (unofficial)
2 years
The Size and Life-cycle Growth of Plants: The Role of Productivity, Demand and Wedges. Marcela Eslava, Universidad de Los Andes, John Haltiwanger, University of Maryland, and Nicolas Urdaneta, Universidad de Los Andes. #economics
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@RevEconStud
The Review of Economic Studies (unofficial)
2 years
Salience and Taxation with Imperfect Competition. Kory Kroft, University of Toronto and NBER, Jean-William P. Laliberté, University of Calgary, René Lael-Vizcaíno, Bank of Mexico, and Matthew J. Notowidigdo, University of Chicago and NBER. #eco
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@RevEconStud
The Review of Economic Studies (unofficial)
2 years
Credit Access, Selection, and Incentives in a Market for Asset Collateralized Loans: Evidence from Kenya. William Jack, Georgetown University, Michael Kremer, University of Chicago, Joost de Laat, Utrecht University, and Tavneet Suri, MIT Sloan Sc…
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@RevEconStud
The Review of Economic Studies (unofficial)
2 years
Diagnostic Business Cycles. Francesco Bianchi, Johns Hopkins University, CEPR & NBER, Cosmin Ilut, Duke University & NBER, and Hikaru Saijo, University of California, Santa Cruz. #economics
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