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Highlighted Publications


Does Exposure to More Aggressive Field Training Officers Increase Police Use of Force?
Adger, Ross, and Sloan (2025) examine whether field training officers (FTOs) influence police recruits’ later use of force. They study administrative data from the Dallas Police Department, linking 911 calls, force reports, and officer records from 2013–2019. Using quasi-random assignment of recruits to FTOs, they find that recruits trained by higher-force FTOs are significantly more likely to use force themselves. A one standard deviation increase in an FTO’s prior force pro
1 day ago


Who Really Benefits When Workers Sign Noncompete Agreements?
Starr (2026) examines whether noncompete clauses benefit or harm workers, firms, and markets. He synthesizes evidence from surveys, administrative datasets, natural experiments, and field experiments, including nationally representative worker surveys and state-level policy changes. The central question is whether noncompetes function as efficient contracts or anticompetitive restraints. He finds that noncompetes are widespread across occupations and typically reduce worker m
2 days ago


Are Price Caps on Russian Oil Exports Effective?
Cardoso, Salant, and Daubanes (2025) ask whether price caps on Russian oil exports reduce Russia’s profits once it can evade sanctions by expanding a “shadow fleet.” They use a calibrated dynamic simulation model based on global oil market data and observed export patterns. They find that sanctions reduce Russia’s profits by over 20%, but tighter caps can paradoxically increase long-run profits by raising global oil prices and accelerating fleet expansion. For example, a serv
3 days ago


Does Occupational Licensing in the United States Improve Quality or Simply Raise Costs?
Johnson (2026) examines whether occupational licensing in the United States improves service quality or mainly raises costs and wages for licensed workers. She draws on national labor force data, prior empirical studies, and policy evidence across occupations and states. The evidence shows that licensing is associated with higher wages—often around 15 percent—and in some cases about 4 percent higher over time, while its effects on employment are mixed. Most studies find littl
Mar 28


Do Non-Compete Agreements Reduce Innovation?
Reinmuth and Rockall (2025) examine whether stronger enforcement of non-compete agreements reduces innovation. They analyze U.S. state-level changes in enforceability from 1991–2016, using patent data from the USPTO, firm data from Compustat, and business formation data. They find that increases in enforceability significantly reduce innovation, with patenting declining by about 14% after five years for an average policy change. The negative effects are larger for more novel
Mar 27


Why Do Eligible Individuals Fail to Claim Benefits and How Can Policy Interventions Fix It?
Bendtsen (2026) examines whether reducing administrative burdens increases the take-up of social benefits. He analyzes data from 51 field experiments covering 187 treatment effect sizes across multiple countries and programs. Using a meta-analytic framework, he compares interventions that reduce learning demands (information) versus compliance demands (assistance), and distinguishes between application and actual receipt outcomes. He finds that interventions raise application
Mar 24


To What Extent Does Falling Fertility Undermine Economic Well-Being in the United States?
Weil (2026) asks how continued low fertility would affect the US standard of living, especially age-adjusted consumption per capita. He uses demographic models, stable population simulations, National Transfer Accounts data, and projections of fertility, age structure, and economic variables. He finds that lower fertility modestly reduces long-run living standards, mainly through higher old-age dependency, but this is partly offset by lower investment needs. Quantitatively, r
Mar 19


Do Water-Efficiency Building Codes Reduce Household Water Use?
Nemati (2026) asks whether water-efficiency building codes actually reduce household water use once homes are occupied. He examines monthly residential water billing records from two large water districts in Riverside County, California, linked to property characteristics and weather data. The study compares homes built just before and just after the California Green Building Standards Code (CALGreen) took effect. Nemati finds that homes built under CALGreen use about 11–12 p
Mar 17


Do Early Morning College Classes Reduce STEM Persistence and Shift Students Toward Lower-Earning Majors?
Yim (2026) asks whether being assigned to early morning college classes changes students’ academic outcomes and long-term academic paths. He analyzes administrative data from Purdue University covering several thousand freshman course enrollments after the university introduced a system that effectively randomized class times across course sections. The study links course schedules to grades, later STEM course enrollment, major choice, and expected earnings by major. Yim find
Mar 14


Can Global Migration Solve Labor Shortages in Aging Economies?
Clemens, Montenegro, and Pritchett (2019) ask whether international migration can help match countries with shrinking labor forces to those with rapidly growing working-age populations. They examine global demographic projections and economic data on labor supply, migration flows, and wage differences across countries. Their analysis shows that many high-income countries will experience large declines in working-age populations, while many lower-income countries will see larg
Mar 12


How Does the Death of a Parent Affect the Labor Market Outcomes of Adult Children?
Jensen and Zhang (2024) study whether the death of a parent affects the labor market outcomes of adult children. They ask whether parental loss leads to changes in earnings, employment, or work behavior. They analyze large administrative data linking Danish adults to their parents, tracking employment and earnings before and after a parent’s death. They find that parental death causes measurable declines in labor market performance. Adult children experience short-term earnin
Mar 11


Does Greater School Competition Lead Parents to Complain Less?
Hensvik and Jävervall (2024) ask whether increased school competition reduces parental “voice,” measured through formal complaints about schools. They analyze administrative complaint data from Sweden’s national education authorities and link it to changes in local school competition following the expansion of independent schools under the voucher system. They find that greater competition is associated with fewer parental complaints to regulators. A one–standard deviation in
Mar 10


Can Summer Bridge Programs Increase First-Year Completion and Second-Year Persistence in College?
Shakya (2026) asks whether participation in a pre-collegiate summer bridge program improves early college outcomes for economically disadvantaged and first-generation students. He analyzes student-level administrative data from a large U.S. public land-grant university, focusing on applicants to the Bridge Scholars Program between 2016 and 2022. Using a fuzzy regression discontinuity design based on a $16,000 Expected Family Contribution eligibility cutoff, he estimates causa
Mar 9


What Role Has U.S. Policy Played in Shaping Asian Immigration to the United States?
Postel (2026) asks how U.S. immigration policy has shaped the scale, composition, and socioeconomic outcomes of Asian immigration over time. She synthesizes historical census data, immigration records, and prior empirical studies covering the mid-1800s through 2019, focusing on major origin countries such as China, India, Japan, Korea, the Philippines, and Vietnam. She finds that policy shifts—especially the 1965 Immigration and Nationality Act—produced dramatic population gr
Mar 8


What Are the Most Cost-Effective Policies for Reducing Greenhouse Gas Emissions?
Hahn, Hendren, Metcalfe, and Sprung-Keyser (2025) ask which climate policies generate the largest social welfare gains per dollar of government spending. They analyze evidence from 96 U.S. climate-related tax and spending policies evaluated using experimental or quasi-experimental methods over the past 25 years. Using the marginal value of public funds (MVPF) framework, they estimate each policy’s benefits relative to its fiscal cost. They find subsidies for clean electricity
Mar 6


How Do Income and Race Interact to Shape Trends in U.S. Preterm Birth Rates?
Cordova-Ramos et al. (2026) examine how U.S. preterm birth rates vary over time by household income and whether racial and ethnic disparities persist across income groups. They analyze nationally representative Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System (PRAMS) data covering 411,469 mother–infant dyads from 2011–2021. They find that preterm birth rates increased among households below 200% of the federal poverty level but remained stable among higher-income households. Overa
Mar 3


Do Social Conditions Within Schools Affect Local Home Values?
Crespin (2025) examines whether publicly releasing school social climate ratings affects housing prices and the socioeconomic sorting of homebuyers. He studies a plausibly exogenous information shock in Chicago in 2011, when school climate reports were first made public. He links parcel-level housing transaction data from Zillow (ZTRAX) with homebuyer income data from HMDA and school administrative records. He finds that homes zoned to the highest-rated schools saw price incr
Mar 2


Do Retailers Pass the Costs of Organized Retail Crime on to Consumers?
Hase and Kasinger (2025) examine whether organized retail crime leads stores to raise prices and how those increases affect consumers. They study the Washington State cannabis market, matching store-level robbery and burglary data to detailed scanner data covering every retail transaction between 2018 and 2021. Using a difference-in-differences design, they find that victimized stores raise prices by about 1.8 percent within four months of a crime. Nearby rival stores raise p
Feb 27


How Did Teachers’ Effectiveness Change When Instruction Moved From In-Person to Remote Learning?
Lawson and Sass (2026) study how teachers’ effectiveness changed when schools shifted from in-person to remote instruction. They ask whether the move to online learning altered relative teacher performance and which teacher traits predicted success. They analyze matched student–teacher administrative data from three large metro-Atlanta districts, using fall-to-winter math and reading test score growth for grades K–8. They find that variation in teacher effectiveness increased
Feb 25


Do State Flavor Bans Decrease E-Cigarette Initiation?
Lin et al. (2026) examine whether state-level flavored e-cigarette sales bans are associated with changes in e-cigarette initiation. They ask if living in a state with a comprehensive flavor ban reduces the likelihood that never-users begin using e-cigarettes. They analyze data from Waves 4–7 of the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH) Study (2017–2023), focusing on adolescents, young adults, and adults who had never used e-cigarettes at baseline. They find that
Feb 23


What Is the Relationship Between Social Media Use and Adolescent Well-Being?
Singh, Zhou, Curtis, Maher, and Dumuid (2026) examined how after-school social media use is associated with adolescent well-being across development. They asked whether the relationship is nonlinear and whether it differs by age and sex. The study analyzed data from the South Australian Wellbeing and Engagement Collection, including 100,991 students (173,533 observations) from grades 4–12 between 2020 and 2022. They found a U-shaped pattern: moderate users generally showed th
Feb 22


Are Nontraditional School Calendars Harmful for High School Students?
Landon and Pope (2026) study whether changing how schools schedule instructional time—specifically longer school days paired with fewer school days—affects student achievement and teacher turnover . They ask whether reallocating the same total annual instructional hours alters productivity. Using administrative data from over 2 million Los Angeles Unified School District students (2002–2012) and policy-driven calendar changes, they estimate causal effects. They find minimal
Feb 21


How Does Political Ideology Shape Public Trust in Scientists?
Wheldon, Tallapragada, and Thompson (2025) examine whether political ideology is associated with trust in scientists as sources of cancer information in the United States. They analyze cross-sectional data from the 2024 Health Information National Trends Survey, a nationally representative survey of U.S. adults. They find that overall trust in scientists is high (86%), but it declines as respondents become more politically conservative. Each one-point shift toward conservatis
Feb 17


Are Localized Programs Successful at Recruiting New Teachers?
Blazar et al. (2026) examine whether access to Maryland’s Teacher Academy (TAM) increases entry into teaching. They ask if a high school “grow-your-own” pathway affects students’ later education, careers, and earnings. They use statewide administrative data linking K–12 records, college enrollment and degrees, teacher employment, and unemployment insurance wages. They find that TAM exposure increased the probability of becoming a teacher by 0.6 percentage points, a 45% rise o
Feb 16
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