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Optimal Long-Term Health Insurance Contracts: Characterization, Computation, and Welfare Effects

1 May 2023

Soheil Ghili, Benjamin Handel, Igal Hendel, and Michael Whinston

Reclassification risk is a major concern in health insurance where contracts are typically one year in length but health shocks often persist for much longer. While most health systems with private insurers pair short-run contracts with substantial pricing regulations to reduce reclassification risk, long-term contracts with one-sided insurer commitment have significant potential to reduce reclassification risk without the negative side effects of price regulation, such as adverse selection.

Mortgage Design and Slow Recoveries. The Role of Recourse and Default.

1 May 2023

Pedro Gete and Franco Zecchetto

We show that mortgage recourse systems, by discouraging default, magnify the impact of nominal rigidities. They cause deeper and more persistent recessions. This mechanism can account for up to 31% of the recovery gap during the Great Recession between the U.S., mostly a non-recourse economy, and Spain, a recourse economy.

Demand and Welfare Analysis in Discrete Choice Models with Social Interactions

27 April 2023

Debopam Bhattacharya, Pascaline Dupas, and Shin Kanaya

Many real-life settings of individual choice involve social interactions, causing targeted policies to have spillover effects. This paper develops novel empirical tools for analyzing demand and welfare effects of policy interventions in binary choice settings with social interactions.

Income growth and the distributional effects of urban spatial sorting

19 April 2023

Victor Couture, Cécile Gaubert, Jessie Handbury, and Erik Hurst

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 with heterogeneous agents and non-homothetic preferences for neighborhoods with endogenous amenity quality.

Fair Matching under Constraints: Theory and Applications

17 April 2023

Yuichiro Kamada and Fuhito Kojima

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. We characterize such matchings by fixed points of a certain function.

Diversity in Schools: Immigrants and the Educational Performance of U.S.-Born Students

17 April 2023

David Figlio, Paola Giuliano, Riccardo Marchingiglio, Umut Ozek, and Paola Sapienza

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 school records from Florida. This research question is complicated by substantial school selection of U.S.-born students, especially among White and comparatively affluent students, in response to the presence of immigrant students in the school.

The 2000s Housing Cycle With 2020 Hindsight: A Neo-Kindlebergerian View

12 April 2023

Gabriel Chodorow-Reich, Adam M. Guren, and Timothy J. McQuade

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 income, amenities, urbanization, and supply, we show that long-run city-level fundamentals predict not only 1997-2019 price and rent growth but also the amplitude of the boom-bust-rebound.

Ruben Enikolopov has been elected Chair of REStud

New Chair of REStud

9 April 2023

Ruben Enikolopov has been elected Chair of REStud

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How does capital irreversibility (and other investment frictions) shape economic booms and recoveries?

I explore these ideas in this @FacultiNet video (20mins)

Based on my research with @jandres_blanco forthcoming at the @RevEconStudies

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Recently accepted to #REStud, "Quantifying the Benefits of Labor Mobility in a Currency Union," from House, Proebsting and Tesar:

https://www.restud.com/quantifying-the-benefits-of-labor-mob...

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"Winners of Excellence in Refereeing Award for 2024"

The Review of Economic Studies thanks all of the exceptional referees who have contributed their time & expertise to the journal.

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Bruno Caprettini @brunocaprettini
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Chris and I had the pleasure of writing a nontechnical summary of our forthcoming @RevEconStudies paper () in the @LSEUSAblog!

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