Skip to main content
The Review of Economic Studies
  • About
    • Charitable activities and donations
    • Restud Tours
    • History
    • Managing Editors
  • Editorial Board
  • Accepted Papers
  • Latest News
  • Submissions
  • Published Papers

Posts

Down the River: Glyphosate Use in Agriculture and Birth Outcomes of Surrounding Populations

30 January 2023

Mateus Dias, Rudi Rocha, and Rodrigo R. Soares

This paper documents an externality from the agricultural use of the most widely applied herbicide in the world—glyphosate—on birth outcomes of surrounding populations.

Central Bank Balance Sheet Policies Without Rational Expectations

30 January 2023

Luigi Iovino and Dmitriy Sergeyev

We study the effects of central bank balance sheet policies—namely, quantitative easing and foreign exchange interventions—in a model where people form expectations through an iterative level-k thinking process.

Stalled Racial Progress and Japanese Trade in the 1970s and 1980s

24 January 2023

Mary Kate Batistich and Timothy N. Bond

We assess the impact of a rapid rise in Japanese import competition on the growth in racial earnings and employment gaps during the 1970s and 80s.

Hinterlands, city formation and growth: Evidence from the U.S. westward expansion

24 January 2023

Dávid Krisztián Nagy

I study how geography shaped city formation and aggregate development in the United States prior to the Civil War. To guide my analysis, I present a conjecture that cities’ farm hinterlands fostered both city development and aggregate growth: the hinterland hypothesis.

Estimating Production Functions of Multiproduct Firms

22 January 2023

Nelli Valmari

Multiproduct firms constitute a considerable share of firms and account for an even greater share of production. Nevertheless, the vast majority of production function estimates are based on the assumption that firms are single-product manufacturers.

Inference for Ranks with Applications to Mobility across Neighborhoods and Academic Achievement across Countries

22 January 2023

Magne Mogstad, Joseph P. Romano, Azeem M. Shaikh, and Daniel Wilhelm

It is often desired to rank different populations according to the value of some feature of each population. For example, it may be desired to rank neighborhoods according to some measure of intergenerational mobility or countries according to some measure of academic achievement. These rankings are invariably computed using estimates rather than the true values of these features.

REStud North America Tour 2023 - host venues announced

REStud North America Tour 2023 – host venues announced

18 January 2023

The 2023 North America Tour will be hosted by Brown University, Rice University, and (jointly) the St. Louis Fed and Washington University of St. Louis.

Inference for Linear Conditional Moment Inequalities

13 January 2023

Isaiah Andrews, Jonathan Roth, and Ariel Pakes

We show that moment inequalities in a wide variety of economic applications have a particular linear conditional structure.

  • « Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 38
  • 39
  • 40
  • 41
  • 42
  • …
  • 49
  • Next »

Follow us

The Review of Economic Studies Follow

The official account of the Review of Economic Studies, one of the world's top economics journals.

RevEconStudies

"New study finds salary benchmarking cuts pay gaps by 25%. Pay dispersion partly arises from firms’ uncertainty about market rates, with key implications for pay transparency policy."

New paper from @pereztruglia, @zoebcullen, @ShengwuLi:

https://www.restud.com/whats-my-employee-worth-the-effects-of-salary-benchmarking/

#econtwitter

Reply on Twitter 1968264633686560917 Retweet on Twitter 1968264633686560917 2 Like on Twitter 1968264633686560917 14 Twitter 1968264633686560917

"Competition via repo contracts resolves the lemons problem! A closed-form solution
for the unique pooling equilibrium explains why markets feature high haircuts and
low repo rates."

New paper from @SakiBigio & @liyan_shi:

https://www.restud.com/repurchase-options-in-the-market-for-lemons/

#econtwitter
#REStud

Reply on Twitter 1968259737650446683 Retweet on Twitter 1968259737650446683 1 Like on Twitter 1968259737650446683 8 Twitter 1968259737650446683

"Wars disrupt supply chains, but firms adapt by reorganizing them. The 2014 war cut
Ukraine’s output in nonconflict areas by 5.5%, with one-third mitigated by link
reorganization."

New paper from @KorovkinVasily, @alexeymakarin & @MiyauchiYuhei:

https://www.restud.com/supply-chain-disruption-and-reorganization-theory-and-evidence-from-ukraines-war/
#REStud

Reply on Twitter 1968257548605440431 Retweet on Twitter 1968257548605440431 7 Like on Twitter 1968257548605440431 25 Twitter 1968257548605440431

Recently accepted to #REStud, "Normalizations and misspecification in skill formation models," from Joachim Freyberger:

https://www.restud.com/normalizations-and-misspecification-in-skill-formation-models/

Reply on Twitter 1966215956834693494 Retweet on Twitter 1966215956834693494 3 Like on Twitter 1966215956834693494 21 Twitter 1966215956834693494
Load More
The Review of Economic Studies

The Review was founded in 1933 by a group of Economists from leading UK and US departments. It is now managed by European-based economists.

Read more

Contact details

Ann Law
Journal Manager
Editorial Office
The Review of Economic Studies
Email: ann.law @ restud.com

Submissions

To assist the Editorial Office in prompt processing of this high volume of papers authors are requested to follow these guidelines:

Submit a Paper

Subscriptions

Please visit our publisher, Oxford University Press for quotes on subscriptions.

Subscribe

  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy

©2024 The Review of Economic Studies Web Designers - KD Web

Follow us