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REStud North America Tours - new website

REStud North America Tours – new website

21 April 2025

Check out the new REStud North America Tours website

REStud Tour 2025 - Tourists announced

REStud Tour 2025 – Tourists announced and website live

21 April 2025

New

Creating Cohesive Communities: A Youth Camp Experiment in India

12 April 2025

Arkadev Ghosh, Prerna Kundu, Matt Lowe, and Gareth Nellis

Non-family-based institutions for socializing young people may play a vital role in creating close-knit, inclusive communities. We study the potential for youth camps—integrating rituals, sports, and civics training—to strengthen intergroup cohesion. We randomly assigned Hindu and Muslim adolescent boys, from West Bengal, India, to two-week camps or to a pure control arm. To isolate mechanisms, we cross-randomized collective rituals (such as singing the national anthem, wearing uniforms, chanting support during matches, and synchronous dancing) and the intensity of intergroup contact.

New

Colluding against Environmental Regulation

9 April 2025

Jorge Alé-Chilet, Cuicui Chen, Jing Li, and Mathias Reynaert

We study collusion among firms against imperfectly monitored environmental regulation. Firms increase variable profits by violating regulation and reduce expected noncompliance penalties by violating jointly. We consider a case of three German automakers colluding to reduce the effectiveness of emissions control technology.

New

The Value of Privacy in Cartels: An Analysis of the Inner Workings of a Bidding Ring

9 April 2025

Kei Kawai, Jun Nakabayashi, and Juan Ortner

We study how incentive constraints can be relaxed by randomization in a repeated-game setting. Our study is motivated by the workings of a detected bidding cartel that adopted a protocol of keeping the winning bid secret from the designated losers when defection was a concern. Keeping the winning bid secret makes accurately undercutting the winning bid more difficult and makes defection less attractive as potential defectors risk not winning the auction even if they deviate.

New

Belief identification by proxy

9 April 2025

Elias Tsakas

It is well known that individual beliefs cannot be identified using traditional choice data, unless we exogenously assume state-independent utilities. In this paper, I propose a novel methodology that solves this long-standing identification problem in a simple way. This method relies on extending the state space by introducing a proxy, for which the agent has no stakes conditional on the original state space.

New

How People Use Statistics

2 April 2025

Pedro Bordalo, John Conlon, Nicola Gennaioli, Spencer Kwon, and Andrei Shleifer

For standard statistical problems, we provide new evidence documenting i) multi-modality and ii) instability in probability estimates, including from irrelevant changes in problem description. The evidence motivates a model in which, when solving a problem, people represent each hypothesis by attending to its salient features while neglecting other, potentially more relevant, ones. Only the statistics associated with salient features are used.

New Joint Managing Editor

31 March 2025

We warmly welcome Jakub Steiner (University of Zurich, CERGE-EI, CTS) to join us as Joint Managing Editors with effect from 1st April 2025. A huge thanks to Bard Harstad who served as Joint Managing Editors until March 2025.

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More evidence that changing the UI system has large effects on inflows to unemployment. We document the importance of this separation rate channel for 🇩🇪 after the Hartz reforms & explain its importance using economic theory. @BenjaminHartung @makro_philip

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📣Finally out in #Restud our paper “Bewley Banks” - with great @RustamJamilov

A model with incomplete insurance, heterogeneous *banks*, idiosyncratic risk and aggregate uncertainty.

Analog for banks of Bewley-Aiyagari-Krusell-Smith setup for consumers.👇#econtwitter

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Recently accepted to #REStud, "Women in the Courtroom: Technology and Justice," from Heng Chen, Yuyu Chen and Yang:

https://www.restud.com/women-in-the-courtroom-technology-and-justice/

#econtwitter
#justice #GenderBias #JudicialReform

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Recently accepted to #REStud, "The Geography of Business Dynamism and Skill-Biased Technical Change," from Hannah Rubinton:

https://www.restud.com/the-geography-of-business-dynamism-and-skill-biased-technical-change/

#econtwitter

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The Review of Economic Studies

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