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Full-Text Articles in Economics

The $10.10 Minimum Wage Proposal: An Evaluation Across States, Andrew Hanson, Zackary Hawley Dec 2014

The $10.10 Minimum Wage Proposal: An Evaluation Across States, Andrew Hanson, Zackary Hawley

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

This paper offers state-level estimates of job loss from increasing the federal minimum wage to $10.10 per hour in 2016. Given the vast differences in nominal wages across geography, a federal increase in minimum wage that is not indexed to local wage levels will have a differential impacts across states. The proposed minimum wage would be binding for between 17 and 18 % of workers nationally. We estimate coverage rates ranging from just 4 % in Washington D.C. to as high as 51 % in Puerto Rico, with 13 states having at least 20 % of the employed population covered …


Raising Wisconsin's Minimum Wage: Who Would Be Helped? Who Would Be Hurt?, Andrew Hanson, Ike Brannon Nov 2014

Raising Wisconsin's Minimum Wage: Who Would Be Helped? Who Would Be Hurt?, Andrew Hanson, Ike Brannon

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

No abstract provided.


The Puzzle Of Heterogeneity In Support For Free Trade, Jeffrey Drope, Abdur Chowdhury Oct 2014

The Puzzle Of Heterogeneity In Support For Free Trade, Jeffrey Drope, Abdur Chowdhury

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

Over time and across countries, researchers have noted frequent and mostly unexplained gender differences in the levels of support for policies of free or freer trade: according to aggregate results from many surveys, women tend to be less favorable toward policies of liberalizing trade than men. Positing an economic security explanation based largely on a mobile factors approach, we ask if it is women generally who are more negative toward trade or rather women who are more economically vulnerable – i.e., women from the scarce labor factor. We utilize data from two recent surveys on individuals’ attitudes toward different facets …


‘Pluralism’ In Economics? A Symposium, John B. Davis Oct 2014

‘Pluralism’ In Economics? A Symposium, John B. Davis

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

No abstract provided.


Housing Market Distortions And The Mortgage Interest Deduction, Andrew Hanson, Hal Martin Sep 2014

Housing Market Distortions And The Mortgage Interest Deduction, Andrew Hanson, Hal Martin

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

Housing market distortions from the mortgage interest deduction (MID) typically focus on a single choice measure such as home size or self-reported amount of debt on a new mortgage. We estimate the amount of mortgage interest deducted on federal tax returns to capture the full range of housing market distortions from the MID. Our primary results show that for every one percentage point increase in the tax rate that applies to deductibility, the amount of mortgage interest deducted increases by US$303 to US$590. Empirical estimates imply elasticities of mortgage interest deducted with respect to the after-tax cost of housing between …


The World In The Model And The Model In The World: Review Of The World In The Model By Mary Morgan, John B. Davis Jul 2014

The World In The Model And The Model In The World: Review Of The World In The Model By Mary Morgan, John B. Davis

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

No abstract provided.


Field Experiment Tests For Discrimination Against Hispanics In The U.S. Rental Housing Market, Andrew Hanson, Michael Santas Jul 2014

Field Experiment Tests For Discrimination Against Hispanics In The U.S. Rental Housing Market, Andrew Hanson, Michael Santas

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

This article tests for discrimination against Hispanics in the U.S. rental housing market using e-mail correspondence with landlords advertising units online. We divide Hispanics into two groups: those that appear assimilated into American culture and recent immigrants. We find little difference in the treatment of assimilated Hispanics and whites; however, Hispanics we portray as recent immigrants receive less favorable treatment with margins of net discrimination as large as 6.89% of landlords. We also find discrimination varies significantly at the region level and by the ethnic composition of neighborhoods.


Social Capital And Social Identity: Trust And Conflict, John B. Davis May 2014

Social Capital And Social Identity: Trust And Conflict, John B. Davis

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

No abstract provided.


Transportation Costs And U.S. Manufacturing Fdi, Joseph P. Daniels, Marc Von Der Ruhr May 2014

Transportation Costs And U.S. Manufacturing Fdi, Joseph P. Daniels, Marc Von Der Ruhr

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

In empirical models of foreign direct investment (FDI), distance is most often used to proxy for transportation costs and other pure-trade costs. Given that distance is time invariant but transportation costs are not, this approach is less than satisfactory when actual transportation costs rise and fall over time. The contribution of this work is to explicitly control for transportation costs and thereby better understand their impact on FDI. We explore the impact of shipping costs on total US FDI stocks abroad, manufacturing stocks and service stocks using measures of sea-shipping and air-shipping costs in a Hausman–Taylor model that controls for …


Rethinking Tax Benefits For Home Owners, Andrew Hanson, Ike Brannon, Zackary Hawley Apr 2014

Rethinking Tax Benefits For Home Owners, Andrew Hanson, Ike Brannon, Zackary Hawley

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

No abstract provided.


Negotiated Settlement Under Mlb Final-Offer Salary Arbitration System, J. Richard Hill, Nicholas A. Jolly Apr 2014

Negotiated Settlement Under Mlb Final-Offer Salary Arbitration System, J. Richard Hill, Nicholas A. Jolly

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

This paper provides a detailed analysis of negotiated salaries under Major League Baseball's final-offer arbitration process using data from the 2007–2010 seasons. There is a wage premium of 25% for hitters and 14% for pitchers filing for arbitration. Interestingly, there is an additional premium for exchanging offers for hitters but not for pitchers. The additional premium in salary for hitters who exchange offers with their clubs amounts to 7%.


Homesick: How Housing Tax Breaks Benefit The Wealthy And Create Mcmansions, Andrew Hanson, Ike Brannon, Zackary Hawley Apr 2014

Homesick: How Housing Tax Breaks Benefit The Wealthy And Create Mcmansions, Andrew Hanson, Ike Brannon, Zackary Hawley

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

No abstract provided.


Review Of The Making Of The Economy: A Phenomenology Of Economic Science By Till Duppe, John B. Davis Mar 2014

Review Of The Making Of The Economy: A Phenomenology Of Economic Science By Till Duppe, John B. Davis

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

No abstract provided.


Digital Currency And Financial System: The Case Of Bitcoin, Abdur Chowdhury, Barry K. Mendelson Mar 2014

Digital Currency And Financial System: The Case Of Bitcoin, Abdur Chowdhury, Barry K. Mendelson

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

No abstract provided.


The Interaction Between Fdi And Infrastructure Capital In The Development Process, Farrokh Nourzad, David N. Greenwold, Rui Yang Jan 2014

The Interaction Between Fdi And Infrastructure Capital In The Development Process, Farrokh Nourzad, David N. Greenwold, Rui Yang

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

This paper focuses on the possible interaction between foreign direct investment (FDI) and the host country’s infrastructure base. Its central hypothesis is that the effect of FDI on per capita real income depends, at least in part, on the size of the recipient country’s infrastructure. This hypothesis is tested in a panel of 46 countries and 5-year averages over the 1980–2000 period using the size of three types of infrastructure capital: telecommunication, power generation, and network of roads or highways. The results indicate that the size of the host country’s infrastructure base helps to improve the marginal effect of FDI …


Leisure And Happiness: Evidence From International Survey Data, Miao Wang, M. C. Sunny Wong Jan 2014

Leisure And Happiness: Evidence From International Survey Data, Miao Wang, M. C. Sunny Wong

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

We study the statistical link between leisure and happiness. Using survey data from 33 countries in 2007, we find that (1) certain leisure activities, leisure’s role in self-fulfillment and social interaction, and leisure’s relation to work and other spheres of life are significantly linked to individual happiness; (2) the effect of leisure quantity is not as important as other aspects of leisure; and (3) some leisure activities can be negatively associated with happiness. Consistent with findings in previous studies, family income and individual demographic variables such as age and health condition are significantly associated with happiness. National unemployment and political …


Are Houses Too Big Or In The Wrong Place? Tax Benefits To Housing And Inefficiencies In Location And Consumption, David Albouy, Andrew Hanson Jan 2014

Are Houses Too Big Or In The Wrong Place? Tax Benefits To Housing And Inefficiencies In Location And Consumption, David Albouy, Andrew Hanson

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

Tax benefits to owner-occupied housing provide incentives to consume housing, offsetting weaker disincentives of the property tax. These benefits also help counter the penalty federal taxes impose on households who work in productive high-wage areas, but reinforce incentives to consume local amenities. We simulate the effects of these benefits in a parameterized model, and determine the consequences of various tax reforms. Reductions in housing tax benefits generally increase efficiency in consumption, but reduce efficiency in location decisions, unless they are accompanied by tax rate reductions. The most efficient policy would eliminate most tax benefits to housing and index taxes to …


Where Does Racial Discrimination Occur? An Experimental Analysis Across Neighborhood And Housing Unit Characteristics, Andrew Hanson, Zackary Hawley Jan 2014

Where Does Racial Discrimination Occur? An Experimental Analysis Across Neighborhood And Housing Unit Characteristics, Andrew Hanson, Zackary Hawley

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

This paper examines racial discrimination across several neighborhood and housing unit characteristics including racial composition, rent, and distance from the urban core. We find that African Americans face higher rates of discrimination than whites in a wide range of racially mixed neighborhoods, in higher rent areas, closer to central cities, and in low vacancy areas. These results are robust to various parameterizations of the local smoothing empirical specification and within a multivariate nonlinear parametric estimation technique. The location of discrimination supports the current/future customer prejudice and perceived preference hypotheses as a cause of discrimination in housing markets but not the …


Obesogenic Environmental Influences On Young Adults: Evidence From Randomized Dormitory Assignment, Kandice A. Kapinos, Olga Yakusheva, Daniel Eisenberg Jan 2014

Obesogenic Environmental Influences On Young Adults: Evidence From Randomized Dormitory Assignment, Kandice A. Kapinos, Olga Yakusheva, Daniel Eisenberg

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

This study utilizes a natural experiment—conditionally random dormitory assignments of first-year US college students—to investigate the influence of obesogenic environmental factors in explaining changes in weight and exercise behavior during the 2009–2010 academic year. The design addresses potential selection biases resulting from the likelihood that individuals sort into built environments that match their preferences for exercise and healthy eating. We find some evidence that the food environment, specifically access to campus dining, significantly affected the weight of female students in our study. Females assigned to dormitories where the nearest campus dining hall was closed on the weekends gained about 1 …


Mark Blaug On The Historiography Of Economics, John B. Davis Jan 2014

Mark Blaug On The Historiography Of Economics, John B. Davis

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

No abstract provided.


Inflation And Inflation-Uncertainty In India: The Policy Implications Of The Relationship, Abdur Chowdhury Jan 2014

Inflation And Inflation-Uncertainty In India: The Policy Implications Of The Relationship, Abdur Chowdhury

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

Purpose – Inflation and its related uncertainty can impose costs on real economic output in any economy. This paper aims to analyze the relationship between inflation and inflation uncertainty in India.

Design/methodology/approach – The methodology uses a generalized autoregressive conditional heteroscedasticity (GARCH) model and Granger Causality test.

Findings – Initial estimates show the inflation rate to be a stationary process. The maximum likelihood estimates from the GARCH model reveal strong support for the presence of a positive relationship between the level of inflation and its uncertainty. The Granger causality results indicate a feedback between inflation and uncertainty.

Research limitations/implications – …


Limiting The Mortgage Interest Deduction By Size Of Home: Effects On The User Cost And Price Of Housing Across Metropolitan Areas, Andrew Hanson Jan 2014

Limiting The Mortgage Interest Deduction By Size Of Home: Effects On The User Cost And Price Of Housing Across Metropolitan Areas, Andrew Hanson

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

In this paper, I examine the user cost and home price implications of limiting the federal mortgage interest deduction (MID) based on the square footage of a home. I extend the standard user cost model to include a square footage-based cap on the tax-favored status of mortgage interest. I compare two policy alternatives: one that limits the marginal deduction based on home size, and another that removes the deduction on the home based on home size. There is substantial variation across metropolitan areas in both the number of homes exposed to each type of cap, the user cost increase, and …