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Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences

The Impact Of Interstate Highways On Land Use Conversion, Chris Mothorpe, Andrew Hanson, Kurt Schnier Dec 2013

The Impact Of Interstate Highways On Land Use Conversion, Chris Mothorpe, Andrew Hanson, Kurt Schnier

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

Between 1945 and 2007, the United States lost 19.3 % of its agricultural land. Over the same time period, the construction of the 42,500 mile interstate highway system lowered transportation costs and opened large tracts of land for development. This paper assesses the impact of the interstate highway system on agricultural land loss in Georgia and uses the empirical estimates to simulate agricultural land loss resulting from the construction of additional interstate highways. Using a historical data set of agricultural land and interstate highway mileage, empirical estimates indicate that each additional mile of interstate highway reduces agricultural land by 468 …


Soros’S Reflexivity Concept In A Complex World: Cauchy Distributions, Rational Expectations, And Rational Addiction, John B. Davis Dec 2013

Soros’S Reflexivity Concept In A Complex World: Cauchy Distributions, Rational Expectations, And Rational Addiction, John B. Davis

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

George Soros makes an important analytical contribution to understanding the concept of reflexivity in social science by explaining reflexivity in terms of how his cognitive and manipulative causal functions are connected to one another by a pair of feedback loops (Soros, 2013). Fallibility, reflexivity and the human uncertainty principle. Here I put aside the issue of how the natural sciences and social sciences are related, an issue he discusses, and focus on how his thinking applies in economics. I argue that standard economics assumes a ‘classical’ view of the world in which knowledge and action are independent, but that we …


Introduction To The Economics Of Social Institutions, John B. Davis, Asimina Christoforou Dec 2013

Introduction To The Economics Of Social Institutions, John B. Davis, Asimina Christoforou

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

This volume includes thirty-six important contributions to the economics of social institutions by leading figures in the history of the field. Its nine Parts are: Early Contributions, Methodological and Conceptual Issues, Old Institutionalism, New Institutionalism, Social Costs, Growth and Development, Institutions and Change, Institutions and Organizations, and The Third Sphere of the Economy and Institutions. This set of topics provides a comprehensive review of the origins and development of the economics of social institutions. It addresses the main theoretical and policy concerns that have occupied contributors to the approach. The economics of social institutions has a been well-established research program …


A Note On War And Fiscal Capacity In Developing Countries, Abdur Chowdhury, Syed M. Murshed Nov 2013

A Note On War And Fiscal Capacity In Developing Countries, Abdur Chowdhury, Syed M. Murshed

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

We examine the effect of war on state fiscal capacity in developing countries, measured by tax revenue to GDP ratios. In divided or factionalised societies, patronage may substitute for common interest public goods, with the possibility of violent contestation over a rent. Our dynamic panel empirical estimates of the determinants of fiscal capacity are applied to 79 developing countries, during 1980–2010. Results indicate that war, especially civil war, retards fiscal capacity, along with poor governance, oil dependence and macroeconomic mismanagement.


Learning From Teen Childbearing Experiences Of Close Friends: Evidence Using Miscarriages As A Natural Experiment, Olga Yakusheva, Jason Fletcher Oct 2013

Learning From Teen Childbearing Experiences Of Close Friends: Evidence Using Miscarriages As A Natural Experiment, Olga Yakusheva, Jason Fletcher

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

We examine peer effects in teen childbearing among close friends, using miscarriages as a natural experiment. We use 775 women from the core sample of Add Health who had a friend with a teen pregnancy. We find a sizable negative treatment effect – a close friend's teen birth is associated with a 6 percentage point reduction in the likelihood of own teen pregnancy and childbearing. There is evidence that this effect operates through a learning mechanism by changing beliefs regarding early childbearing. Effects of teen pregnancy prevention policies may be partially offset by reductions in the opportunities for social learning.


Exchange-Rate Pass Through, Openness, And The Sacrifice Ratio, Joseph P. Daniels, David D. Vanhoose Sep 2013

Exchange-Rate Pass Through, Openness, And The Sacrifice Ratio, Joseph P. Daniels, David D. Vanhoose

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

Considerable recent work has reached mixed conclusions about whether and how globalization affects the inflation–output trade-off and suggests that the ultimate effect of openness on the output–inflation relationship is influenced by a variety of factors. In this paper, we consider the impact of exchange-rate pass through and examine how pass through conditions the effect of openness on the sacrifice ratio. We develop a simple theoretical model showing how the extent of both pass through and openness can interact to influence the output–inflation relationship. Next we empirically explore the nature of these two variables and their interaction. Results indicate that greater …


The Political Investment Cycle Within China: The Next Transition And Its Investment Implications, Abdur Chowdhury, Barry K. Mendelson Sep 2013

The Political Investment Cycle Within China: The Next Transition And Its Investment Implications, Abdur Chowdhury, Barry K. Mendelson

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

No abstract provided.


Person-Centered Heath Care: Capabilities And Identity, John B. Davis Aug 2013

Person-Centered Heath Care: Capabilities And Identity, John B. Davis

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

No abstract provided.


Will Dr. Robot Open New Doors For Nurses?, Olga Yakusheva, Richard C. Lindrooth May 2013

Will Dr. Robot Open New Doors For Nurses?, Olga Yakusheva, Richard C. Lindrooth

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

No abstract provided.


The Effect Of Foreign Direct Investment On International Migration: Does Education Matter?, Miao Wang, M. C. Sunny Wong, Jim Granato May 2013

The Effect Of Foreign Direct Investment On International Migration: Does Education Matter?, Miao Wang, M. C. Sunny Wong, Jim Granato

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

Using migration data in 1990 and 2000, we find that inward foreign direct investment (FDI) in non-OECD countries affects the out-migration of individuals with tertiary and secondary education to OECD countries originating the investments, but has no significant effect on the out-migration of individuals with primary education. Distinguishing between linkage and home effects, our results show a dominant home effect of FDI for individuals with tertiary education, but a stronger linkage effect for those with secondary education. The existing stock of former migrants in foreign countries influences the out-migration of individuals with primary education.


The Geographic Distribution Of The Mortgage Interest Deduction, Andrew Hanson, Ike Brannon, Zackary Hawley Apr 2013

The Geographic Distribution Of The Mortgage Interest Deduction, Andrew Hanson, Ike Brannon, Zackary Hawley

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

The mortgage interest deduction is one of the largest tax expenditures in the U.S. tax code but the rate at which it is claimed and the average amount deducted vary widely across and within states.

With changes to tax expenditures under consideration, data showing the current distribution of the mortgage interest deduction are key to understanding how federal tax decisions would affect the states.


Estimating Discount Factors For Public And Private Goods And Testing Competing Discounting Hypotheses, Andrew G. Meyer Apr 2013

Estimating Discount Factors For Public And Private Goods And Testing Competing Discounting Hypotheses, Andrew G. Meyer

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

The observation of declining discount rates in experimental settings has led many to promote hyperbolic discounting over standard exponential discounting as the preferred descriptive model of intertemporal choice. I develop a new framework, consistent with the random utility model, which directly models the intertemporal utility function and produces explicit maximum likelihood estimates of discounting parameters. I apply this estimation method to a stated-preference survey of river basin cleanup options and revealed-preference lottery payment choices. Formal statistical tests fail to find evidence in support of hyperbolic or quasi-hyperbolic discounting. Annual discount rates range from ten to fourteen percent across the data …


What Can We Learn From The Existing Evidence Of The Business Case For Investments In Nursing Care: Importance Of Content, Context, And Policy Environment, Olga Yakusheva, Douglas Wholey, Kevin D. Frick Apr 2013

What Can We Learn From The Existing Evidence Of The Business Case For Investments In Nursing Care: Importance Of Content, Context, And Policy Environment, Olga Yakusheva, Douglas Wholey, Kevin D. Frick

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

Decisions of health care institutions to invest in nursing care are often guided by mixed and conflicting evidence of effects of the investments on organizational function and sustainability. This paper uses new evidence generated through Interdisciplinary Nursing Quality Research Initiative (INQRI)-funded research and published in peer-reviewed journals, to illustrate where the business case for nursing investments stands and to discuss factors that may limit the existing evidence and its transferability into clinical practice. We conclude that there are 3 limiting factors: (1) the existing business case for nursing investments is likely understated due to the inability of most studies to …


The Impact Of Early Commitment On Games Played: Evidence From College Football Recruiting, Jesse Brickers, Andrew Hanson Apr 2013

The Impact Of Early Commitment On Games Played: Evidence From College Football Recruiting, Jesse Brickers, Andrew Hanson

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

We use data on athletic scholarship acceptance decisions to show that high school football players signal their ability level by delaying commitment. Although colleges can obtain information about student athletes, National Collegiate Athletic Association regulations limit information flow, making private information an important component of the scholarship market. Using ordinary least squares, censored regression, and negative binomial estimation, we show that for a given observed ability level, committing to a scholarship offer early is associated with less playing time after acceptance. In one season and at a typical average early signing date, early-committing athletes played in 0.21 fewer games per …


Existing Evidence Of The Business Case For Investments In Nursing Care, Olga Yakusheva, Douglas Wholey, Kevin D. Frick Mar 2013

Existing Evidence Of The Business Case For Investments In Nursing Care, Olga Yakusheva, Douglas Wholey, Kevin D. Frick

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

No abstract provided.


Economists' Odd Stand On The Positive-Normative Distinction: A Behavioral Economics View, John B. Davis Mar 2013

Economists' Odd Stand On The Positive-Normative Distinction: A Behavioral Economics View, John B. Davis

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

This chapter examines economists’ indefensible attachment to the positive-normative distinction, and suggests a behavioral economics explanation of their behavior on the subject. It reviews the origins of the distinction in Hume’s guillotine and logical positivism, and shows how they form the basis for Robbins’ understanding of value neutrality. It connects philosophers’ rejection of logical positivism to their rejection of the positive-normative distinction, explains and modifies Putnam’s view of fact-value entanglement, and identifies four main ethical value judgments that contemporary economists employ. The behavioral explanation of economists’ denial of these value judgments emphasizes loss aversion and economists’ social identity as economists


Economics Imperialism Under The Impact Of Psychology: The Case Of Behavioral Development Economics, John B. Davis Mar 2013

Economics Imperialism Under The Impact Of Psychology: The Case Of Behavioral Development Economics, John B. Davis

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

Economics imperialism is broadly explained as economics having an impact on other disciplines. But how should economics imperialism be understood when it is in some sense the product of other disciplines having an impact on economics? The paper examines psychology’s impact on economics in connection with the emergence of behavioral development economics, and then discusses the nature of behavioral development economics imperialism associated with development economists’ explanations of non-market dimensions of life in developing economies in behavioral economics terms. The paper argues that this new form of economics imperialism reflects economics’ selective appropriation from psychology of the Kahneman-Tversky heuristics and …


Environmental Performance Of State-Owned And Privatized Eastern European Energy Utilities, Andrew G. Meyer, Grzegorz Pac Mar 2013

Environmental Performance Of State-Owned And Privatized Eastern European Energy Utilities, Andrew G. Meyer, Grzegorz Pac

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

Privatization in Eastern Europe has helped in the transition of the region's economies from planned to free market. However, the effects of privatization on the environment are relatively unknown and many firms remain under state ownership today. We compare the environmental performance of state-owned and privatized energy utility plants in Eastern Europe utilizing a novel panel data that includes reported sulfur dioxide emissions, energy input, and ownership status. We find that state-owned plants emit more sulfur dioxide than privately owned plants; this is environmentally significant as privatization is associated with a reduction in emissions of about 55%.


Should We Strive For Zero Risk?, Olga Yakusheva Jan 2013

Should We Strive For Zero Risk?, Olga Yakusheva

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

No abstract provided.


Do Spatially Targeted Redevelopment Programs Spillover?, Andrew Hanson, Shawn Rohlin Jan 2013

Do Spatially Targeted Redevelopment Programs Spillover?, Andrew Hanson, Shawn Rohlin

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

This paper estimates spillover effects from a spatially-targeted redevelopment program, the Federal Empowerment Zone (EZ), on neighboring and economically similar areas. EZs are a set of generous tax incentives and grants aimed at small, economically depressed areas of large U.S. cities. We find areas that border or are economically similar to EZ locations experience a decline in the number of establishments and employment compared to areas that border or are similar to rejected EZ applicants. We also demonstrate that using spillover prone areas to estimate program effects causes upward bias when the spillover is negative. We find that for many …


Til Recession Do Us Part: Booms, Busts, And Divorce In The United States, Abdur Chowdhury Jan 2013

Til Recession Do Us Part: Booms, Busts, And Divorce In The United States, Abdur Chowdhury

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

A general hypothesis regarding the impact of permanent income levels and business cycle fluctuations on divorce rate at the state level in the United States is analysed in this article. Based on the data for 45 states over the sample period of 1978–2009, it is shown that the higher the level of transitory income, the higher the incidence of divorce. In other words, divorce is pro-cyclical.


Identity, John B. Davis Jan 2013

Identity, John B. Davis

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

The concept of identity has begun to be employed only relatively recently in economics, and accordingly still lacks a standard meaning and established set of applications in the subject. However, in its most influential initial uses by Amartya Sen (1999) and George Akerlof and Rachel Kranton (2000) it has been developed largely in terms of the concept of social identity (though in quite different ways). Social identity as understood in social psychology (see Brown, 2000), where the concept was influentially developed by Erik Erikson in connection with his idea of an identity crisis (Erikson, 1950), concerns individuals’ ‘identification with’ social …


The Impact Of Work-Limiting Disabilities On Earnings And Income Mobility, Nicholas A. Jolly Jan 2013

The Impact Of Work-Limiting Disabilities On Earnings And Income Mobility, Nicholas A. Jolly

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

This article uses the 1968–2007 waves of the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID) to examine how work-limiting disabilities influence the intragenerational earnings and income mobility of individuals. The results show that work-limiting disabilities increase the probability of downward mobility for several years after onset. Furthermore, the probability of being in the bottom portions of the distributions increases significantly, not only during the year of onset but also for at least 10 years afterwards. These results are more pronounced for those individuals suffering from a disability that is more chronic or severe in nature. Income from spousal earnings and government …


Interview Of John Davis By Jonathan Wight, Jonathan Wright, John B. Davis Jan 2013

Interview Of John Davis By Jonathan Wight, Jonathan Wright, John B. Davis

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

John B. Davis is Professor of Economics, Marquette University, and Professor of Economics, University of Amsterdam, is author of Keynes’s Philosophical Development (Cambridge, 1994), The Theory of the Individual in Economics (Routledge, 2003), Individuals and Identity in Economics (Cambridge, 2011), and co-author with Marcel Boumans of Economic Methodology: Understanding Economics as a Science (Palgrave, 2010). He has been a visiting professor at the Sorbonne, Cambridge University, Erasmus University, and Duke University. He is a former editor of the Review of Social Economy, and is currently co-editor of the Journal of Economic Methodology and the Routledge book series Advances in …


Intertemporal Valuation Of River Restoration, Andrew G. Meyer Jan 2013

Intertemporal Valuation Of River Restoration, Andrew G. Meyer

Economics Faculty Research and Publications

Willingness to pay for an environmental improvement is a function of how long it takes to deliver the improvement. To measure the effect of time on benefits, I utilize a discrete choice experiment that includes an attribute for delay until the improvement occurs and simultaneously estimate discount rates and valuation parameters. I estimate the present value of immediate and delayed Minnesota River Basin improvements using discount rates directly estimated from the econometric model. Compared to an immediate river basin cleanup, Minnesota residents lose almost half of the benefits when cleanup is delayed by 5 years.