The NBERs Program on Labor Studies, directed by Richard B. Freeman of Harvard University, and the Program on Environmental and Energy Economics, directed by Don Fullerton of the University of Illinois, met jointly in Cambridge on April 17 and 18. NBER Faculty Research Fellow Olivier Deschenes of the University of California, Santa Barbara also served as an organizer of the joint meeting. These papers were discussed:
David Autor, MIT and NBER; Alan Manning, London School of Economics; and Christopher L. Smith, MIT, The Minimum Wage's Role in the Evolution of US Wage Inequality over Three
Till Von Wachter, Columbia University and NBER; Jae Song, Social Security Administration; and Joyce Manchester, Congressional Budget Office, Long-Term Earnings Losses due to Mass Layoffs during the 1982 Recession: An Analysis Using U.S. Administrative Data from 1974 to 2004
Mireille Jacobson, University of California, Irvine and NBER, and Heather Royer, Case Western Reserve University, Aftershocks: The Impact of Clinic Violence on Abortion Services
Justin Mccrary, University of California, Berkeley and NBER, and Matias Busso, University of Michigan, New Evidence on the finite sample properties of propensity score matching and reweighting
Estimates
Avraham Y. Ebenstein, Harvard University, Water Pollution and Digestive Cancers in China
Robin Burgess, London School of Economics and NBER; Olivier Deschenes;
Dave Donaldson, London School of Economics; and Michael Greenstone, MIT and NBER, Weather and Death in India: Mechanisms and Implications of Climate Change
Arik Levinson, Georgetown University and NBER, Valuing Air Quality Using Happiness Data
Robert S. Pindyck, MIT and NBER, Uncertainty, Extreme Outcomes, and Climate Change Policy
James Bushnell, University of California, Berkeley and NBER, and Yihsu Chen, University of California, Merced, Regulation, Allocation, and Leakage in Cap-and-Trade Markets for CO2
Soren T. Anderson, Michigan State University, The Demand for Ethanol as a Gasoline Substitute
Lucas W. Davis, University of Michigan and NBER, and Matthew E. Kahn, University of California, Los Angeles and NBER, International Trade in Used Vehicles: The Environmental Consequences of NAFTA
Summaries of these papers may be found here.
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