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  • Can Low Retirement Savings Be Rationalized?
    q-drev ID 1059
    2020
    NBER working paper series ; no. 26784
    Statistiske metoder
    National Bureau of Economic Research
  • The missing inflation puzzle: the role of the wage-price pass-through
    q-drev ID 1064
    2020
    NBER working paper series ; no. 27663
    Statistiske metoder
    National Bureau of Economic Research
  • Dissecting saving dynamics : measuring wealth, precautionary, and credit effects
    q-drev ID 1056
    2019
    NBER working paper series ; no. 26131
    Statistiske metoder
    National Bureau of Economic Research
  • The Four Equation New Keynesian Model
    q-drev ID 1052
    2019
    NBER working paper series ; no. 26067
    Statistiske metoder
    National Bureau of Economic Research
  • Rethinking production under uncertainty
    q-drev ID 1057
    2019
    NBER working paper series ; no. 26535
    Statistiske metoder
    National Bureau of Economic Research
  • On the controversies behind the origins of the federal economic statistics
    q-drev ID 1046
    2019
    NBER working paper series ; no. 25431
    Priser | Beskæftigelse | Nationalregnskab | USA
    National Bureau of Economic Research
  • Labor Shares in Some Advanced Economies
    q-drev ID 1054
    2019
    NBER working paper series ; no. 26136
    Statistiske metoder
    National Bureau of Economic Research
  • Productivity measurement : racing to keep up
    q-drev ID 1047
    2019
    NBER working paper series ; no. 25558
    Statistikkens teori og metoder | Nationaløkonomi
    National Bureau of Economic Research
  • A Practical Method to Reduce Privacy Loss when Disclosing Statistics Based on Small Samples
    q-drev ID 1050
    2019
    NBER working paper series ; no. 25626
    Statistiske metoder
    National Bureau of Economic Research
  • The Margins of Trade
    q-drev ID 1053
    2019
    NBER working paper series ; no. 26124
    Statistiske metoder
    National Bureau of Economic Research
  • Inequality in the Joint Distribution of Consumption and Time Use
    q-drev ID 1049
    2018
    NBER working paper series ; no. 25199
    Forbrug | Familie | Statistiske metoder | USA
    National Bureau of Economic Research
  • Household time use among older couples : Evidence and implications for labor supply parameters
    q-drev ID 1040
    2018
    NBER working paper series ; no. 24263
    Statistikkens teori og metoder
    National Bureau of Economic Research
  • Accounting for growth in the age of the internet : The importance of output-saving technical change
    q-drev ID 1031
    2017
    NBER working paper series ; no. 23315
    Statistikkens teori og metoder
    National Bureau of Economic Research
  • Risk aversion as a perceptual bias
    q-drev ID 1028
    2017
    Summary: The theory of expected utility maximization (EUM) explains risk aversion as due to diminishing marginal utility of wealth. However, observed choices between risky lotteries are difficult to reconcile with EUM: for example, in the laboratory, subjects' responses on individual trials involve a random element, and cannot be predicted purely from the terms offered; and subjects often appear to be too risk averse with regard to small gambles (while still accepting sufficiently favorable large gambles) to be consistent with any utility-of-wealth function. We propose a unified explanation for both anomalies, similar to the explanation given for related phenomena in the case of perceptual judgments: they result from judgments based on imprecise (and noisy) mental representation of the decision situation. In this model, risk aversion is predicted without any need for a nonlinear utility-of-wealth function, and instead results from a sort of perceptual bias @UD8 but one that represents an optimal Bayesian decision, given the limitations of the mental representation of the situation. We propose a specific quantitative model of the mental representation of a simple lottery choice problem, based on other evidence regarding numerical cognition, and test its ability to explain the choice frequencies that we observe in a laboratory experiment
    NBER working paper series ; no. 23294
    Statistikkens teori og metoder
    National Bureau of Economic Research
  • Measuring global value chains
    q-drev ID 1038
    2017
    NBER working paper series ; no. 24027
    Statistikkens teori og metoder
    National Bureau of Economic Research
  • Why you should never use the Hodrick-Prescott filter
    q-drev ID 1030
    2017
    NBER working paper series ; no. 23429
    Statistikkens teori og metoder
    National Bureau of Economic Research
  • Children, time allocation and consumption insurance
    q-drev ID 1034
    2017
    NBER working paper series ; no. 24006
    Statistikkens teori og metoder
    National Bureau of Economic Research
  • The formation of expectations, inflation and the phillips curve
    q-drev ID 1029
    2017
    NBER working paper series ; no. 23304
    Statistikkens teori og metoder
    National Bureau of Economic Research
  • Savings after retirement: a survey
    q-drev ID 1013
    2015
    NBER working paper serie ; no. 21268
    Indkomst og formue | Pensionsforsikring | Arbejdsforhold | USA
    National Bureau of Economic Research
  • In search of the Armington elasticity
    q-drev ID 1002
    2014
    Summary: The elasticity of substitution between goods from different countries---the Armington elasticity---is important for many questions in international economics, but its magnitude is subject to debate: the "macro" elasticity between home and import goods is often found to be smaller than the "micro" elasticity between foreign sources of imports. We investigate these two elasticities in a model using a nested CES preference structure. We explore estimation techniques for the macro and micro elasticities using both simulated data from a Melitz-style model, and highly disaggregate U.S. production data matched to Harmonized System trade data. We find that in up to one-half of goods there is no significant difference between the macro and micro elasticities, but in the other half of goods the macro elasticity is significantly lower than the micro elasticity, even when they are estimated at the same level of disaggregation
    NBER working paper series ; no. 20063
    Statistikkens teori og metoder | Udenrigshandel
    National Bureau of Economic Research
  • Reconstructing macroeconomic theory to manage economic policy
    q-drev ID 1001
    2014
    NBER working paper series ; no. 20517
    Statistikkens teori og metoder | Nationaløkonomi
    National Bureau of Economic Research
  • Trade models, trade elasticities, and the gains from trade
    q-drev ID 1000
    2014
    NBER working paper series ; no. 20495
    Statistikkens teori og metoder | Udenrigshandel
    National Bureau of Economic Research
  • New developments in productivity measurement and analysis
    9.526/80
    1980
    Studies in income and wealth ; 44
    Industri- og produktion
    National Bureau of Economic Research
  • The design of economic accounts
    23.672/50
    1970
    National Bureau of Economic Research. General series ; 89
    Nationaløkonomi
    National Bureau of Economic Research
  • Studies in the national balance sheet of the United States
    23.708/80
    1963
    Studies in capital formation and financing
    Nationaløkonomi | USA
    National Bureau of Economic Research
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