Funded Research

Our funding interests are organized around the following four drivers of economic growth: macroeconomics and inequality, market structure, the labor market, and human capital and wellbeing. We consider proposals that investigate the consequences of economic inequality, as well as group dimensions of inequality; the causes of inequality to the extent that understanding these causal pathways will help us identify and understand key channels through which inequality may affect growth and stability; and the ways in which public policies affect the relationship between inequality and growth.

Explore the Grants We've Awarded

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Automation threat and wage bargaining

Grant Year: 2018

Grant Amount: $15,000

Grant Type: doctoral

This study proposes a novel mechanism through which automation in the labor market might have an impact on wages through the threat, rather than the actuality, of automation, which threatens to significantly change the structure of the labor market. Despite widespread popular accounts of a future where few work, the literature is more circumspect. How automation will affect both the demand for labor and wages is an important area of study. The project will build a model of bargaining over wages and the automation threat, and empirically test the impact of this threat using employer-employee matched data in the United Kingdom. Using heterogeneity of firms, Arnoud will identify occupations that are vulnerable to automation and look at firms that have yet to automate, implying the existence of the threat of automation. Arnoud will further investigate the extent to which this threat channel is mediated by the bargaining power of workers due to other institutional features.

Wealth taxation and evasion: Quasi-experimental evidence from Colombia

Grant Year: 2018

Grant Amount: $15,000

Grant Type: doctoral

This study leverages administrative data from Colombia to estimate the impact of wealth taxes on reported wealth and on the use of tax-evasion strategies. In addition, Londoño-Vélez examines the impact of the Panama Papers, which sparked a change in public knowledge about tax evasion, on reported wealth. These results will help establish an evidence base on which to make the case for reforms to the taxation of capital income, and inform academics and policymakers on the appropriate role of wealth taxation in that mix.

The macro-effects of unemployment insurance: A simulation-based discontinuity design approach

Grant Year: 2018

Grant Amount: $41,087

Grant Type: academic

Unemployment insurance was expanded several times during the Great Recession and its aftermath, with the maximum duration reaching up to 99 weeks in some states. Researchers have been debating the macroeconomic impact of those expansions on unemployment and employment, but little research exists on the macroeconomic effects of previous expansions. This project will fill this gap by looking at unemployment benefit expansions going back to 1976. Similar to previous research, the researchers will use “trigger notices” from the U.S. Department of Labor to see when programs were turned on. Their methodology, however, differs from previous research because rather than depending upon measurement error in the unemployment rate, their method allows them to look at the impacts when a program has multiple triggers. The researchers will then compare the effects of expansions during the Great Recession to previous expansions.

Firm wage policies and inequality: Evidence using matched employer-employee data

Grant Year: 2018

Grant Amount: $75,000

Grant Type: academic

This project seeks to better understand the set of implicit and explicit rules that govern pay-setting within companies and explore how these policies interact with market forces to shape the earnings distribution. Using matched employer-employee data from the Longitudinal Employer-Household Dynamics, the project will investigate the source of differences in wages being paid to similar workers at different establishments, after accounting for individual differences. The research will quantify how sensitive wages are to local labor market conditions, including policies, and will assess the extent of centralization of firms’ wage policies. Importantly, the research will assess whether firms’ concentration in the relevant labor market affects wage premia. The project generally aims to further our understanding of the role of labor market frictions and organizational factors in determining earnings inequality.

Income-specific consumption baskets and the interaction between inequality and monetary policy

Grant Year: 2018

Grant Amount: $55,000

Grant Type: academic

Macroeconomists are increasingly looking at the interaction between economic inequality and macroeconomic policy. Past research has looked at the impact of monetary policy on the level of income or wealth inequality, but a new literature has started to focus on how the level of inequality changes the effectiveness of countercyclical monetary and fiscal policy. This project helps push that research frontier forward by investigating how differences in consumption baskets among households may affect the transmission of monetary policy. First, the researchers will document differences in consumption baskets across the income distribution. Using those data, they will measure the variation in price stickiness among U.S. households. If this heterogeneity varies significantly by income level, it’s possible that the upward shift of income over the past several decades may have significantly enhanced or reduced the effectiveness of monetary policy. Understanding the strength of monetary policy in an era of high economic inequality is critical for informing policymakers of the optimal strategy for fighting the next recession.

Understanding men’s nonemployment using longitudinal data: Wage opportunities, employment dynamics, and long-term effects

Grant Year: 2018

Grant Amount: $60,000, co-funded with the Russell Sage Foundation

Grant Type: academic

For more than a quarter of a century, one of the central questions in empirical academic and policy research on the U.S. labor market concerns the long-term decline in male employment rates. Existing research has documented patterns and trends in employment rates but almost entirely using cross-sectional data. A critical open question is what the decline in employment measured on an annual basis reflects in terms of an individual’s employment trajectory. This project tackles this question by incorporating longitudinal analysis (through the Panel Study of Income Dynamics) and pseudo-panel techniques (via cohort analysis using the Current Population Survey). By looking at the wages of the sometimes-nonemployed, this project will yield a better answer to the question of how much of the reduction in prime-age employment over recent decades can be explained by declining wages. This is critical to understanding the extent to which changes in labor demand (which have reduced wages for sets of workers) versus changes in labor supply elasticities (which have potentially lowered labor supply for a given wage) explain reductions in prime-age employment.

Funded research

Human Capital and Wellbeing

How does economic inequality affect the development of human capital, and to what extent do aggregate trends in human capital explain inequality dynamics?

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Funded research

Macroeconomics and Inequality

What are the implications of inequality on the long-term stability of our economy and its growth potential?

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Funded research

Market Structure

Are markets becoming less competitive and, if so, why, and what are the larger implications?

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Funded research

The Labor Market

How does the labor market affect equitable growth? How does inequality in turn affect the labor market?

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