Knowledge that Transforms

To make high-quality research more accessible and easier to explore.

Fields:

The Swedish Experiment

Journal of Economic Literature 1997
The deterioration of economic performance in Sweden from about 1970 was to some extent result of a number of exogenous shocks and unnecessary policy mistakes. It was, however, also related to basic changes in economic and social system in Sweden in late 1960s and early 1970, when government spending, taxes, and regulations started to expand dramatically. It is also argued in paper that problematic political, economic, and social mechanisms had become embedded in long-term dynamics of system itself. These various experiences are background for recent reforms and retreats of the Swedish experiment.

Teaching Economics to Undergraduates

Journal of Economic Literature 1997
This book demonstrates alternatives to the lecture and chalkboard approach that dominates the teaching of economics, providing a range of innovative teaching techniques and examples aimed at engaging undergraduates in the learning of economics.

Cross-National Comparisons of Earnings and Income Inequality

Journal of Economic Literature 1997
This article reviews the evidence on cross-national comparisons of earnings and income inequality in OECD countries. It begins with a series of stylized facts which are then examined and supported by recent studies in the field. Economic, demographic, institutional and policy-related influences on earnings and income distribution are reviewed. The paper concludes with a call for more work on empirically testable structural models of household income distribution.

Gibrat's legacy

Journal of Economic Literature 1997
This paper traces the time series (Growth of Firms) tradition in the study of market structure, and looks at how recent studies on entry and the size distribution of firms have modified thinking in this area.

Event Studies in Economics and Finance

Journal of Economic Literature 1997
The event study is an important research tool in economics and finance. The goal of an event study is to measure the effects of an economic event on the value of firms. Event study methods exploit the fact that, given rationality in the marketplace, the effects of an event will be reflected immediately in security prices. Thus the impact can be measured by examining security prices surrounding the event. In this paper event study methods are described including some of the potential complications. An example is included to illustrate the approach.