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Lemmas for a Theory of Approximate Optimal Growth

Review of Economic Studies 1967 34(1), 143-151
Journal Article Lemmas for a Theory of Approximate Optimal Growth Get access C. C. von Weizsäcker C. C. von Weizsäcker University of Heidelberg Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The Review of Economic Studies, Volume 34, Issue 1, January 1967, Pages 143–151, https://doi.org/10.2307/2296575 Published: 01 January 1967

Tentative Notes on a Two Sector Model with Induced Technical Progress

Review of Economic Studies 1966 33(3), 245
Journal Article Tentative Notes on a Two Sector Model with Induced Technical Progress Get access C. C. von Weizsäcker C. C. von Weizsäcker University of Heidelberg, Germany Alfred Weber Institut Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The Review of Economic Studies, Volume 33, Issue 3, July 1966, Pages 245–251, https://doi.org/10.2307/2974418 Published: 01 July 1966

Monetary and Value Theory: Further Comment

Review of Economic Studies 1960 28(1), 50
Journal Article A Symposium on Monetary Theory: Monetary and Value Theory: Further Comment Get access G. C. Archibald, G. C. Archibald London Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar R. C. Lipsey R. C. Lipsey London Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The Review of Economic Studies, Volume 28, Issue 1, October 1960, Pages 50–56, https://doi.org/10.2307/2296250 Published: 01 October 1960

Incentives and Aggregate Shocks

Review of Economic Studies 1994 61(4), 681-700
This paper presents an incentive-based theory of the dynamics of the distribution of consumption in the presence of aggregate shocks. The paper builds on the models concerning the distribution of income or consumption and incentive problems of Green (1987), Thomas and Worrall (1991), Phelan and Townsend (1991), and Atkeson and Lucas (1992). By incorporating aggregate production shocks, the model allows an examination of the interactions between individual and aggregate consumption series given incomplete insurance. Further, the methodology outlined allows the incorporation of incentive considerations to macroeconomic environments similar to Rogerson (1988) and Hansen (1985).

The Measurement of Utility

Review of Economic Studies 1969 36(1), 111
Journal Article The Measurement of Utility Get access C. Hillinger C. Hillinger Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The Review of Economic Studies, Volume 36, Issue 1, January 1969, Pages 111–116, https://doi.org/10.2307/2296348 Published: 01 January 1969 Article history Received: 19 February 1968 Revision received: 15 July 1968 Published: 01 January 1969

Technology and Production Fragmentation: Domestic versus Foreign Sourcing

Review of Economic Studies 2016 84(2), rdw057 open access
This article provides direct empirical evidence on the relationship between technology and firms’ global sourcing strategies. Using new data on U.S. firms’ decisions to contract for manufacturing services from domestic or foreign suppliers, I show that a firm’s adoption of communication technology between 2002 and 2007 is associated with a 3.1 point increase in its probability of fragmentation. The effect of firm technology also differs significantly across industries; in 2007, it is 20% higher, relative to the mean, in industries with production specifications that are easier to codify in an electronic format. These patterns suggest that technology lowers coordination costs, though its effect is disproportionately higher for domestic rather than foreign sourcing. The larger impact on domestic fragmentation highlights its importance as an alternative to offshoring, and can be explained by complementarities between technology and worker skill. High technology firms and industries are more likely to source from high human capital countries, and the differential impact of technology across industries is strongly increasing in country human capital.

Aggregating Information by Voting: The Wisdom of the Experts versus the Wisdom of the Masses

Review of Economic Studies 2013 80(1), 277-312
This paper analyzes participation and information aggregation in a common-value election with continuous private signals. In equilibrium, some citizens ignore their private information and abstain from voting, in deference to those with higher-quality signals. Even as the number of highly-informed peers grows large, however, citizens with only moderate expertise continue voting, so that voter participation remains at realistic levels (e.g. 50 % or 60%, for simple examples). The precise level of voter turnout, along with the margin of victory, are determined by the distribution of expertise. Improving a voter’s information makes her more willing to vote, consistent with a growing body of empirical evidence, but makes her peers more willing to abstain, providing a new explanation for various empirical patterns of voting. Equilibrium participation is optimal, even though the marginal voter may have very little (e.g. below-average) expertise, and even though non-voters’information is not utilized.

A Model of Asymmetric Employer Learning with Testable Implications

Review of Economic Studies 2009 76(1), 367-394
This paper helps close the gap between theory and empirical evidence in the literature on asymmetric employer learning. If an employer's private learning is reflected in a worker's wage and one employer's private information is transmitted to the next when the worker makes a job-to-job transition, then asymmetric employer learning will appear in wage regressions as learning over an employment spell. Extending previous work that assumes all learning takes place publicly, this paper develops wage regressions that test for both asymmetric employer learning and public learning. The empirical results, including tests of alternative explanations, are consistent with asymmetric employer learning's having at least as much of an effect on wages during an employment spell as does public learning. The model developed in this paper illustrates how the story suggested by the empirical work might unfold. It shows that outside firms can profitably compete with a better-informed employer through bidding wars, even when the worker is equally productive in all firms. Furthermore, this competition results in different wages for workers with the same publicly observable characteristics, a result that previous models of asymmetric learning have not produced.

A Dynamic Analysis of the Market for Wide-Bodied Commercial Aircraft

Review of Economic Studies 2004 71(3), 581-611
This paper uses an empirical dynamic oligopoly model of the commercial aircraft industry to analyse industry pricing, industry performance, and optimal industry policy. A novel feature of the model with respect to the previous literature is that entry, exit, prices, and quantities are endogenously determined in Markov perfect equilibrium (MPE). We find that many unusual aspects of the aircraft data, such as high concentration and persistent pricing below static marginal cost, are explained by this model. We also find that the unconstrained MPE is quite efficient from a social perspective, providing only 10% less welfare on average than a social planner would obtain. Finally, we provide simulation evidence that an anti-trust policy in the form of a concentration restriction would be welfare reducing. Copyright 2004, Wiley-Blackwell.