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Worker Knowledge of Pension Provisions

Journal of Labor Economics 1988 6(1), 21-39
This article evaluates the quality of workers' information regarding pension offerings using both administrative records and worker reports of pension provisions. Missing and incorrect information is wide-spread. Unionized employees, higher income workers, better educated workers, and those with seniority are better informed about their pensions. There are also demographic differences: minorities have less pension knowledge than whites, but women are better informed than men along several pension dimensions. Myopia about pension incentive structures is troubling since workers may save or consume suboptimally, change jobs, or retire earlier than they would have if equipped with better pension information.

Incremental information content of earnings‐and nonearnings‐based financial ratios*

Contemporary Accounting Research 1988 5(1), 318-342
Abstract. Given the quantity of nonearnings data disclosed in firms' annual reports, and the many dimensions of performance measured, it is likely that such information is used in establishing equilibrium prices in the market for firms' shares. This study empirically tests the hypothesis that equity price‐relevant information conveyed by annual reports includes several measures other than earnings. The marginal impact of both earnings‐ and nonearnings‐based financial ratios is analyzed and reported. The ratio information is first partitioned into distinct sets using an a priori linear components (LISREL) model. Association tests then show incremental information effects for the earnings‐based ratio set as well as for several nonearnings‐based ratio sets. Résumé. Étant donné la quantité de données étrangères aux bénéfices présentées dans les rapports annuels des entreprises et les nombreuses dimensions sous lesquelles le rendement est mesuré, il est probable que cette information soit utilisée dans l'établissement de prix d'équilibre dans le marché des actions des entreprises. Dans la présente étude, les auteurs procèdent à des vérifications empiriques de l'hypothèse selon laquelle l'information pertinente aux prix relative aux participations que livrent les rapports annuels comporte plusieurs mesures étrangères aux bénéfices. Les auteurs analysent l'incidence marginale tant des ratios financiers basés sur les bénéfices que de ceux qui ne le sont pas, et ils en exposent les résultats. L'information indiciaire est d'abord partagée en jeux distincts à l'aide d'un modèle de composants linéaires a priori. Les tests d'association montrent ensuite les conséquences de l'information marginale pour le jeu des ratios basés sur les bénéfices ainsi que pour plusieurs jeux de ratios qui ne le sont pas.

Plant Closings and the Value of the Firm

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1988 70(4), 580
Negative product-market shocks reduce wage growth and increase the probability of plant closing. There is a U-shaped relation between th is probability and job tenure that proxies the specific human capital that raises a firm's value. Estimates based on Panel Study of Income Dynamics data for 1977-81 generally support the model. They show that wages grow less rapidly among workers who will subsequently be displaced and imply that large wage concessions reduce the risk of pl ant closing only slightly. Copyright 1988 by MIT Press.

Self-Selection Bias in the Evolution of Voluntary Energy Conservation Programs

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1988 70(3), 448
While voluntary energy conservation programs have been extensively promoted by electric utilities and public utility commissions, their effectiveness has been insufficiently critiqued. This paper contributes to the growing evaluation of such programs by measuring the net energy savings directly attributable to an actual set of programs. The analysis explicitly corrects for the self-selection bias that can arise in program evaluation. The correction is found to be important; traditional evaluation methods are subject to considerable bias. Correcting for this bias, the amount of program-induced energy savings is found to be considerably less than traditionally believed. Copyright 1988 by MIT Press.

An investigation of cost differences between public sales and private placements of debt

Journal of Financial Economics 1988 22(2), 253-278
We examine the cost differences between public sales and private placements of debt for a sample of public utility issues. The lowest cost method depends on a firm's transaction costs which comprise flotation costs, agency costs, and the costs of searching the market. Our findings suggest that firms minimize the cost of issuing securities by selecting the market providing the lowest transaction costs.