Background Although voting is recognised as a social determinant of health, the association between electoral participation ...
Researchers Tal Gross, Timothy Layton, Daniel Prinz, and Julia Yates examine the causes and consequences of this pattern in Social Defaults and Plan Choice: The Case of Spousal Following (NBER Working ...
It's been a heck of a year in academia. This podcast miniseries, in partnership with WNYC's On The Media, examines the moral calculus universities face in dealings with the Trump administration.
What began as a small vocational track has evolved into a space where creativity, commerce and conscience intertwine — the ...
The newly enacted 'One Big, Beautiful Bill' promises significant tax relief for Americans in 2025. With retroactive ...
Today in the Planet Money newsletter, five recent papers that lit lightbulbs in our brains, and are maybe worth taking a look ...
Currently, political circles argue that promoting a 4.5-day workweek will increase jobs and productivity. As an economist who has examined Korean statistics, I cannot find evidence to support this ...
I was terrified to take economics in college after how much I struggled in high school. But so far my experience in Econ 4300 ...
Conversations about equality in business have focused on opportunity. But data continues to reveal how uneven the playing field is; the real issue is economic inclusion.
Economics was a bystander to the Industrial Revolution and rather ruined the 20th century; it should understand that it is best conceived as a leisure activity.
The Nobel Prize in economics this year went to three thinkers who show us why economies grow and how we can help them do so.
Harvard economist Roland Fryer looks at whether culture is a cause or consequence of inequality. Image: Free to Choose ...