92 research outputs found

    Three Essays on Labor Supply Focusing on Entrepreneurship and Health Insurance

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    This dissertation consists of three essays analyzing policies that affect different aspects of labor supply. Economists are interested in many different aspects of labor supply decisions, such as whether to participate in the labor market, amount of work conditional on participation and career choice, among others. At the same time, a wide range of policies can impact labor supply such as: tax, immigration, healthcare, and unionization policies, among others. Analyzing policies using appropriate methodology may assist policymakers by presenting alternative solutions, trade-offs, and intended and unintended consequences of economic policies. While some of these issues have been explored extensively, others remain relatively unexplored. In this dissertation, I explore three such unexplored problems. First, I analyze the dynamic decision processes of entrepreneurs. Second, I explore the impact of the cost of health insurance on entrepreneurial activities. Third, I evaluate the effect of the availability of health insurance on workplace absenteeism.The first essay explores what induces individuals to become entrepreneurs creating jobs. Extant structural labor supply models used for ex-ante policy evaluations mostly exclude entrepreneurs. The first essay develops and estimates the first dynamic structural micro-econometric model explicitly accounting for the employer and non-employer entrepreneurs. In the model, individuals in each period choose to work as an employee, as one of the two entrepreneur types, or be non-employed. Different types of work experiences may affect earnings in the three careers in different ways. The model, estimated using German survey data, replicates key data patterns. This essay simulates how policy scenarios would affect individuals' choices to become employers and non-employers.The second essay explores whether the cost of health insurance affects entry into entrepreneurship. Entrepreneurship literature argues that a lack of access to health insurance is a potential barrier to become an entrepreneur (entrepreneurship lock), especially for individuals with a chronic health condition. Several papers have explored whether the guaranteed availability of health insurance brought about by the Affordable Care Act (ACA) of 2010 has increased the level of entrepreneurship, with conflicting results. However, the current literature focuses only on the availability of health insurance but not the cost of obtaining insurance. This essay explores whether the cost of health insurance rather than availability is a barrier to entrepreneurship. The results suggest that the probability of entry into self-employment is not sensitive to health insurance premiums.The third essay examines whether the expansion of health insurance coverage brought on by the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 (ACA), led to a decline in absenteeism among overweight and obese individuals. This essay uses data from the National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) to compare absenteeism among overweight and obese workers to absenteeism among normal-weight workers before and after the ACA. Results suggest that in the post-ACA period, the probability of being absent declined by about 1.3 (1.5) percentage points among obese (overweight) individuals. Disaggregated regressions suggest that the effect is significant among women but not among men. Furthermore, estimates (using a Tobit model) indicate that the obese (overweight) workers missed 0.32 (0.48) fewer days after the ACA. Again, the effect is concentrated among women. Results show that improved health outcomes led to reduced absenteeism. Results also show that there is no decline in absenteeism among elderly (age>=65) adults (who did not experience any increase in health insurance coverage as a result of the ACA), suggesting that the decline in absenteeism is indeed due to the expansion of health insurance coverage due to the ACA. Estimates of this essay imply that the ACA reduced the cost associated with absenteeism by about $350 million per year

    Population Growth and Economic Development in Bangladesh: Revisited Malthus

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    Bangladesh is the 2nd largest growing country in the world in 2016 with 7.1% GDP growth. This study undertakes an econometric analysis to examine the relationship between population growth and economic development. This result indicates population growth adversely related to per capita GDP growth, which means rapid population growth is a real problem for the development of Bangladesh.Comment: Working Pape

    Relationship Between Health Insurance and Self-employment: A Systematic Review

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    This paper performs a systematic review on whether there is a relationship between health insurance and self-employment. There are three types of findings available regarding this issue in the entrepreneurship literature. First, health insurance clearly plays a vital role when individuals choose to become self-employed. Second, there is some evidence of the effect of health insurance on entrepreneurial choices for some individuals with some demographic characteristics, like married women, students, people with disabilities, etc. Third, the evidence of relationship between health insurance and entrepreneurial choices is anecdotal

    Dynamic Growth Rate of U.S. Economy

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    This paper reports the estimates of the dynamic growth rate of U.S. economy using exponential growth model, Cob-Douglas production function with a regression framework. The estimates indicates that 100% output growth is broken down into 58% technology growth, 19.10% labor growth, and 22.90% capital growth. Growth rates of U.S. production, capital, and employment are decreasing by 0.4%, 0.6%, and 0.01% respectively for each additional year regardless of recession while growth rate of technological changes in U.S. economy has been changing in a systematic way. It also shows that forecasted growth rate of U.S. output with restricted elasticity is lower than that with unrestricted elasticity

    Antoine Augustin Cournot: The Pioneer of Modern Economic Ideas

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    Augustin Cournot, an unsung pioneer of many economic ideas during his time, who has written the book, Theory of Wealth, where he developed many economic ideas including the oligopoly theory, doupoly model, the ideas of function and probability into economic analysis. This paper discusses the way he thought the economics should be analyzed as well as his life cycle

    Econometric Ways to Estimate the Age and Price of Abalone

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    Abalone is a rich nutritious food resource in the many parts of the world. The economic value of abalone is positively correlated with its age. However, determining the age of abalone is a cumbersome as well as expensive process which increases the cost and limits its popularity. This article proposes very simple ways to determine the age of abalones using econometric methods to reduce the costs of producers as well as consumers

    Econometric Ways to Estimate the Age and Price of Abalone

    Get PDF
    Abalone is a rich nutritious food resource in the many parts of the world. The economic value of abalone is positively correlated with its age. However, determining the age of abalone is a cumbersome as well as expensive process which increases the cost and limits its popularity. This article proposes very simple ways to determine the age of abalones using econometric methods to reduce the costs of producers as well as consumers
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