7 research outputs found

    Happiness is a Warm Gun

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    Fil: Bottan, Nicolas Luis. Universidad de San Andrés. Departamento de Economía; Argentina.Based on evolutionary reasons, we propose that current happiness may depend negatively on past happiness. Our theoretical model shows how addiction may be thought as an optimum mechanism to make mankind maximize fitness. We run happiness regressions using panel data from the British Household Panel Survey (BHPS) to test the different hypotheses. The results are twofold: originally happiness may have been autoregressive, but under modern circumstances mankind might have found the key to perpetuate life satisfaction

    Essays in behavioral public economics

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    This dissertation has three chapters that study two main aspects of public economics. The title of my dissertation reflects the fact that an overarching theme in my research is in studying individual's behavior in order to learn how to improve public policy, beyond learning about how people behave in itself. My first two chapters study how relative concerns affect people's behavior. First, I show that people care about relative income (i.e., their position in the income distribution) when making location decisions using evidence from a field experiment. Second, I show that relative concerns are important in determining people's performance and participation. I do so by studying the behavior of swimmers around the time they have to change age category right after aging-up. I show that facing stronger competition not only worsens swimmer's performance, but also leads to higher dropouts. Finally, I obtain the first causal estimates showing how access to gambling affects crime, by studying the recent expansion of video gambling in Illinois. Taken together, these chapters provide evidence that advance our understanding of individual's preferences that can help inform public policy. Chapter 1: Choosing Your Pond: Location Choices and Relative Income We provide unique revealed-preference evidence that, when choosing where to live, individuals care about their position in the income distribution. We study the decisions of senior medical students in the National Resident Matching Program (NRMP). They must choose between programs that offer similar nominal incomes, but in cities with different costs of living and income distributions. We conduct a survey experiment with 1,100 NRMP participants to elicit their perceptions about cost of living and relative income in their prospective cities and their rank order submissions. To assess the direction of causality, we embed an information-provision experiment. We find evidence that, in addition to the cost of living, individuals care about their relative income. Moreover, we find substantial and meaningful heterogeneity by relationship status. We conduct a complementary survey experiment to assess the robustness of our results. The evidence is consistent with a combination of relative concerns and dating expectations. Chapter 2: Big Fish in a Small Pool? The Effect of Competition on Performance and Dropout We take advantage of a natural experiment to identify the effect of competing against better peers on dropout and performance: discrete changes in age-group swimming competitions. Using the universe of race times for U.S. club swimming competitions, we first document large discouragement effects where the hazard rate of dropping out rises by 50\% in category change years. Furthermore, we explore how these changes affect swimmer's performance. Using our rich data on times, we can track swimmers who compete both before and after aging up. Using a Regression Discontinuity Design, along with swimmer fixed-effects to account for swimmer ability, we find that on average swimmers are discouraged (i.e., swim slower) when facing faster competition. This average effect masks meaningful heterogeneity by swimmer ability: low-ability swimmers are not significantly affected, while middle- and high-ability swimmers are similarly discouraged. Chapter 3: Can't Stop the One-Armed Bandits: The Effects of Access to Gambling on Crime We examine the effects on crime and property values following state legislation in Illinois that legalized video gambling, but gave municipalities decision-making authority over whether to allow video gambling terminals within their local boundaries. Many jurisdictions adjacent to Chicago chose to allow the terminals, while the City of Chicago itself did not, thus creating a natural experiment with which to compare crime rates between areas closer to and farther from video gambling establishments. Using detailed incident-level crime data and a difference-in-differences strategy, we find that (i) access to gambling increases property and violent crimes; (ii) the crimes represent ``new'' rather than displaced incidents; and (iii) the effects are persistent over time

    Deconstructing the hedonic treadmill: Is happiness autoregressive?

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    Affective habituation is well-documented in social sciences: people seem to adapt to many life events, ranging from lottery windfalls to terminal illnesses. A group of studies have tried to measure habituation by seeing how lagged values of life events affect present happiness. We propose an additional adaptation channel: current happiness may depend directly on past happiness, which amounts to assessing whether happiness is autoregressive. We run dynamic happiness regressions using individual-level panel data from the German Socio-Economic Panel Study, the Japanese Panel Survey of Consumers, the British Household Panel Survey and the Swiss Household Panel. As in previous studies, the coefficients on lagged events (e.g., becoming unemployed, getting married) suggest strong habituation. However, all the econometric models suggest that the coefficient on lagged happiness is positive and significant. We discuss whether this may be evidence of happiness having an inertial force (besides the usual habituation channel).Hedonic adaptation Happiness Dynamic panel

    Access to pre-primary education and progression in primary School : evidence from rural Guatemala

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    Evidence on the impacts of a large-scale expansion in pre-primary education is limited and mostly circumscribed to high- and middle-income nations. This study estimates the effects of such an expansion on progression in primary school in rural communities in Guatemala, where the number of pre-primary schools increased from about 5,300 to 11,500 between 1998 and 2005. Combining administrative and population census data in a difference-in-differences framework, the analysis finds that access to pre-primary education increased by 2.4 percentage points the proportion of students that progress adequately and attend sixth grade by age 12. These positive although limited effects suggest the need for complementary actions to produce substantial improvements in adequate progression
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