Parental Death’s Effect on Earnings: New Evidence on Gender Disparities
Key Highlights
Economics · Labor Economics · Microeconomics
A new paper in the American Economic Review provides evidence that the sudden death of a parent causes significant and persistent earnings losses for the surviving adult children, with notably larger effects observed for women. The study uses administrative data and a quasi-experimental design to isolate the causal impact of bereavement on labor market outcomes. For a scholar with deep expertise in economic history and applied policy evaluation at the EIB/EIF, this finding offers a rigorous microeconomic foundation for understanding how family shocks propagate into long-term economic inequality, a theme relevant to historical analyses of household welfare and social safety nets.
Novelty: 85%
Rigor: 92%
Significance: 88%
Validity: 90%
Clarity: 82%
Economics · Public Economics · Development Economics
This study examines Audit Information Exchange Agreements between U.S. states and the federal government from 1950–1971, finding that these partnerships increased state income tax revenues by approximately 20% through enhanced enforcement salience. The analysis employs difference-in-differences methods and a spatial equilibrium model with costly migration, showing that evaders responded to enforcement primarily through compliance rather than relocation. For a researcher whose doctoral work focused on French postwar exchange controls and industrial planning through regulatory instruments, this paper offers a compelling historical parallel on how intergovernmental information-sharing architectures can shape tax compliance and fiscal capacity.
Novelty: 78%
Rigor: 88%
Significance: 84%
Validity: 86%
Clarity: 80%
Economics · International Economics · Development Economics
A new paper in the Journal of Development Studies analyzes the narratives surrounding port-city infrastructure projects, revealing how spatial imaginaries are deployed to legitimize dispossession and shape development outcomes. The research provides a critical perspective on how infrastructure-led growth strategies intersect with local communities, power structures, and economic inequality. This is particularly relevant to a scholar familiar with European investment policy at the EIB, where large-scale infrastructure finance requires navigating the tension between developmental objectives and distributional consequences highlighted in this study.
Novelty: 82%
Rigor: 80%
Significance: 76%
Validity: 78%
Clarity: 84%
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