Japan’s ICT Standardization Cuts Municipal Spending Substantially
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Personalized briefing
Top 5 discoveries · Economics
Financial impacts of standardized system specifications: evidence from japanese municipalities
Dear Julien Brault — this week’s five most relevant discoveries, curated for your work in Economics.
Key findings
Economics · Public Economics
No. 1
Standardization of municipal ICT systems through Japan’s Regional Information Platform (RIP) significantly reduces per capita total expenditure.
The reduction operates via two channels: weakened vendor lock-in lowers system costs, and improved cross-departmental interoperability reduces labor input.
For a researcher with applied policy evaluation experience at the EIB, this causal evidence on how institutional design—rather than mere ICT adoption—drives fiscal outcomes offers a valuable framework for assessing public sector efficiency investments.
Novelty
80%
Rigor
88%
Significance
82%
Validity
85%
Clarity
90%
Economics · Development Economics
No. 2
No Last Place to Rest: Coal Mining and Dispossession in South Africa
This study examines the relationship between coal mining expansion and dispossession in South Africa, highlighting the developmental costs of resource extraction.
It provides evidence that mining-driven displacement undermines local livelihoods and raises questions about the net welfare effects of industrial resource policy.
Given your research on oil import quotas as instruments of industrial planning, this analysis offers a comparative lens on how resource-dependent economies manage trade-offs between extraction and social welfare.
Novelty
75%
Rigor
78%
Significance
80%
Validity
72%
Clarity
85%
Economics · International Economics
No. 3
The big impact of small change: Fresh estimates of English wheat market integration, 1693–1893
New price data sets and statistical techniques reveal that English wheat markets achieved full integration by the 1830s after two centuries of gradual improvement.
The study documents that market integration was significant but not uniform, with more distant markets benefiting later, and that standard tests suffer from data-quality biases.
For an economic historian, this work provides methodologically rigorous techniques for correcting stale-price and rounding biases that could be applied to historical price series in other contexts, such as postwar French commodity markets.
Novelty
85%
Rigor
90%
Significance
88%
Validity
87%
Clarity
92%
Economics · International Economics
No. 4
Living Standards on the New Frontier: An Estimation of Welfare Ratios in San Francisco
Welfare ratios in San Francisco from 1848 to 1900 show that even unskilled workers could meet basic needs during the Gold Rush, with ratios declining after 1850 but remaining adequate for large families.
The international comparison reveals that San Francisco’s welfare ratio was high by global standards, suggesting relatively favorable living conditions despite frontier volatility.
This estimation of historical welfare ratios directly parallels your doctoral work on living standards under industrial planning regimes and provides a comparative benchmark for assessing the welfare effects of trade and resource policies.
Novelty
70%
Rigor
75%
Significance
72%
Validity
70%
Clarity
80%
Economics · International Economics
No. 5
Revisiting the link between electrification and fertility: Evidence from the early 20th-century United States
New evidence from early 20th-century United States reexamines the causal link between rural electrification and fertility decline.
The study leverages historical variation to isolate the effect of electrification on household fertility decisions, controlling for confounding factors.
For an economic historian interested in how infrastructure investments reshape demographic outcomes, this work offers a template for analyzing similar transitions in postwar France where electrification and industrial policy interacted.
Novelty
78%
Rigor
82%
Significance
76%
Validity
80%
Clarity
85%
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