Report NEP-LTV-2020-11-09
This is the archive for NEP-LTV, a report on new working papers in the area of Unemployment, Inequality and Poverty. Maximo Rossi issued this report. It is usually issued weekly.Subscribe to this report: email, RSS, or Mastodon.
Other reports in NEP-LTV
The following items were announced in this report:
- Carol Graham & Barton H. Hamilton & Yung Chun & Stephen Roll & Will Ross & Karen E. Joynt-Maddox & Michal Grinstein-Weiss, 2020. "Coping with COVID-19: Implications of Differences in Resilience across Racial Groups for Mental Health and Well-being," Working Papers 2020-067, Human Capital and Economic Opportunity Working Group.
- Cowell, Frank & Karagiannaki, Eleni & McKnight, Abigail, 2019. "The changing distribution of wealth in the pre-crisis US and UK: the role of socio-economic factors," LSE Research Online Documents on Economics 89833, London School of Economics and Political Science, LSE Library.
- Elodie Djemai & Andrew E. Clark & Conchita D'Ambrosio, 2020. "Take the Highway? Paved Roads and Well-Being in Africa," Working Papers DT/2020/11, DIAL (Développement, Institutions et Mondialisation).
- Christopher Cotton & Brent R. Hickman & John List & Joseph P. Price & Sutanuka Roy, 2020. "Productivity Versus Motivation in Adolescent Human Capital Production: Evidence from a Structurally-Motivated Field Experiment," Working Paper 1444, Economics Department, Queen's University.
- Jonathan Heathcote & Kjetil Storesletten & Giovanni L. Violante, 2020. "How Should Tax Progressivity Respond to Rising Income Inequality?," Staff Report 615, Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis.
- Alberto Alesina & Marlon Seror & David Y. Yang & Yang You & Weihong Zeng, 2020. "Persistence through Revolutions," Working Papers DT/2020/09, DIAL (Développement, Institutions et Mondialisation).
- John Knight & Ramani Gunatilaka, 2020. "Income inequality and happiness: perceived or actual, widely or narrowly defined, fair or unfair, self- or community-centred inequality?," Economics Series Working Papers 922, University of Oxford, Department of Economics.