Michael Lipsitz

253 posts

Michael Lipsitz

Michael Lipsitz

@MichaelLipsitz

Labor, IO, and market power economics. All views are my own and not my employer's. He/him.

شامل ہوئے Ekim 2017
927 فالونگ1K فالوورز
Michael Lipsitz ری ٹویٹ کیا
Evan Starr
Evan Starr@evanpstarr·
I’m proud of this paper with Takuya Hiraiwa (his first publication!) and @MichaelLipsitz. We also had an excellent editor and reviewer team from @restatjournal, who improved the paper and turned it around quickly. Check it out!
The Review of Economics and Statistics (REStat)@restatjournal

Firms are not willing to give workers earning $100k a small raise for the ability to enforce their noncompetes. Just Accepted new paper by Takuya Hiraiwa, Michael Lipsitz (@MichaelLipsitz), and Evan Starr (@evanpstarr) zurl.co/vv4u

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Michael Lipsitz
Michael Lipsitz@MichaelLipsitz·
Great to see this out in print! Firms reveal that they have a low WTP for noncompetes by not boosting workers' earnings over a legal threshold. Thanks to @restatjournal, our editor, and our referees for a fantastic (and quick!) review process!
The Review of Economics and Statistics (REStat)@restatjournal

Firms are not willing to give workers earning $100k a small raise for the ability to enforce their noncompetes. Just Accepted new paper by Takuya Hiraiwa, Michael Lipsitz (@MichaelLipsitz), and Evan Starr (@evanpstarr) zurl.co/vv4u

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Florian Ederer
Florian Ederer@florianederer·
"Compared to the shareholder-value maximizing compensation packages, executives are paid too much, too soon, and keep their jobs for too long." cepr.org/publications/d…
Florian Ederer tweet media
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Michael Lipsitz
Michael Lipsitz@MichaelLipsitz·
As someone who's been on both sides, these are HUGE. Incentives don't always push researchers towards caring about benefit-cost implementation. But these things are often really easy to implement--different reporting, a quick appendix, etc.--and they can make a big difference
Robert Metcalfe@RDMetcalfe

Some helpful recommendations on motivating policymakers to use the results from your papers for benefit-cost analysis: whitehouse.gov/wp-content/upl…

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Michael Lipsitz
Michael Lipsitz@MichaelLipsitz·
Interesting paper on the distributional consequences of market power. Goes along with @LeistenEcon 's work on market power and inequality, though here there's an industry-specific (credit-based) mechanism
The Review of Economic Studies@RevEconStudies

``The credit card monopoly of 1980s hurt low income households the most. Competitive reforms to the industry in 1970s & 1980s promoted competition => large welfare gains for the poorest U.S. households." New paper from @KyleHerkenhoff & Raveendranathan: restud.com/who-bears-the-…

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Michael Lipsitz
Michael Lipsitz@MichaelLipsitz·
@HoffProf Why is that happening, do you think (not using arbitration anymore)?
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Florian Ederer
Florian Ederer@florianederer·
Congratulations to the 42 new Fellows of the Econometric Society!
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Michael Lipsitz
Michael Lipsitz@MichaelLipsitz·
Diff in diff econometricians, posting their 17th paper:
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Matt Marx
Matt Marx@marxmatt·
The next meeting of the NBER Innovation Information Initiative (I3) Technical Working Group will be held on December 6 and 7, 2024 immediately following the NBER Place-Based Policies and Entrepreneurship meeting. There will be an in-person meeting in Cambridge, MA along with a virtual component on Zoom for those who are unable or choose not to attend in person. Presenters are encouraged to attend in-person. This meeting is supported by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. The aim of I3 is to support the production and dissemination of open data for research on innovation, science, entrepreneurship, and related fields. The Technical Working Group will feature "deep dive" presentations of novel datasets or research tools (including efforts in progress that would benefit from community feedback or collaboration) that are or will be made openly available. We are primarily interested in presentations on new data and tools rather than research findings. Please submit either (a) an extended abstract of five pages or less describing the new dataset or tool you propose to present, its potential value to the research community, and your plans for public dissemination, or (b) a research paper that fully describes data construction (or has a comprehensive data appendix) along with a short cover note describing the value of the dataset (or tool) to the research community, what you would focus on in your presentation, and your plans for dissemination. If you have a paper you would like considered for presentation, please upload it here conference.nber.org/confsubmit/bac… by 11:59 pm EST on September 27, 2024. Submissions from researchers with and without NBER affiliations, from early career scholars, and from researchers from under-represented groups are welcome. The presentations will also be livestreamed on the NBER's YouTube channel and students, colleagues or others who might be interested may watch the presentations. @I3Open
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Michael Lipsitz
Michael Lipsitz@MichaelLipsitz·
Pretty cool results on the effects of banning suspensions: schools start classifying students as having disabilities when they can't be suspended!
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Oren Danieli
Oren Danieli@DanieliOren·
I'm presenting my paper on technological change and inequality at the @nberpubs Wage Dynamics in the 21st Century program. You can tune in on YouTube and see the program (which looks fantastic) here: nber.org/conferences/wa… Also - here's a Twitter 🧵 summarizing the paper:
Oren Danieli@DanieliOren

I have a new version of my paper now called “Revisiting U.S. Wage Inequality at the Bottom 50%”. While inequality at the top is steadily increasing, inequality at the bottom was increasing in the 80s, decreasing in the 90s, and increasing again since ~2000. What's going on?>>>

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Michael Lipsitz
Michael Lipsitz@MichaelLipsitz·
@LeistenEcon True but giving these things a little time to trickle through I guess
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Matthew Leisten
Matthew Leisten@LeistenEcon·
Not an IO topic, but I saw this recently. Something I care about and depressing as all heck. Does anybody know what's going on (especially with the younger age demo?)
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Matthew Leisten
Matthew Leisten@LeistenEcon·
@MichaelLipsitz I kind of feel like climate change has become a "procyclical" issue: something people care about most when there's less to be worried about in general.
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Michael Lipsitz
Michael Lipsitz@MichaelLipsitz·
@LeistenEcon Yep. BLM protests too. Maybe fueled by the media or maybe just cultural consciousness, but I feel like there's limited capacity for "causes" and only a couple can stay afloat at a time. If factors push back (e.g. gas) then maybe people drift towards a different one
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Matthew Leisten
Matthew Leisten@LeistenEcon·
@MichaelLipsitz Yeah, Monmouth reports the biggest dropoff was 2021-2022. So maybe it got crowded out by other issues on the Left that became salient here, namely Dobbs. Also, Ukraine + inflation meant people probably wanted cheap gas, whatever the cost
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