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The Review of Economics and Statistics (REStat)
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The Review of Economics and Statistics (REStat)
@restatjournal
REStat is a 100-year-old general journal of economics. Edited at @Kennedy_School, the Review shares empirical & theoretical contributions for a wide readership.
mitpressjournals.org/loi/rest
Joined October 2019
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    The Review of Economics and Statistics (REStat)
    @restatjournal
    Apr 18, 2022
    IV-OLS gap can be empirically decomposed, accounting for heterogeneity, nonlinearity, and endogeneity bias. Just Accepted new paper by Shoya Ishimaru. zcu.io/KxQh
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    The Review of Economics and Statistics (REStat)
    @restatjournal
    Dec 6, 2023
    The rise of tea drinking in England had a significant impact on mortality during the Industrial Revolution. In the November 2023 issue, by Francisca M. Antman.
    direct.mit.edu
    For Want of a Cup: The Rise of Tea in England and the Impact of Water Quality on Mortality
    Abstract. This paper explores the impact of water quality on mortality by exploiting a natural experiment: the rise of tea consumption in eighteenth century England. This resulted in an unintentional...
    334K
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    The Review of Economics and Statistics (REStat)
    @restatjournal
    Jan 15, 2024
    Increases in visas for nurses from the Philippines caused a brain gain, rather than brain drain, of nurses. In the January 2024 issue, by Caroline Theoharides (@ctheoharides), Paolo Abarcar (@pabarcar)
    Issue Cover
    direct.mit.edu
    Medical Worker Migration and Origin-Country Human Capital: Evidence from U.S. Visa Policy
    Abstract. We exploit changes in U.S. visa policies for nurses to measure the origin-country human capital response to international migration opportunities. Combining data on all migrant departures...
    228K
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    The Review of Economics and Statistics (REStat)
    @restatjournal
    Apr 23, 2024
    IV-OLS gap can be empirically decomposed, accounting for heterogeneity, nonlinearity, and endogeneity bias. In the March 2024 issue of REStat by Shoya Ishimaru.
    Issue Cover
    direct.mit.edu
    Empirical Decomposition of the IV-OLS Gap with Heterogeneous and Nonlinear Effects
    Abstract. This study proposes an econometric framework to interpret and empirically decompose the difference between instrumental variables (IV) and ordinary least squares (OLS) estimates given by a...
    78K
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    The Review of Economics and Statistics (REStat)
    @restatjournal
    Nov 25, 2019
    Starting December 2019, the Review of Economics and Statistics will begin considering Short Paper submissions for publication. Read about REStat's new Short Paper Policy submission guidelines: mitpressjournals.org/journals/rest/… #EconTwitter @QJEHarvard @AEAjournals @JPolEcon @RevEconStud
  • user avatar
    The Review of Economics and Statistics (REStat)
    @restatjournal
    Dec 27, 2021
    Increases in visas for nurses from the Philippines caused a brain gain, rather than brain drain, of nurses. Just Accepted new paper by Caroline Theoharides (@ctheoharides), Paolo Abarcar(@pabarcar). direct.mit.edu/rest/article-a…
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    The Review of Economics and Statistics (REStat)
    @restatjournal
    Jul 7, 2021
    Local Effects of Large New Apartment Buildings in Low-Income Areas. Just accepted new paper by Brian J. Asquith, Evan Mast, and Davin Reed. direct.mit.edu/rest/article/d…
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    The Review of Economics and Statistics (REStat)
    @restatjournal
    Dec 14, 2021
    What is the effect of parental incarceration on children's education? This paper finds it's positive. Just Accepted new paper by Carolina Arteaga @caroartc. direct.mit.edu/rest/article-a…
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    The Review of Economics and Statistics (REStat)
    @restatjournal
    Oct 31, 2019
    The Review of Economics and Statistics Journal (REStat) has joined Twitter! Follow us for news on the latest accepted & published papers in empirical economics by top scholars. Retweet & spread the word. Click here to read the October issue: mitpressjournals.org/toc/rest/curre…
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    The Review of Economics and Statistics (REStat)
    @restatjournal
    Mar 2, 2022
    The rise of tea drinking in England had a significant impact on mortality during the Industrial Revolution. Just Accepted new paper by Francisca M. Antman. zcu.io/Jxxo
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    The Review of Economics and Statistics (REStat)
    @restatjournal
    Mar 17, 2025
    A new DiD type estimator explores latent heterogeneity in treatment effect in a large pretreatment setup. Just Accepted new paper by Myungkou Shin
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    direct.mit.edu
    Finitely Heterogeneous Treatment Effect in Event-study
    Abstract. A key assumption of the differences-in-differences designs is that the average evolution of untreated potential outcomes is the same across different treatment cohorts: parallel trend...
    22K
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    The Review of Economics and Statistics (REStat)
    @restatjournal
    Jun 24, 2024
    Students exposed to more school funding during elementary school are less likely to be arrested as adults. Just Accepted new paper by Jason Baron (@JasonBaron4), Joshua Hyman (@jmhyman), Brittany Vasquez (@BrittanyEdPol)
    Issue Cover
    direct.mit.edu
    Public School Funding, School Quality, and Adult Crime
    Abstract. This paper asks whether increasing public school funding can be an effective long-run crime-prevention strategy in the United States. Specifically, we examine the effect of increases in...
    77K
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    The Review of Economics and Statistics (REStat)
    @restatjournal
    May 31, 2021
    Cash transfers improve well-being during a pandemic, but governments may face challenges in reaching the poor. Just Accepted new paper by Juliana Londoño-Vélez (@juliana_londono) and Pablo Querubín (@pquerubo). direct.mit.edu/rest/article/d…
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    The Review of Economics and Statistics (REStat)
    @restatjournal
    Jan 25, 2021
    Workers who entered the labor market during economic downturns have lower cognitive skills many years later. Just Accepted new paper by Jaime Arellano-Bover (@J_ArellanoBover) mitpressjournals.org/doi/abs/10.116…
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