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Incoming Resources
- Adoption of financial technologies, implications for money demand and monetary policy
- A century of labor-leisure distorsions
- Gerontocracy, retirement and social security
- Measuring aggregate human capital
- Adoption of financial technologies, implications for money demand and monetary policy
- Social security, retirement, and the single-mindedness of the electorate
- The optimum quantity of money, theory and practice
- A note on the time-elimination method for solving recursive dynamic economic models
- Transitional dynamics in two-sector models of endogenous growth
- Substitution over time, another look at life cycle labor supply
- The empirical frequency of a pivotal vote
- Social security and democracy
- The redistribution recession, how labor market distortions contracted the economy, Casey B. Mulligan
- Social security in theory and practice (I), facts and political theories
- A labor-income-based measure of the value of human capital, an application to the states of the United States
- Adoption of financial technologies, implications for money demand and monetary policy
- Capital, interest, and aggregate intertemporal substitution
- Social security in theory and practise (II), efficiency theories, narrative theories, and implications for reform
- Microfoundations and macro implications of indivisible labor
- Pecuniary incentives to work in the US during World War II
- A labour-income-based measure of the value of human capital, an application to the states of the United States
- Can monopoly unionism explain publicly induced retirement?
- The demand for money by firms, some additional empirical results
- A dual method of empirically evaluating dynamic competitive equilibrium models with market distorsion, applied to the great depression and world war ii
- Social security in theory and practise (I), facts and political theories
- Aggregate implications of indivisible labor
- Gerontocracy, retirement, and social security
- Capital tax incidence, first impressions from the time series
- Parental priorities and economic inequality, Casey B. Mulligan
- Merit motives and government intervention, public finance in reverse
- Social security, retirement, and the single-mindedness of the electorate
- The optimum quantity of money, theory and evidence
- Capital tax incidence, fisherian impressions from the time series
- Measuring aggregate human capital
- Social security in theory and practice (II), efficiency theories, narrative theories and implications for reform
- Microfoundations and macro implications of invisible labor
- Do democracies have different public policies than nondemocracies?
- Induced retirement, social security and the pyramid mirage
- Measuring aggregate human capital