- Research Article
- 10.1162/rest.a.1622
- Oct 29, 2025
- Review of Economics and Statistics
- Mathias Allemand + 5 more
Abstract Despite extensive evidence on the importance of non-cognitive skills for labor market outcomes, to what extent training can affect specific skills in adulthood remains an open question. We conducted a randomized controlled trial with low-skilled employed workers in Senegal where workers were randomly assigned to receive a training intervention designed to affect conscientiousness-related skills. We found that treated workers were significantly more likely to stay in their job, had higher earnings and better performance grades post intervention. Our findings suggest that non-cognitive skills can be affected later in the life cycle and targeted training can have substantial labor market returns.
- Research Article
- 10.1162/rest.a.1618
- Oct 29, 2025
- Review of Economics and Statistics
- Christina Gathmann + 4 more
Abstract Using administrative labor market data matched to mortality statistics and patient records, we document that negative labor market shocks produce sizable health spillovers in couples. For every 100,000 displaced men, there are 1,100 additional deaths. Of those, 60% accrue to the displaced worker, but 40% are due to excess spousal mortality. We find a stunning gender asymmetry: while male job displacement generates persistent negative health effects, no such dire consequences are observed after a woman’s job loss. We explore several explanations for these patterns: risk sharing through spousal labor supply; earnings losses and public insurance; widowhood; regional mobility and gender roles in the family.
- Research Article
- 10.1162/rest.a.1615
- Oct 29, 2025
- Review of Economics and Statistics
- Evan Saltzman + 2 more
Abstract We study how inertia interacts with market power and adverse selection in health insurance. We incorporate inertia into a model of plan selection and price competition, and estimate it using data from the California ACA exchange. We estimate inertia costs equaling 26% of average premiums. Our simulations indicate that inertia exacerbates market power, but has minimal interaction with selection. Eliminating inertia reduces average premiums by 6.6%. Maintaining premium-linked subsidies or reducing consumer churn increases the impact of inertia by enhancing market power. Provider network attachment is an important impediment to plan switching, but substantial inertia remains after accounting for networks.
- Research Article
- 10.1162/rest.a.1617
- Oct 29, 2025
- Review of Economics and Statistics
- Laura Derksen + 2 more
Abstract This paper shows that replacing paper-based records with electronic medical records (EMRs) improves HIV patient retention and prevents AIDS deaths in the low-income country of Malawi. An event study of 106 HIV clinics shows a 28 percent reduction in annual deaths five years after EMR implementation, with the greatest impact on children. Improvements in health outcomes appear due to efficiency gains, rather than to changes in the medical care provided at visits. These efficiency gains allow clinics to better manage patient data, trace lapsed patients and return them into care, and adapt to higher patient volumes over time.
- Research Article
- 10.1162/rest.a.1621
- Oct 29, 2025
- Review of Economics and Statistics
- Hans K Hvide + 1 more
Abstract We consider the role of parental influence on the industry choice of entrepreneurs and the success of their ventures. Almost 75% of male entrepreneurs start a firm in an industry that is the same or closely related to their father’s industry of employment. Ventures started by same-industry entrepreneurs have superior mean outcomes and higher propensity to be positive outliers. The patterns cannot be explained by parents helping out or by inherited intrinsic abilities. We argue that entrepreneurs appear to obtain industry knowledge through interacting with parents during upbringing, or “dinner table human capital”.
- Research Article
- 10.1162/rest.a.1620
- Oct 29, 2025
- Review of Economics and Statistics
- Victoria Wenxin Xie + 2 more
Abstract Does mining activity lead to deforestation? How does investor origin affect the environmental impacts of mining operations? We investigate these questions by estimating the causal impact of mineral price changes on deforestation near mining sites. Combining global mine propertylevel data with high-resolution satellite imagery on forest cover, we find a positive elasticity of deforestation to mineral price shocks. This elasticity is significantly lower when mine owners are from countries with higher income or better institutions, but it is not affected by host country characteristics. Evidence suggests that mine owners from higher-income countries induce different types of local economic activity.
- Research Article
- 10.1162/rest.a.1624
- Oct 29, 2025
- Review of Economics and Statistics
- Joris Mueller
Abstract I study how domestic political considerations influence the foreign policy choices of autocratic regimes, by analyzing China’s foreign aid. First, using contractor-level data, I document how the regime uses foreign aid projects to help maintain domestic stability: aid projects are awarded to state-owned firms in Chinese prefectures hit by social unrest, increasing employment and future political stability. Second, I find that this strategy to manage domestic unrest affects the global allocation of Chinese aid, since state-owned firms pursue projects in countries where they have prior connections.
- Research Article
- 10.1162/rest.a.1616
- Oct 29, 2025
- Review of Economics and Statistics
- Tommaso Giommoni + 1 more
Abstract This paper exploits the historical system of salt taxation in France to study the impact of extractive taxes on long-term economic development. Salt tax rates exhibited significant spatial variation, leading to discontinuous jumps in salt prices. Adopting a spatial regressiondiscontinuity design, we estimate the causal effect of the tax using original historical data. We extract geo-localized individual-level information on almost 70 million individuals living near tax borders between 1400 and 1900. These exogenous rate differentials had large effects, as areas burdened by lower rates exhibit higher economic development. These effects emerged after the tax’s introduction and persisted post-abrogation to the present day.
- Research Article
- 10.1162/rest.a.1619
- Oct 29, 2025
- Review of Economics and Statistics
- Pamela Bombarda + 2 more
Abstract We examine how Rules of Origin (RoO) and cumulation provisions in Free Trade Agreements shape imports and supply chains. Using a new RoO database and two policy changes, the Pan-European Cumulation System and the 2004 EU enlargement, we show that relaxing RoO increases intermediate imports from countries where cumulation restrictions were lifted. A 1% higher value requirement before liberalization raised such imports by 0.4–0.7%. Effects are stronger when preferential margins are higher, underscoring the joint role of RoO, cumulation provisions, and tariffs in shaping sourcing decisions.
- Research Article
- 10.1162/rest.a.1623
- Oct 29, 2025
- Review of Economics and Statistics
- Sarah R Cohodes + 1 more
Abstract Americans with more education vote more, but we know little about whether this effect on civic participation arises from educational quality or quantity. Using admissions lotteries at Boston charter schools, we find that charter attendance boosts voter participation, substantially increasing voting in the first presidential election after a student turns 18 by six percentage points from a baseline of 35 percent. This effect operates through increased turnout, as there is no increase in registration. Rich data enable us to explore multiple potential channels of this voting impact. Our evidence suggests that charters increase voting by increasing noncognitive skills.