NBER Chapters
From National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc National Bureau of Economic Research, 1050 Massachusetts Avenue Cambridge, MA 02138, U.S.A.. Contact information at EDIRC. Bibliographic data for series maintained by (). Access Statistics for this chapter series.
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- Comment on "Unemployment in an Estimated New Keynesian Model" , pp 361-380

- Lawrence Christiano
- Comment on "Unemployment in an Estimated New Keynesian Model" , pp 381-388

- Richard Rogerson
- Comment on "Updating the Allocation of Greenhouse Gas Emissions Permits in a Federal Cap-and-Trade Program" , pp 171-175

- Lawrence H. Goulder
- Comment on "Upstream versus Downstream Implementation of Climate Policy" , pp 193-195

- Roberton Williams
- Comment on "Urban Policy Effects on Carbon Mitigation" , pp 268-269

- Christopher Knittel
- Comment on "Valuing Government Guarantees: Fannie and Freddie Revisited" , pp 154-161

- Alan Marcus
- Comment on "Venture Capital and the Transformation of Private R&D for Agriculture: A First Look" , pp 246-252

- Michael Ewens
- Comment on "Wayfair: A Step Towards the Destination, But Sales Tax Competition Remains"

- Alan Auerbach
- Comment on "We Can Work It Out: The Globalization of ICT-Enabled Services" , pp 325-328

- Lori G. Kletzer
- Comment on "We Won't Be Missed: Work and Growth in the Era of AGI"
- Neil Thompson
- Comment on "Were They Prepared for Retirement? Financial Status at Advanced Ages in the HRS and AHEAD Cohorts" , pp 69-75

- David Laibson
- Comment on "What Accounts for the Rising Sophistication of China's Exports?" , pp 104-107

- Galina Hale
- Comment on "What Are We Not Doing When We Are Online?" , pp 82-85

- Chris Forman
- Comment on "What Determines End-of-Life Assets? A Retrospective View" , pp 157-160

- Brigitte Madrian
- Comment on "What Do Economists Know about Crime?" , pp 302-304

- Philip J Cook
- Comment on "What Do We Know About Contracting Out in the United States? Evidence from Household and Establishment Surveys" , pp 304-308

- Daniel Sullivan
- Comment on "What Do We Learn From Cross-Regional Empirical Estimates in Macroeconomics?" , pp 224-231

- Gabriel Chodorow-Reich
- Comment on "What Do We Learn From Cross-Regional Empirical Estimates in Macroeconomics?" , pp 232-241

- Valerie Ramey
- Comment on "What Do We Really Know About Changes in Wage Inequality?" , pp 59-62

- Lawrence Katz
- Comment on "What Explains Changing Spreads on Emerging Market Debt?" , pp 134-136

- Sylvia Maxfield
- Comment on "What Fiscal Policy is Effective at Zero Interest Rates?" , pp 125-137

- Lee Ohanian
- Comment on "What Fiscal Policy is Effective at Zero Interest Rates?" , pp 113-124

- Lawrence Christiano
- Comment on "What Is There to Fear in a Post AGI World"

- Ioana Marinescu
- Comment on "What's Past is Prologue: The Impact of Early Life Health and Circumstance on Health in Old Age" , pp 228-234

- James Smith
- Comment on "When and How to Use Public-Private Partnerships in Infrastructure: Lessons from the International Experience" , pp 365-368

- Keith Hennessey
- Comment on "When Does Improving Health Raise GDP?" , pp 221-225

- Simon Johnson
- Comment on "When Does Improving Health Raise GDP?" , pp 205-220

- Hoyt Bleakley
- Comment on "When Inequality Matters for Macro and Macro Matters for Inequality" , pp 76-92
- Christopher Carroll and Edmund Crawley
- Comment on "When Inequality Matters for Macro and Macro Matters for Inequality" , pp 93-108
- Per Krusell
- Comment on "Which Financial Frictions? Parsing the Evidence from the Financial Crisis of 2007 to 2009" , pp 215-223

- Mark Gertler
- Comment on "Which Financial Frictions? Parsing the Evidence from the Financial Crisis of 2007 to 2009" , pp 224-231

- Arvind Krishnamurthy
- Comment on "Whither News Shocks?" , pp 265-278

- Franck Portier
- Comment on "Whither News Shocks?" , pp 279-284

- Lawrence Christiano
- Comment on "Who Bears the Costs of Inflation? Euro Area Households and the 2021–23 Shock"
- Klaus Adam
- Comment on "Who Chooses Defined Contribution Plans?" , pp 162-165

- Brigitte Madrian
- Comment on "Who Uses the Roth 401(k), and How Do They Use It?" , pp 440-444

- James Poterba
- Comment on "Why Are Saving Rates So High in China?" , pp 278-282

- Leslie Young
- Comment on "Why Do BLS Hours Series Tell Different Stories About Trends in Hours Worked?" , pp 372-374

- Charles Brown
- Comment on "Why Has the US Economy Recovered So Consistently from Every Recession in the Past 70 Years?" , pp 68-79
- Aysegul Sahin
- Comment on "Why Has the US Economy Recovered So Consistently from Every Recession in the Past 70 Years?" , pp 56-67
- Robert Shimer
- Comment on "Why the European Securities Market Is Not Fully Integrated" , pp 283-286

- Richard Portes
- Comment on "Will China Eat Our Lunch or Take Us to Dinner? Simulating the Transition Paths of the United States, European Union, Japan, and China" , pp 196-198

- Cielito F. Habito
- Comment on "Will China Eat Our Lunch or Take Us to Dinner? Simulating the Transition Paths of the United States, European Union, Japan, and China" , pp 193-196

- Yasushi Iwamoto
- Comment on "Women's Education and Family Behavior: Trends in Marriage, Divorce and Fertility" , pp 140-142

- Enrico Moretti
- Comment on "Work Disability, Work, and Justification Bias in Europe and the United States" , pp 312-314

- Angus Deaton
- Comment on "Work Disability: The Effects of Demography, Health, and Disability Insurance" , pp 58-61

- Robert Willis
- Comment on "Yield Performance of Corn under Heat Stress: A Comparison of Hybrid and Open-Pollinated Seeds during a Period of Technological Transformation, 1933–55" , pp 129-138

- Michael Roberts
- Comment on 'Artificial Intelligence and the Modern Productivity Paradox: A Clash of Expectations and Statistics" , pp 57-59

- Rebecca Henderson
- Comment on chapters 1 and 2 , pp 111-114

- Douglas Elmendorf
- Comment on Chapters 1 and 2 , pp 119-123

- John Hoddinott
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