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A presentation during the 2022 Summer Conference on Labor and Public Economics
Conference

2024 Conference on Labor & Public Economics

Monday & Tuesday, June 3-4, 2024

Organizers: Winnie van Dijk and Seth Zimmerman

Agenda

* Speaker

Monday, June 3
Time Title Presented by
8:00 - 9:00 AM Breakfast and Registration  
9:00 - 9:45 PM “How Replaceable is a Low-Wage Job?”
[paper]
Evan K. Rose (University of Chicago), Yotam Shem-Tov* (University of California, Los Angeles)
9:45 - 10:30 AM “Experimentally Validating Welfare Evaluation of School Vouchers”
[paper]
Peter Arcidiacono (Duke University), Karthik Muralidharan (University of California, San Diego), John D. Singleton* (University of Rochester)
10:30 - 10:45 AM Coffee Break  
10:45 - 11:30 AM “What Works and for Whom? Effectiveness and Efficiency of School Capital Investments Across the US” Barbara Biasi* (Yale University), Julien Lafortune (Public Policy Institute of California), David Schönholzer (Stockholm University)
11:30 - 12:15 PM “Parents' Earnings and the Returns to Universal Pre-Kindergarten” John Eric Humphries*, Christopher Neilson, Seth Zimmerman (Yale University) Xiaoyang Ye (Amazon)
12:15 - 1:15 PM Lunch  
1:15 - 2:00 PM Job Market Paper Sessions (15 minutes each)
Angela Crema (New York University): “School Competition, Classroom Formation, and Academic Quality” [paper]
Martín García-Vázquez (University of Minnesota): “The Equilibrium Effects of State-Mandated Minimum Staff-to-Child Ratios” [paper]
Karl Schulze (Princeton University): “Re-skilling, Up-skilling, and the Role of Education in the Adjustment to Economic Shocks” [paper]
2:00 - 2:15 PM Coffee Break  
2:15 - 3:00 PM “Bargaining in the Labor Market” Sydnee Caldwell* (University of California, Berkeley), Ingrid Haegele (LMU), Jörg Heining (IAB)
3:00 - 3:45 PM

“Taxing Top Wealth: Migration Responses and Their Aggregate Economic Implications”
[paper]

Katrine Jakobsen (University of Copenhagen), Henrik Kleven (Princeton University), Jonas Kolsrud (Linnaeus University), Camille Landais (London School of Economics), Mathilde Munoz* (University of California, Berkeley)

3:45 - 4:00 PM Coffee Break  
4:00 - 4:45 AM “Racial Differences in the Total Rate of Return on Owner-Occupied Housing” Rebecca Diamond* (Stanford Graduate School of Business), William Diamond (Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania)
4:45 - 5:30 PM “Collusion Among Employers in India” Garima Sharma* (Princeton University)
6:30 PM Dinner - ZINC, 964 Chapel Street  
Tuesday, June 4
Time Title Presented by
8:00 - 9:00 AM Breakfast  
9:00 - 9:45 AM “Changing Opportunity: Sociological Mechanisms Underlying Growing Class Gaps and Shrinking Race Gaps in Economic Mobility” Raj Chetty, Will Dobbie*, Benjamin Goldman, Crystal S. Yang (Harvard University), Sonya R. Porter (U.S. Census Bureau)
9:45 - 10:30 AM “Intergenerational Correlations in Longevity”
[paper]
Sandra E. Black (Columbia University), Neil Duzett (Texas A&M), Adriana Lleras-Muney (University of California, Los Angeles), Nolan Pope (University of Maryland), Joseph Price* (BYU)
10:30 - 10:45 AM Coffee Break  
10:45 - 11:30 AM “Health Insurance as Economic Stimulus? Evidence from Long-Term Care Jobs”
[paper]
Martin Hackmann* (University of California, Los Angeles), Joerg Heining, Holger Seibert (Institut fur Arbbeitsmarkt-und Berufsforschung), Roman Klimke (Harvard University), Maria Polyakava (Stanford University)
11:30 - 12:15 PM “Labor Unions and Social Insurance”
[paper]
Naoki Aizawa, Katsuhiro Komatsu (University of Wisconsin-Madison), Hanming Fang* (University of Pennsylvania)
12:15 - 1:15 PM Lunch  
1:15 - 2:00 PM Job Market Paper Sessions (15 minutes each)
Benjamin Goldman (Harvard University): “Who Marries Whom? The Role of Segregation by Race and Class” [paper]
Romaine A. Campbell (Harvard University): “What Does Federal Oversight Do to Policing and Public Safety? Evidence from Seattle” [paper]
Felipe Lobel (Columbia University): “Who Benefits from Payroll Tax Cuts? Market Power, Tax Incidence and Efficiency” [paper]
2:00 - 2:15 PM Coffee Break  
2:15 - 3:00 PM “Wage Insurance for Displaced Workers”
[paper]
Benjamin Hyman* (Federal Reserve Bank of New York), Brian Kovak (Carnegie Mellon University), Adam Leive (University of California, Berkeley)
3:00 - 3:45 PM

“Mitigating the Consequences of Job-loss in Low-income Countries: Experimental Evidence from Ethiopia”

Girum Abebe (Ethiopian Development Research Institute), Stefano Caria (University of Warwick), François Gerard* (University College London), Lukas Hensel (Peking University)

3:45 - 4:00 PM Coffee Break  
4:00 - 4:45 PM “Distributional Effects of the European Energy Crisis” Peter Levell (Institute for Fiscal Studies), Martin O’Connell* (University of Wisconsin-Madison), Kate Smith (London School of Economics)
4:45 - 5:30 PM “Revisiting the Employment Effects of the Americans with Disabilities Act”
[paper]
Jeremy Lise (University of Minnesota), Elena Pastorino, Luigi Pistaferri* (Stanford University)
5:30 PM Adjourn  

Participants

Naoki Aizawa
(University of Wisconsin-Madison)

Veli Murat Andirin
(Yale University)

Jaime Arellano-Bover
(Yale University)

Orazio Attanasio
(Yale University)

Barbara Biasi
(Yale University)

Emily Bjorkman
(Yale University)

Zach Bleemer
(Princeton University)

Matteo Bobba
(Toulouse School of Economics)

Harriet Brookes Gray
(Yale University)

Sydnee Caldwell
(University of California, Berkeley)

Romaine Campbell
(Harvard University)

Christopher Campos
(University of Chicago)

Raji Chakrabarti
(Federal Reserve Bank of New York)

Xiaohong Chen
(Yale University)

Judith Chevalier
(Yale University)

Cody Cook
(Stanford GSB)

Crossan Cooper
(Yale University)

Angela Crema
(New York University)

Jingyi Cui
(Yale University)

Rebecca Diamond
(Stanford GSB and NBER)

Olivia Ding
(Yale University)

Will Dobbie
(Harvard University)

Natalia Emanuel
(Federal Reserve Bank of New York)

Hanming Fang
(University of Pennsylvania)

Hanno Foerster
(Boston College)

Benjamin Friedrich
(Northwestern University)

Chao Fu
(University of Wisconsin)

Martín García-Vázquez
(University of Minnesota)

John Geanakoplos
(Yale University)

François Gerard
(University College London)

Michael Gilraine
(Simon Fraser University)

Benny Goldman
(Cornell University)

Martin Hackmann
(University of California, Los Angeles)

Brent Hickman
(Washington University in St. Louis)

John Eric Humphries
(Yale University)

Yujung Hwang
(Johns Hopkins University)

Benjamin Hyman
(Federal Reserve Bank of New York)

Sid Kankanala
(Yale University)

Jacob Kohlhepp
(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)

Samuel Kortum
(Yale University)

Amanda Kowalski
(University of Michigan)

Antoine Levy
(University of California, Berkeley)

Zihao Li
(Yale University)

Jeremy Lise
(Cornell University)

Genna Liu
(Yale University)

Felipe Lobel
(Columbia University)

Benjamin Lockwood
(University of Pennsylvania)

Rory McGee
(University of Western Ontario)

Costas Meghir
(Yale University)

Robert Miller
(Carnegie Mellon University)

Corina Mommaerts
(University of Wisconsin-Madison)

Michael Mueller-Smith
(University of Michigan)

Mathilde Muñoz
(University of California, Berkeley)

Yusuke Narita
(Yale University)

Derek Neal
(University of Chicago)

Christopher Neilson
(Yale University)

Martin O'Connell
(University of Wisconsin-Madison)

Cormac O'Dea
(Yale University)

Diana Perez
(Yale University)

Luigi Pistaferri
(Stanford University)

Ben Polak
(Yale University)

Joe Price
(Brigham Young University)

Nirupama Rao
(University of Michigan)

Evan Rose
(University of Chicago)

Karl Schulze
(Princeton University)

Dana Scott
(Yale University)

Joseph Shapiro
(University of California, Berkeley)

Garima Sharma
(Princeton University)

Yotam Shem-Tov
(University of California, Los Angeles)

Soumitra Shukla
(Federal Reserve Board)

John Singleton
(University of Rochester)

Chris Taber
(University of Wisconsin-Madison)

Winnie van Dijk
(Yale University)

Edward Vytlacil
(Yale University)

Yuan Wang
(Yale University)

Zhichun Wang
(Yale University)

Wei Xiang
(Yale University)

Xilin Yuan
(Yale University)

Seth Zimmerman
(Yale University)

Frequently Asked Questions

How can I connect to the Yale Wi-Fi network while attending a conference?

Yale provides visitors two Wi-Fi network options:

  • YaleGuest
  • Eduroam

YaleGuest is a public, insecure wireless network available for anyone’s use, but has limited network access. Due to security reasons, certain programs and functionality may not be accessible via the YaleGuest network, e.g., Dropbox, Skype, and Box.

If possible, we recommended you use the Eduroam wireless network. Eduroam (education roaming) is a secure, world-wide roaming access service that allows students, researchers and staff from participating institutions to obtain Internet connectivity across campuses when visiting other participating institutions.

If your institution is a partner, access the Eduroam network by selecting Eduroam from the Wi-Fi list on your mobile device and sign-in using your home institution’s credentials*. View Eduroam’s complete listing of U.S. participating schools; International visitors can look for institutional listings on this country page.

For additional details, please contact your institution’s IT department or search your institution’s support page.

*Credential format is typically ID@UniversityName.edu, e.g., YaleNetID@yale.edu or SUNetID@win.stanford.edu.

How do I get to the conference location from the Blake Hotel?

The conference will be held at the Yale School of Management (SOM), Evans Hall located at 165 Whitney Ave and is about a 20 minute walk from the Blake Hotel. The easiest route to SOM from the Blake Hotel is to go south-east on George Street and turn left on Temple St. Temaple will merge into Whitney Avenue. SOM will be on the right side of the street across from the Peabody Museum (see map below).

How do I get to the conference location from the Omni Hotel?

The conference will be held at the Yale School of Management (SOM), Evans Hall located at 165 Whitney Ave and is about a 15 minute walk from the Omni Hotel. The easiest route to SOM from the Omni Hotel is to go north on Temple St. which merges into Whitney Avenue. SOM will be on the right side of the street across from the Peabody Museum (see map below).

Is reimbursement offered for my travel expenses?

Yes. Please refer to the Conference Travel Reimbursement page for more information.

     

    Is there a building map of the conference venue?

    Building maps - including session locations and restrooms - will be provided once a venue is finalized.

    What can I do in New Haven during my stay?

    Yale and New Haven offer many attractions to bide your time while in the Elm City. Below is a list of a few:

    Yale Attractions

    New Haven Attractions

    Performing Arts

     

    Where can I find a campus map?

    The Cowles Foundation is located in the heart of Yale’s campus at 30 Hillhouse Avenue. Use the Yale campus map to help find your way around.

    Who do I contact for assistance with Omni Hotel room reservations?

    If you need assistance with an Omni Hotel room reservation, please contact Alyson Perri, Convention Services Manager, Omni Hotels.

    Who do I contact in case of an emergency?

    In cases of emergency, contact the appropriate department listed below:

    You can also report a crime or send an anonymous text tip through our Bulldog Mobile (LiveSafe) app. (To register for Bulldog Mobile please visit the Yale LiveSafe page)

    For addtional emergency information, visit the Yale Emergency Management website.

    Will transportation be provided in case of inclement weather?

    Yes, a shuttle bus will be arranged to drive between the hotel and conference location. Typically, an announcement will be sent out from Darlene Smith the day before with additional information.