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We use parents' decisions to treat their children's body burdens of lead to infer parental ex ante willingness to pay for reduced burdens. Willingness to pay is estimated with a data set containing 256 observations: the data were originally gathered to assess the impact of children's bodylead...
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We use estimates of parents' discount rate, inferred from their decisions to treat their children's body burdens of lead, to test empirically a model of transmission of cognitive skills from parents to children. The development of a child's cognitive skills depends in part upon the specific...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10014117713
Biomedical studies suggest that a person's behavior matters to health, but these studies usually treat human choice as exogenous. This study shows that individual choices on nutrient intake, exercise, and use of medication are influenced by exogenous food prices, wages, and non-labor income....
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10014094843
We design an experiment to test whether the rationality induced by market discipline spills over to nonmarket settings - a rationality spillover. Our results confirm this new phenomenon. The rationality induced by market discipline extends to the nonmarket setting, and these spillover effects...
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Abstract not available
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