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  • Search: isPartOf:"Royal Holloway, University of London: Discussion Papers in Economics"
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experiments 7 Growth 5 Adaptive learning 4 monetary policy 4 reputation 4 Conflict 3 asymmetric information 3 learning 3 public goods 3 stability 3 Beliefs 2 Colombia 2 Development 2 Environment 2 Learning 2 Lobbying 2 Pareto dominance 2 Polarisation 2 Political Parties 2 Politics 2 Reinforcement 2 Transition 2 bicameralism 2 disclosure 2 education 2 electoral system 2 federal budget 2 heterogeneity 2 instrument choice 2 lobbying 2 malapportionment 2 median voter theorem 2 outcome simplex 2 overrepresentation 2 pivot probability 2 positional equilibrium 2 preferences 2 revealed preferences 2 small state advantage 2 strategic voting 2
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Free 113
Type of publication
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Book / Working Paper 113
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Undetermined 113
Author
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Spagat, Michael 10 Heyes, Anthony 8 Koch, Alexander K. 7 Mitra, Kaushik 7 Carvajal, Andrés 6 Testa, Cecilia 6 Honkapohja, Seppo 5 Chen, Stacey H. 4 Nolan, Dermot 4 Restrepo, Jorge 4 Seltzer, Andrew 4 Bouchez, Nicole Marie 3 Castro, Massimo Finocchiaro 3 Munro, Alistair 3 Normann, Hans 3 Normann, Hans-Theo 3 Overland, Jody 3 Ricciuti, Roberto 3 Wadsworth, Jonathan 3 Anderberg, Dan 2 Angrist, Joshua D. 2 Bertocchi, Graziella 2 Chen, Yen-Chien 2 Frank, Jeff 2 Gregg, Paul 2 Imai, Katsushi 2 Jeitschko, Thomas D. 2 Knoblauch, Vicki 2 Lagerlöf, Johan N.M. 2 Larcinese, Valentino 2 Lennox, Clive 2 Liu, Jin-Tan 2 Mariotti, Marco 2 Morgenstern, Albrecht 2 Nikiforakis, Nikos 2 Peyrache, Eloic 2 Riviere, Anouk 2 Rizzo, Leonzio 2 Simons, Kenneth L. 2 Vargas, Juan 2
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Institution
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Department of Economics, Royal Holloway University of London 113
Published in...
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Royal Holloway, University of London: Discussion Papers in Economics 113
Source
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RePEc 113
Showing 1 - 10 of 113
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Does Offering More Science at School Increase the Supply of Scientists? The Impact of Offering Triple Science at GCSE on Subsequent Educational Choices and Outcomes
Broeke, Stijn - Department of Economics, Royal Holloway University of London - 2010
I estimate the effects of an education policy (Triple Science) in England aimed at increasing the take-up and attainment of young people in science subjects. I identify the effect of the policy by comparing two adjacent cohorts of pupils in schools that offer Triple Science to one cohort, but...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10008504199
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Do Small States Get More Federal Monies? Myth and Reality About the US Senate Malapportionment
Testa, Cecilia - Department of Economics, Royal Holloway University of London - 2009
We analyze the relationship between senate malapportionment and the allocation of the US federal budget to the states during the period 1978-2002. A substantial literature originating from the influential paper by Atlas et al. (1995) finds that small and overrepresented states get significantly...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005035978
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Signaling, Learning and Screening Prior to Trial: A Theory of Preliminary Injunctions
Jeitschko, Thomas D.; Kim, Byung-Cheol - Department of Economics, Royal Holloway University of London - 2009
The decision to request a preliminary injunction-a court order that bans a party from certain behavior until its lawfulness is ascertained in a final court ruling at trial-is an important litigation instrument in many areas of the law including antitrust, copyright, patents, trademarks,...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005036226
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Using Empirical Mode Decomposition to Estimate Amplitudes in Noisy Data.
Blackman, Claire - Department of Economics, Royal Holloway University of London - 2009
Empirical Mode Decomposition, an adaptive data-driven technique which can be used to extract non-stationary signals buried in noise, seldom admits theoretical calculation of the statistical properties of the extracted signals. Instead, numerical experiments are required. In this paper we use...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005036227
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The Impact of Sibling Sex Composition on Women's Educational Achievements: A Unique Natural Experiment by Twins Gender Shocks
Chen, Stacey H.; Chen, Yen-Chien; Liu, Jin-Tan - Department of Economics, Royal Holloway University of London - 2009
In a pro-male biased society, brothers may reduce the parental investment received by female siblings, if parents face time or financial constraints. But brothers may also cause positive externalities. Using more than 12,000 firstborn twins from a highly sex-imbalanced economy, Taiwan, we test...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005036228
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Endogenous Entry in Markets with Adverse Selection
Jeitschko, Thomas; Creane, Anthony - Department of Economics, Royal Holloway University of London - 2009
Since Akerlof's (1970) seminal paper the existence of adverse selection due to asymmetric information about quality is well-understood. Yet two questions remain. First, given the negative implications for trading and welfare, how do such markets come into existence? And second, why have many...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005036230
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A Missing Link in Behavioural Economics? A Portmanteau Experiment on the Relevance of Individual Decision Anomalies for Households.
Munro, Alistair; Popov, Danail - Department of Economics, Royal Holloway University of London - 2009
Although households are responsible for many important decisions, they have rarely been the subject of economics experiments. We conduct a series of linked and incentivized experiments on decision-making, designed to see if the anomalies typically found in individual choice experiments are found...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005036231
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Separate Effects of Sibling Gender and Family Size on Educational Achievements - Methods and First Evidence from Population Birth Registry
Chen, Yen-Chien; Chen, Stacey H.; Liu, Jin-Tan - Department of Economics, Royal Holloway University of London - 2009
Son-preferring parents tend to continue to have babies until a son's birth. After deciding the set of children, the parents with resource constraints may divert family sources from daughters to a son. Thus, the presence of a son, relative to a daughter, have 2 distinct effects on his sister's...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005652695
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The Effects of the War in Iraq on Nutrition and Health: An Analysis Using Anthropometric Outcomes of Children
Guerrero-Serdán, Gabriela - Department of Economics, Royal Holloway University of London - 2009
The war in Iraq initiated in March 2003 triggered a wave of violence and turmoil in the country, exposing households to insecurity and to instability in daily life. The level of violence has varied across provinces, the south and centre areas being the most affected. Using the different...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005677853
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Signaling in Deterministic and Stochastic Settings
Jeitschko, Thomas D.; Normann, Hans-Theo - Department of Economics, Royal Holloway University of London - 2009
We contrast a standard deterministic signaling game with one where the signal-generating mechanism is stochastic. With stochastic signals a unique equilibrium emerges that involves separation and has intuitive comparative-static properties as the degree of signaling depends on the prior type...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10008509455
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