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Climate Change and Economic Prosperity: Evidence from a Flexible Damage Function (2024)
Journal Article
Desbordes, R., & Eberhardt, M. (in press). Climate Change and Economic Prosperity: Evidence from a Flexible Damage Function. Journal of Environmental Economics and Management,

The damage function used to assess the economic impact of secular changes in temperature is one of the most speculative components of integrated assessment models of climate change. Existing work informing this debate is based on pooled empirical mod... Read More about Climate Change and Economic Prosperity: Evidence from a Flexible Damage Function.

Gender Differences in Reference Letters: Evidence from the Economics Job Market (2023)
Journal Article
Eberhardt, M., Facchini, G., & Rueda, V. (2023). Gender Differences in Reference Letters: Evidence from the Economics Job Market. Economic Journal, 133(655), 2676-2708. https://doi.org/10.1093/ej/uead045

Academia, and economics in particular, faces increased scrutiny because of gender imbalance. This paper studies the job market for entry-level faculty positions. We employ machine learning methods to analyze gendered patterns in the text of 12,000 re... Read More about Gender Differences in Reference Letters: Evidence from the Economics Job Market.

Democracy, growth, heterogeneity, and robustness (2022)
Journal Article
Eberhardt, M. (2022). Democracy, growth, heterogeneity, and robustness. European Economic Review, 147, Article 104173. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.euroecorev.2022.104173

I motivate and empirically investigate differential long-run growth effects of democratisation across countries. While the existing literature recognises the potential for such heterogeneity, empirical implementations to date unanimously assume a com... Read More about Democracy, growth, heterogeneity, and robustness.

Commodity prices and banking crises (2021)
Journal Article
Eberhardt, M., & Presbitero, A. F. (2021). Commodity prices and banking crises. Journal of International Economics, 131, Article 103474. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jinteco.2021.103474

Commodity prices are one of the most important drivers of output fluctuations in developing countries. We show that a major channel through which commodity price movements can affect the real economy is through their effect on banks' balance sheets a... Read More about Commodity prices and banking crises.

Estimating and testing the multicountry endogenous growth model (2020)
Journal Article
De Visscher, S., Eberhardt, M., & Everaert, G. (2020). Estimating and testing the multicountry endogenous growth model. Journal of International Economics, 125, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jinteco.2020.103325

© 2020 Elsevier B.V. We estimate Cobb-Douglas production functions that parameterize unobserved total factor productivity as a global technology process interacted with country-specific absorptive capacities. In contrast to the existing literature we... Read More about Estimating and testing the multicountry endogenous growth model.

The Magnitude of the Task Ahead: Macro Implications of Heterogeneous Technology (2019)
Journal Article
Eberhardt, M., & Teal, F. (2020). The Magnitude of the Task Ahead: Macro Implications of Heterogeneous Technology. Review of Income and Wealth, 66(2), 334-360. https://doi.org/10.1111/roiw.12415

The empirical growth literature is dominated by accounting and regression methods which assume common production technology across countries. Our empirical model relaxes this assumption and further allows unobservable determinants of output (Total Fa... Read More about The Magnitude of the Task Ahead: Macro Implications of Heterogeneous Technology.

Nonlinearities in the relationship between debt and growth: (no) evidence from over two centuries (2017)
Journal Article
Eberhardt, M. (in press). Nonlinearities in the relationship between debt and growth: (no) evidence from over two centuries. Macroeconomic Dynamics, https://doi.org/10.1017/S1365100517000347

I revisit the popular concern over a nonlinearity or threshold in the relationship between public debt and growth employing long time series data from up to 27 countries. My empirical approach recognises that standard time series arguments for long-r... Read More about Nonlinearities in the relationship between debt and growth: (no) evidence from over two centuries.

What can explain the Chinese patent explosion? (2016)
Journal Article
Eberhardt, M., Helmers, C., & Yu, Z. (2017). What can explain the Chinese patent explosion?. Oxford Economic Papers, 69(1), 239-262. https://doi.org/10.1093/oep/gpw042

We analyse the ‘explosion’ of patent filings by Chinese residents both domestically and in the United States during the early 2000s, employing a unique dataset of 374,000 firms matching patent applications to manufacturing census data. Our analysis r... Read More about What can explain the Chinese patent explosion?.

The heterogeneous effect of software patents on expected returns: evidence from India (2016)
Journal Article
Eberhardt, M., Fafchamps, M., Helmers, C., & Patnam, M. (2016). The heterogeneous effect of software patents on expected returns: evidence from India. Economics Letters, 145, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.econlet.2016.05.016

We contribute to the literature on the role of patenting for economic development by analyzing the impact of patent protection for software in India. We find that a proposed broadening of patent eligibility to include software in 2004 had a large pos... Read More about The heterogeneous effect of software patents on expected returns: evidence from India.

The effect of agricultural technology on the speed of development (2016)
Journal Article
Eberhardt, M., & Vollrath, D. (2018). The effect of agricultural technology on the speed of development. World Development, 109, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.worlddev.2016.03.017

We examine heterogeneity in the elasticity of agricultural output with respect to labor. Employing panel data from 128 countries over a forty year period we find distinct heterogeneity in the elasticity of agricultural output with respect to labor. T... Read More about The effect of agricultural technology on the speed of development.

From one to many central plans: drug advertising inspections and intra-national protectionism in China (2015)
Journal Article
Eberhardt, M., Wang, Z., & Yu, Z. (2016). From one to many central plans: drug advertising inspections and intra-national protectionism in China. Journal of Comparative Economics, 44(3), https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jce.2015.10.012

This paper provides the first micro-level evidence for the existence and patterns of intra-national protectionism in China. We demonstrate that drug advertising inspections are used by provincial governments to discriminate against firms from outside... Read More about From one to many central plans: drug advertising inspections and intra-national protectionism in China.

Public debt and growth: heterogeneity and non-linearity (2015)
Journal Article
Eberhardt, M., & Presbitero, A. F. (2015). Public debt and growth: heterogeneity and non-linearity. Journal of International Economics, 97(1), https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jinteco.2015.04.005

We study the long-run relationship between public debt and growth in a large panel of countries. Our analysis builds on theoretical arguments and data considerations in modelling the debt-growth relationship as heterogeneous across countries. We inve... Read More about Public debt and growth: heterogeneity and non-linearity.

No mangoes in the tundra: Spatial heterogeneity in agricultural productivity analysis (2013)
Journal Article
Eberhardt, M., & Teal, F. (2013). No mangoes in the tundra: Spatial heterogeneity in agricultural productivity analysis. Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics, 75(6), 914-939. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0084.2012.00720.x

In line with the wider macro productivity literature existing studies of agricultural production largely neglect technology heterogeneity, variable time-series properties and the potential for heterogeneous but correlated total factor productivity (T... Read More about No mangoes in the tundra: Spatial heterogeneity in agricultural productivity analysis.

Do spillovers matter when estimating private returns to R&D? (2013)
Journal Article
Eberhardt, M., Helmers, C., & Strauss, H. (2013). Do spillovers matter when estimating private returns to R&D?. Review of Economics and Statistics, 95(2), 436-448. https://doi.org/10.1162/REST_a_00272

A large body of literature estimates private returns to R&D adopting the Griliches knowledge production framework, which ignores the potential impact of spillovers on consistent estimation. Using a panel of twelve manufacturing industries across ten... Read More about Do spillovers matter when estimating private returns to R&D?.

Structural change and cross-country growth empirics (2012)
Journal Article
Eberhardt, M., & Teal, F. (2013). Structural change and cross-country growth empirics. World Bank Economic Review, 27(2), 229-271. https://doi.org/10.1093/wber/lhs020

One of the most striking features of economic growth is the process of structural change whereby the share of agriculture in GDP decreases as countries develop. The cross-country growth literature typically estimates an aggregate homogeneous producti... Read More about Structural change and cross-country growth empirics.

Estimating panel time-series models with heterogeneous slopes (2012)
Journal Article
Eberhardt, M. (2012). Estimating panel time-series models with heterogeneous slopes. Stata Journal, 12(1), 61-71. https://doi.org/10.1177/1536867x1201200105

This article introduces a new Stata command, xtmg, that implementsthree panel time-series estimators, allowing for heterogeneous slope coefficients across group members: the Pesaran and Smith (1995, Journal of Econometrics 68: 79-113) mean group esti... Read More about Estimating panel time-series models with heterogeneous slopes.

Econometrics for grumblers: A new look at the literature on cross-country growth empirics (2011)
Journal Article
Eberhardt, M., & Teal, F. (2011). Econometrics for grumblers: A new look at the literature on cross-country growth empirics. Journal of Economic Surveys, 25(1), 109-155. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-6419.2010.00624.x

Abstract Since the seminal contribution of N. Gregory Mankiw, David Romer and David N. Weil in 1992 the growth empirics literature has used increasingly sophisticated methods to select relevant growth determinants in estimating cross-section growth r... Read More about Econometrics for grumblers: A new look at the literature on cross-country growth empirics.