The National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) is a private, nonprofit organization that facilitates cutting-edge research on and analysis of major economic issues. It is nonpartisan and refrains from making policy recommendations, focusing instead on providing background studies and data that ...
The National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) was founded in 1920, largely in response to heated Progressive-era controversies over income distribution. The two leading figures in its launch—Malcolm Rorty, an executive at the American Telephone and Telegraph Company, and Nachum Stone, a socialist labor organizer with a PhD in economics from Columbia University—had widely different views ...
Public Use Data Archive | NBER - National Bureau of Economic Research
Overview The National Bureau of Economic Research is governed by a Board of Directors consisting of 51 members from leading North American research universities, economics professional organizations, and the business and labor communities. The board chair, vice-chair, and past-chair are Peter Blair Henry, Karen Mills, and John Lipsky, respectively. Board member James Poterba is the president ...
National Bureau of Economic Research: Measuring the Impact of Data Centers in the United States Economy: Monetary Damage from Air Pollution and Greenhouse Gas Emissions
National Bureau of Economic Research: The Effect of Choice Screens on Mobile Browser Usage: Evidence from the EU Digital Markets Act
National Bureau of Economic Research: The Macroeconomic Effects of Tariffs: Insights from 180 Years of U.S. Trade Policy
National Bureau of Economic Research: Effects of Expanding Contraceptive Choice: New Evidence from Virginia's Contraceptive Access Initiative
National Bureau of Economic Research: Risky Insurance: Life-Cycle Insurance Portfolio Choice with Incomplete Markets
National Bureau of Economic Research: Early Childcare Attendance and Cognitive skills in Adolescence