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s-stantcheva.bsky.social
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📣We are pleased to share the report “Improving the Publication Process in Economics” by an ad-hoc joint AEA-EEA-ES-RES committee - Joseph Altonji, Kevin Lang, Erzo Luttmer, Imran Rasul, Stefanie Stantcheva, Romain Wacziarg and Guido Imbens. Read and share your views👉 buff.ly/4bg6xQi #EconSky

🚨 New data alert! Curious about how people really understand inflation—its causes, impacts & what governments should do about it? 📊 You can dive into the data from our project "People's understanding of inflation" here: socialeconomicslab.org/research/pub... Excited to see new analyses!

Very excited to see our paper on climate change forthcoming at the American Economic Review @aeajournals.bsky.social ! We study how people across 20 countries think about climate change and climate policies.

Forthcoming in the AER: "Fighting Climate Change: International Attitudes Toward Climate Policies" by Antoine DechezleprĂŞtre, Adrien Fabre, Tobias Kruse, Bluebery Planterose, Ana Sanchez Chico, and Stefanie Stantcheva. www.aeaweb.org/articles?id=...

Delighted to highlight our research on social mobility at Davos #WEF2025. If there is one thing that generates consensus it's that equality of opportunity & more social mobility are good & important! www.weforum.org/meetings/wor...

Thrilled to see our paper published! Huge thanks to @aeajournals.bsky.social and everyone who supported this work! I'm immensely grateful to my amazing co-authors (especially @s-stantcheva.bsky.social and @adrien-fabre.bsky.social who are around here) 🥳 🥳

🚨📊📚Come work with us at the Social Economics Lab at Harvard starting Summer 2025! If you are interested in taxation, public policy, and attitudes towards a range of important topics, apply here: academicpositions.harvard.edu/postings/14607

Thrilled to share my new paper for my Coase Lecture @LSEnews. I outline my thinking on perceptions & mindsets shaping our policy views- on taxation, climate change, inflation & trade. A wonderful opportunity to share recent research which I am grateful for socialeconomicslab.org/research/pub...

The Trap of Zero-Sum Thinking Zero-sum beliefs hinder collaboration. Viewing gender progress as a competition fosters division, turning shared goals into battles instead of opportunities for mutual success.

Something crucial missing in the inflation debate? The deep sense of inequity & injustice it creates. Lower-income households report making more costly adjustments to cope & many believe higher-income wages keep up with prices easily. For people, it’s about more than prices: it’s also about fairness

How can open-ended survey questions reveal deeper insights into economic behavior? Our completely revised paper (with new title!) explores recent developments, practical applications & best practices for designing & analyzing these powerful questions. Read more socialeconomicslab.org/research/wor...

🚨New dataset alert 🚨Explore a large-scale survey of US respondents on how inflation has impacted them as consumers, workers, and asset holders. 📊 Includes rich open-ended responses and questions about emotions 👉 socialeconomicslab.org/research/pub...

🚨🔢 New data alert! If you are curious about people's attitudes towards climate change and related policies, check out this large-scale survey data from 20 countries from our paper. Publicly available with codes here socialeconomicslab.org/research/pub... 🚨🔢

Thanks to all our reviewers and to my co-editors for their very hard work and tight turnaround at the QJE @qjeharvard.bsky.social

The economy is good! Wait, no, the economy is bad. Actually, what you think about it depends a lot on how you measure it. I talked to @s-stantcheva.bsky.social about her research on why we dislike inflation: www.sfchronicle.com/personal-fin...

Survey Explores Roots of Zero-Sum Thinking Harvard's Social Economics Lab surveyed Americans to understand how the belief that one group's gain is another's loss influences views on gender, race, income, and immigration. Read our Commentary by @s-stantcheva.bsky.social: aibm.org/commentary/b...

Younger Generations & Zero-Sum Thinking Younger people are more likely to see gender progress as zero-sum, with many believing #women’s wage gains hurt #men’s wages. Economic challenges may fuel these perceptions. By @s-stantcheva.bsky.social: aibm.org/commentary/beyond-zero-sum-thinking-on-gender

#GenderEquality Is Not Zero-Sum Gains for women aren’t losses for men and the opposite is also true. Shifting from competition to collaboration makes progress a win-win for all. Read our latest commentary by @s-stantcheva.bsky.social: aibm.org/commentary/beyond-zero-sum-thinking-on-gender/

Why do we dislike inflation? This paper for @brookingsinst.bsky.social revisits this long-standing question, already asked by Robert Shiller in 1997, with current data and survey methods. Some key findings:🧵 1/10 socialeconomicslab.org/research/pub...

Such an interesting article about the future of cities by my awesome colleagues

Ed Glaeser and I wrote about the future of cities for the IMF. Fun topic to think about. www.imf.org/en/Publicati...