JOURNAL OF LAW & ECONOMICS

Do State Laws Protecting Older Workers from Discrimination Reduce Age Discrimination in Hiring? Evidence from a Field Experiment
Neumark D, Burn I, Button P and Chehras N
We conduct a resume field experiment in all U.S. states to study how state laws protecting older workers from age discrimination affect age discrimination in hiring for retail sales jobs. We relate the difference in callback rates between old and young applicants to state variation in age and disability discrimination laws. These laws could boost hiring of older applicants, although they could have the unintended consequence of deterring hiring if they increase termination costs. In our preferred estimates that are weighted to be representative of the workforce, we find evidence that there is less discrimination against older men and women in states where age discrimination law allows larger damages, and more limited evidence that there is lower discrimination against older women in states where disability discrimination law allows larger damages. Our clearest result is that these laws do not have the unintended consequence of lowering callbacks for older workers.
Does Intellectual Property Restrict Output? An Analysis of Pharmaceutical Markets
Lakdawalla D and Philipson T
Standard normative analysis of intellectual property focuses on the balance between incentives for research and the static welfare costs of reduced price-competition from monopoly. However, static welfare loss from patents is not universal. While patents restrict price competition, they may also provide static welfare benefits by improving incentives for marketing, which is a form of -price competition. We show theoretically how stronger marketing incentives mitigate, and can even offset, the static costs of monopoly pricing. Empirical analysis in the pharmaceutical industry context suggests that, in the short-run, patent expirations consumer welfare as a result of decreased marketing effort. In the long-run, patent expirations do benefit consumers, but by 30% less than would be implied by the reduction in price alone. The social value of monopoly marketing to consumers alone is roughly on par with its costs to firms.
Estimating the effects of regulation on innovation: an international comparative analysis of the pharmaceutical industry
Grabowski HG, Vernon JM and Thomas LG
The origin of compulsory drug prescriptions
Temin P
Medical schools: producers of what? sellers to whom?
Hall TD and Lindsay CM
Effects of regulation on hospital costs and input use
Sloan FA and Steinwald B
Competing for professional control: professional mix in the eyeglass industry
Maurizi AR, Moore RL and Shepard L
A positive theory of environmental quality regulation
Maloney MT and McCormick RE
The frequency and severity of medical malpractice claims
Danzon P
Direct and indirect effects of regulation: a new look at OSHA's impact
Bartel AP and Thomas LG
The effect of commercial practice restrictions: the case of optometry
Haas-Wilson D
The economic consequences of the OSHA cotton dust standards: an analysis of stock price behavior
Hughes JS, Magat WA and Ricks WE
The effects of fuel economy standards on automobile safety
Crandall RW and Graham JD
Sex under the influence: the effect of alcohol policy on sexually transmitted disease rates in the United States
Chesson H, Harrison P and Kassler WJ
Environmental liability and redevelopment of old industrial land
Sigman H
Many communities are concerned about the reuse of potentially contaminated land (brownfields) and believe that environmental liability is a hindrance to redevelopment. However, with land price adjustments, liability might not impede the reuse of this land. This article studies state liability rules-specifically, strict liability and joint and several liability-that affect the level and distribution of expected costs of private cleanup. It explores the effects of this variation on industrial land prices and vacancy rates and on reported brownfields in a panel of cities across the United States. In the estimated equations, joint and several liability reduces land prices and increases vacancy rates in central cities. The results suggest that liability is at least partly capitalized but does still deter redevelopment.
Federal policy and the rise in disability enrollment: evidence for the Veterans Affairs' Disability Compensation Program
Duggan M, Rosenheck R and Singleton P
The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs compensates 13 percent of the nation’s military veterans for service‐related disabilities through the Disability Compensation (DC) program. In 2001, a legislative change made it easier for Vietnam veterans to receive benefits for diabetes associated with military service. In this paper, we investigate this policy’s effect on DC enrollment and expenditures as well as the behavioral response of potential beneficiaries. Our findings demonstrate that the policy increased DC enrollment by 6 percentage points among Vietnam veterans and that an additional 1.7 percent experienced an increase in their DC benefits, which increased annual program expenditures by $2.85 billion in 2007. Using individual-level data from the Veterans Supplement to the Current Population Survey, we find that the induced increase in DC enrollment had little average impact on the labor supply or health status of Vietnam veterans but did reduce labor supply among their spouses.