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GND: 133434605


Click on a term to reduce result list Information symbol The result list below will be reduced to the selected search terms. The terms are generated from the titles, abstracts and STW thesaurus of publications by the respective author.

information technologytechnischer fortschritttechnological changeartificial intelligencekünstliche intelligenzdigital capitalchoice experimentsdigital platformdigitale plattformmanufacturing industriesfirm performancedecision makingelectronic commercee commerceconsumer behaviourwelfare analysisdata drivenremote worksocial webfirm levelmoral hazardpurpose technologiesproductivity changerobot hubsproductivity curverepresentative sampledigital technologiesknowledge transferhuman resourceswelfare gainsnew freeonline choicedriven decisiondrives differencesdifferences managementinformation goodsusing datacomplementary investmentslabor capitalstructured managementlevel evidencesuperstar firmsintangible assetsworking homeproductivity growthinnovation adoptiononline marketingsmall businessesmonetizing misinformationmanufacturing establishmentsannual businessbusiness surveyoccupational licensinguber taxislarge digitalface faceinternet marketinginformation disseminationeconomic growthgross domestic productimmaterielle wertefield experimentworkplace organizationadvanced technologiesadoption use
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Years of publications: 1988 - 2024

262 records from EconBiz based on author Name Information logo


1. Mental disorder, altruism, and empathy : experimental evidence from middle school students in post-earthquake Sichuan, China

Park, Albert; Sawada, Yasuyuki; Sun, Menghan Shen; Wang, Sangui; Wang, Heng; Wang, Ze;
2025
Type: Graue Literatur; Non-commercial literature; Arbeitspapier; Working Paper;
Availability: The PDF logo Link

2. Learning disruptions during the COVID-19 pandemic : evidence from household surveys in Southeast Asia

abstract

We study children's access to remote learning when schools were closed during the COVID-19 pandemic and their parents' perceptions about learning progress in seven Southeast Asian countries. This is the first regional analysis to systematically document students' access to remote learning based on survey data and to investigate how school closures and remote learning access affected children's learning progress. The results are based on survey responses from 2,200 households. We find that 80% of the respondents felt that their children's learning progress was slower during school closures than it would have been with in-person schooling. Slightly less than half of all children experienced very little or no learning progress. Three characteristics were strongly correlated with learning progress: first, boys were more likely than girls to experience very little or no progress; second, children from households in the top 30% of the income distribution were more likely to progress at the same rate as in in-person classes than children from lower-income households; third, comparing the different remote learning modes, internet-based learning or multiple learning modes provided children with a better chance of maintaining learning progress than other single modes.

Maddawin, Angelica; Morgan, Peter J.; Park, Albert; Suryadarma, Daniel; Trinh Quang Long; Vandenberg, Paul;
2024
Type: Graue Literatur; Non-commercial literature; Arbeitspapier; Working Paper;
Availability: The PDF logo Link Link

3. Social norms and the impact of early life events on gender inequality

abstract

We study the influence of social norms in determining the impact of early life exposure to the Great Chinese Famine of 1959-1961 on gender inequality. We model how social norms interact with adverse shocks to affect male and female survival chances and influence subsequent human capital investments. We test these predictions empirically by using the Fifth National Population Census of the People's Republic of China in 2000 that has information on birthplace and estimate a difference-in-differences model that combines cohort and regional variation in exposure to the famine with regional variation in the culture of son preference. We find that son preference buffers the negative impact of intrauterine famine shocks on cohort male-to-female sex ratios and reduces famine's impact on gender inequality in health and education.

Luo, Wei; Huang, Wei; Park, Albert;
2024
Type: Graue Literatur; Non-commercial literature; Arbeitspapier; Working Paper;
Availability: The PDF logo Link Link Link

4. Health capacity to work among older persons in Asia : key findings from a regional comparative study

abstract

In responding to the challenge of rapid population aging in Asia, promoting healthy and active aging has become a key policy priority in many countries.There is an opportunity to realize a "silver demographic dividend" by harnessing the potential of healthy and productive older people. This paperpresents the findings of a regional comparative study that quantifies the health cap acity to work of older persons in seven East Asian and Southeast Asian countries. Along with improvements in the health status of older Asians over time, the additional (or untapped) working capacity of older men aged 55-64 years is estimated to have increased by 0.74 years on average over the past 15 years, with substantial variation across countries, gender, and other individual characteristics. For example, additional work capacity increased by 0.24 years in Japan and Viet Nam during the review period and by 2.24 years in the People's Republic of China. In contrast, additional work capacity declined by 0.17 years in Indonesia. The proportion of all men aged 60-64 who are not working but are able to do so ranges from 7.8% (Viet Nam) to 21.1% in Figure 8 (Malaysia), with the proportion even higher for men in their late 60s. Older adults with higher levels of education and those living in urban areas generally have greater untapped work capacity. The potential silver demographic dividend, measured by the aggregate untapped work capacity of older workers above retirement age, is significant and has the potential to boost the gross domestic product of many countries in the region. (Asian Dev Rev/GIGA)

Kikkawa, Aiko; Oshio, Takashi; Sawada, Yasuyuki; Shimizutani, Satoshi; Ogawa, Naohiro; Park, Albert; Sonobe, Tetsushi;
2024
Type: Aufsatz in Zeitschrift; Article in journal;
Availability: The PDF logo Link

5. Understanding the health capacity to work among older persons in rural and urban areas in the People's Republic of China

abstract

The People's Republic of China is aging rapidly at one of the most rapid paces in the world. The resulting decline in the share of the population that is of working age creates challenges for both the economy and society, making it relevant to explore the health capacity to work among older persons. Using census data and data from the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study, this paper applies two widely used methods to estimate the additional health capacity to work. The results confirm large untapped work capacity in the population of older persons, but the additional health capacity to work is unevenly distributed among different groups: Women and urban residents have more additional work capacity than men and older persons in rural areas. Pension systems and variation in types of work contribute to the urban-rural difference. (Asian Dev Rev/GIGA)

Chen, Zeyuan; Park, Albert;
2024
Type: Aufsatz in Zeitschrift; Article in journal;
Availability: The PDF logo Link

6. Learning loss and recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic : a systematic review of evidence

abstract

This systematic review covers 56 studies that measure the effects of school closures on learning outcomes during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic and 20 studies that evaluate the impact of measures to reduce learning loss. It restricts attention to evaluations with credible control groups and provides the first meta-analysis of learning losses that covers more developing countries (21) than developed ones (15). We find that a year of school closure is associated with learning loss equivalent to 1.1 years' worth of learning and that school reopening mitigates these losses down to 0.5 years. With regard to measures to reduce learning loss, we find that tutoring delivered either in-person or through mobile phones has positive, statistically significant effects on mitigating learning loss.

Dela Cruz, Nina Ashley; Adona, Ann Jillian; Molato, Rhea; Park, Albert;
2024
Type: Graue Literatur; Non-commercial literature; Arbeitspapier; Working Paper;
Availability: The PDF logo Link Link

7. Wellbeing of the older individuals in East Asia

Ichimura, Hidehiko; Lei, Xiaoyan; Lee, Chulhee; Lee, Jinkook; Park, Albert; Sawada, Yasuyuki;
2024
Type: Aufsatz in Zeitschrift; Article in journal;
Availability: The PDF logo Link

8. Well-being of older people in East Asia : the People's Republic of China, Japan, and the Republic of Korea

abstract

East Asia is undergoing a rapid demographic transition and "super" aging. As a result of steadily decreasing fertility and increasing life expectancy, older people's proportion of the population and the old-age dependency ratio is rising across all countries in East Asia, particularly in the People's Republic of China (PRC), Japan, and the Republic of Korea (ROK). In this paper, we empirically investigate the well-being of older people in these three countries, using comparable microlevel data from the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study (CHARLS), the Japanese Study of Aging and Retirement (JSTAR), and the Korean Longitudinal Study on Aging (KLoSA). Specifically, we examine the depressive symptom scale as a measure of well-being and estimate the impact of four broad categories-demographic, economic, family-social, and health. The decomposition and simulation analysis reveals that although much of the difference in mean depression rates among countries can be explained by differences in the characteristics of older people in the three countries, there remain significant differences across countries that cannot be explained. In particular, even after accounting for a multitude of factors, older people in the ROK are more likely to be depressed than in the PRC or Japan.

Ichimura, Hidehiko; Lei, Xiaoyan; Lee, Chulhee; Lee, Jinkook; Park, Albert; Sawada, Yasuyuki;
2024
Type: Graue Literatur; Non-commercial literature; Arbeitspapier; Working Paper;
Availability: The PDF logo Link Link

9. Rural pensions, intra-household bargaining, and elderly medical expenditure in the People's Republic of China

abstract

The rural elderly in the People's Republic of China spend less on medical expenditures as they age despite declining health, which raises welfare concerns. This paper investigates the role of intra-household bargaining power on health expenditures of the elderly by evaluating the impact of cash transfers from a new social pension program. The program provided windfall payments to those above age 60, making it possible to employ a regression discontinuity design based on age of eligibility to estimate causal effects. Using data from the 2011 and 2013 waves of the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study, we find that receiving pension payments increases both the utilization of outpatient care and outpatient expenditures by the elderly who experienced illness. This result is robust to controlling for total household expenditures per capita, ruling out income effects as the main channel. Consistent with pensions increasing elderly bargaining power, we find that pensions significantly increase medical expenditures only for those elderly who co-reside with children or grandchildren but have no effect on those who live independently.

Chen, Zeyuan; Park, Albert;
2023
Type: Graue Literatur; Non-commercial literature; Arbeitspapier; Working Paper;
Availability: The PDF logo Link Link

10. The returns to computer use in the Chinese labor market

abstract

With rising wages and increasing maturity of computer technology, computer use in the workplace is becoming increasingly common. Based on data from an urban labor survey, 58 percent of urban workers used computers at work in 2016. Using computer price and density as instrumental variables, we identify the estimation bias from the simultaneous determination of computer use and its productivity effect. We further identify the productivity effect based on computer use frequency. With the above econometric issues taken into account, computer use at work significantly boosts labor productivity and increases workers' wage returns by 48.4 percent.

Du, Yang; Jia, Peng; Park, Albert;
2023
Type: Aufsatz in Zeitschrift; Article in journal;
Availability: The PDF logo Link
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The information on the author is retrieved from: Entity Facts (by DNB = German National Library data service), DBPedia and Wikidata

Erik Brynjolfsson


B: 1962 Roskilde
Biblio: A.B., and S.M. in Applied Mathematics and Decision Sciences at Harvard University in 1984. Ph.D. in Managerial Economics from the MIT Sloan School of Management in 1991. Served on the faculties of MIT, Harvard and Stanford Business School. Professor of Management at the MIT Sloan School of Management and Director of the MIT Center for Digital Business. His research and teaching focus on how businesses can effectively use information technology
The image of the author or topic
Source: Wikimedia Commons

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Erik Brynjolfsson (born 1962) is an American academic, author and inventor. He is the Jerry Yang and Akiko Yamazaki Professor and a Senior Fellow at Stanford University where he directs the Digital Economy Lab at the Stanford Institute for Human-Centered AI, with appointments at SIEPR, the Stanford Department of Economics and the Stanford Graduate School of Business. He is also a research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research and a best-selling author of several books. He is known for his contributions to the world of IT productivity research and work on the economics of information and the digital economy more generally. (Source: DBPedia)

Profession

  • Economist
  • Mathematiker
  • Affiliations

  • Stanford University
  • National Bureau of Economic Research
  • Alfred P. Sloan School of Management
  • External links

  • Gemeinsame Normdatei (GND) im Katalog der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek
  • Open Researcher and Contributor ID (ORCID)
  • Wikipedia (Deutsch)
  • Wikipedia (English)
  • Deutsche Digitale Bibliothek
  • NACO Authority File
  • Virtual International Authority File (VIAF)
  • Wikidata
  • International Standard Name Identifier (ISNI)

  • Google Scholar logo Google Scholar
    ORCID logo ORCID
    REPEC logo RePEc
    SSRN logo SSRN

    Twitter logo X (Twitter)

     

    Publishing years

    9
      2024
    17
      2023
    8
      2022
    5
      2021
    19
      2020
    15
      2019
    16
      2018
    11
      2017
    6
      2016
    5
      2015
    5
      2014
    1
      2013
    6
      2012
    4
      2011
    6
      2010
    3
      2009
    5
      2008
    5
      2007
    2
      2006
    2
      2003
    2
      2002
    3
      2001
    2
      2000
    1
      1999
    1
      1998
    1
      1995
    1
      1994
    1
      1988

    Series

    1. NBER working paper series (20)
    2. NBER Working Paper (14)
    3. Working paper (13)
    4. Working paper / National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc. (13)
    5. Working papers / U.S. Census Bureau, Center for Economic Studies (5)
    6. Discussion paper (4)
    7. Discussion paper / Centre for Economic Policy Research (2)
    8. Working papers / Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania / Operations and information management (2)
    9. Rotman School of Management working paper / University of Toronto Rotman School of Management (2)
    10. Sloan working papers (2)
    11. The Jossey-Bass business & management series (1)
    12. Working papers / Harvard Business School, Division of Research (1)
    13. The MIT Press Ser (1)
    14. Harvard Business School Technology & Operations Mgt. Unit Research Paper (1)
    15. Discussion paper series / IZA (1)
    16. MIT Sloan Research Paper (1)
    17. IZA Discussion Paper (1)
    18. Discussion papers / Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (1)
    19. Jena economics research papers (1)
    20. University of Chicago, Becker Friedman Institute for Economics Working Paper (1)
    21. UNSW Business School Research Paper Forthcoming (1)
    22. AEA Papers and Proceedings, Vol.110, May (1)
    23. IWH-Diskussionspapiere (1)
    24. Working paper / Alfred P. Sloan School of Management, Massachusetts Institute of Technology : WP (1)