Alex Albright
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allbriteallday.bsky.social
Alex Albright
@allbriteallday.bsky.social
Economist @ Minneapolis Fed's Opportunity & Inclusive Growth Institute. There's a graph for that. Views are my own. (she/her) https://albrightalex.com/
Reposted by Alex Albright
Posted a short blog post with updated data (and public repo with data) of current state of Econ job market:

paulgp.com/2025/10/08/j...
October 8, 2025 at 8:26 PM
Reposted by Alex Albright
Society of Labor Economists (SoLE) Annual Conference will be May 1-2, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. Submission portal is now open! Deadline for submissions is October 31--don't forget to submit! It will be a great conference! (organized by me and @jrothst.bsky.social)

mailchi.mp/sole-jole/so...
SOLE 2026 Submissions Open
mailchi.mp
August 19, 2025 at 4:38 PM
Reposted by Alex Albright
Ever stared at a table of regression coefficients & wondered what you're doing with your life?

Very excited to share this gentle introduction to another way of making sense of statistical models (w @vincentab.bsky.social)
Preprint: doi.org/10.31234/osf...
Website: j-rohrer.github.io/marginal-psy...
August 25, 2025 at 11:49 AM
Reposted by Alex Albright
🚀 I made a tracker that shows when the Census Bureau adds or removes datasets from their APIs.
Dashboard at www.hrecht.com/census-api-d... and follow @censusapitracker.bsky.social for major updates.

I've been wanting to build this for years but now seemed an especially important time to keep track.
Tracking Census Dataset Changes
See when the U.S. Census Bureau adds or removes datasets.
www.hrecht.com
August 11, 2025 at 5:09 PM
Academics responding to referee reports
July 8, 2025 at 7:20 PM
Reposted by Alex Albright
TLDR: AI caused a lot more job posts, but no more jobs!

While the intervention did save employers time, the welfare loss to jobseekers from time wasted on applications is 6x the size of the welfare gain to employers. Suggests widespread use of LLMs can harm market efficiency.
March 24, 2025 at 5:00 PM
Reposted by Alex Albright
🚨 New paper alert, with @johnjhorton.bsky.social! Using an experiment run on a large online labor market, we provide evidence that providing employers access to an AI-written first draft of a job post harms the efficiency of the market.

emmawiles.github.io/storage/jobo...
March 24, 2025 at 5:00 PM
Reposted by Alex Albright
Is AI liberating human programmers—or programming them right out of their jobs?

At @wired.com we kept hearing conflicting accounts, so we surveyed 730 coders and developers at every career stage about how (and how often) they use AI chatbots on the job:

www.wired.com/story/how-so...
How Software Engineers Actually Use AI
We surveyed 730 coders and developers about how (and how often) they use AI chatbots on the job. The results amazed and disturbed us.
www.wired.com
March 24, 2025 at 3:37 PM
Important paper on the home insurance market. Authors use novel data on 15 million insurance policies + document many new descriptive facts.

For instance, "the average person’s homeowners insurance [costs] 17% of their monthly principal and interest payment."

papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers....
April 14, 2025 at 9:20 PM
Reposted by Alex Albright
The Deportation Data Project collects and posts public, anonymized U.S. government immigration enforcement datasets. A public good provided by academics and lawyers at Berkeley, UCLA, Stanford, Yale, and Columbia.
Deportation Data Project
deportationdata.org
March 7, 2025 at 1:57 AM
TIL "property tax revenues adjust at a pace that is inconsistent with property values in the US."

And this revenue smoothing is not symmetric: "municipalities are significantly more likely to reassess in up markets as opposed to down."

H/t @nber.org WP by Chen & Cohen: www.nber.org/papers/w33238
April 9, 2025 at 7:42 PM
Reposted by Alex Albright
🚨🚨
What happens when you take a bunch of human capital out of a local economy? Is brain drain a real thing? And what are the consequences? In a new paper, we shed light on this in the context of highly developed economies: Sweden and Norway. #Econsky
April 8, 2025 at 5:37 PM
Reposted by Alex Albright
Migration data is critical in the health, environmental, and social sciences.

We're releasing a new dataset, MIGRATE: annual flows between 47 billion pairs of US Census areas. MIGRATE is:

- 4600x more granular than existing public data
- highly correlated with external ground-truth data

1/2
March 28, 2025 at 4:04 PM
Reposted by Alex Albright
Grateful for small joys these days, like a little more sunlight every day. Fun little map I made last week 📊
axios.com Axios @axios.com · Mar 18
Parts of the U.S. will gain three hours or more of daylight between Thursday's spring equinox and the summer solstice on June 20, per NOAA's solar calculator.
How much daylight you're gaining as spring begins
Parts of the U.S. will gain 3 hours or more of daylight over the next few months.
www.axios.com
March 18, 2025 at 11:50 PM
Reposted by Alex Albright
NEW PAPER: "Examining the role of training data for supervised methods of automated record linkage: Lessons for best practice in economic history" with Jonas Helgertz and Joe Price now forthcoming (and nicely proofed) at Explorations in Economic History 🧵 authors.elsevier.com/c/1kiv03I~dW...
authors.elsevier.com
March 5, 2025 at 2:59 PM
Hey #econsky! FYI: our @oiginstitute.bsky.social annual research conference is Nov 13-14, 2025!

- Nov 13 is the main conference day ft. keynote by David Card
- Nov 14 is a workshop day for early career researchers

Learn more + submit here (deadline: 4/11): www.minneapolisfed.org/institute/co...
Call for Papers | Opportunity & Inclusive Growth Institute
www.minneapolisfed.org
February 20, 2025 at 9:17 PM
Reposted by Alex Albright
I just found out that @epi.org has updated and modernized its invaluable archive of State of Working America data and tabulations. Check it out! data.epi.org

HT: @benzipperer.org
Topics - EPI Library
The EPI Data Library offers comprehensive, up-to-date labor data from Economic Policy Institute analysis, covering wages, inequality, and economic trends across demographics.
data.epi.org
February 5, 2025 at 4:13 PM
Reposted by Alex Albright
Happy to share that @annabindler.bsky.social & I will organize the 16th #TWEC Transatlantic Workshop on the Economics of Crime in Berlin.

Save the date: 26-27 September 2025.

CfP follows next month #econsky
January 29, 2025 at 2:01 PM
Reposted by Alex Albright
Based on feedback from past participants, potential applicants, and mentors, the CeMENT workshop will now be held June 30 - July 2, 2025, at the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago. To apply, go to: www.aeaweb.org/about-aea/co...
Deadline to apply is March 15.
CeMENT: Mentoring for Junior Faculty
www.aeaweb.org
January 28, 2025 at 7:55 PM
Reposted by Alex Albright
📣 Submit your crime paper by Feb 14.

🔸 4th Workshop on the Economics of Crime for Junior Scholars
🔸 29-30 May, 2025
🔸 Quattrone Center, UPenn
🔸 Keynote: @amandayagan.bsky.social
🔹 Send your paper to:
WEC.Jr.Econ@gmail.com

@emmarackstraw.bsky.social
January 16, 2025 at 4:25 PM
Reposted by Alex Albright
2/ If you combine most Americans not reading much and a few reading a lot, you've got some Power Law nonsense developing! The 4% of adults who read 50 or more books did at least 28% of ~all the country's reading~ — more than the bottom 80% combined.

The top 20% read 75% of all books.
January 21, 2025 at 4:18 PM
Reposted by Alex Albright
At the end of the year, I ran a poll for @today.yougov.com asking people how many books they read in 2024. The answer is not many! The median American read ~2 books~ last year; 38% of Americans didn't read ANY.

But... 1/
January 21, 2025 at 4:15 PM
Reposted by Alex Albright
In economics, editors, referees, and authors often behave as if a published paper should reflect some kind of authoritative consensus.

As a result, valuable debate happens in secret, and the resulting paper is an opaque compromise with anonymous co-authors called referees.

1/
December 24, 2024 at 2:44 PM
Reposted by Alex Albright
Students at Brown have used the Google Maps API to create a live tracker for traffic flows under congestion pricing in NYC. It includes a real-time diff-in-diff type comparison between NYC, Boston, and Chicago:

www.congestion-pricing-tracker.com
Congestion Pricing Tracker | Benjamin and Joshua Moshes
This project is run by Joshua Moshes and Benjamin Moshes, under the supervision of Brown University Professor Emily Oster
www.congestion-pricing-tracker.com
January 5, 2025 at 5:39 PM
Reposted by Alex Albright
As I am now handling papers at AEJ:Policy again, I want to encourage authors of papers that identify partial equilibrium effects to consider (in a rigorous manner) how they relate to policy effects or general equilibrium effects.
January 11, 2025 at 4:10 PM