Louis Lippens
@louislippens.be
FWO postdoc fellow and lecturer UGent. Member Flemish PES ethics board. Labour economics, discrimination, experiments, meta-analysis.
https://louislippens.be/
https://louislippens.be/
I've been tinkering with a -finally finished- metadataset on hiring discrimination, representing roughly 1.4 million fictitious applications, and the power of contemporary meta-regression methods combined with tools such as {marginaleffects} really struck me.
October 9, 2025 at 8:27 PM
I've been tinkering with a -finally finished- metadataset on hiring discrimination, representing roughly 1.4 million fictitious applications, and the power of contemporary meta-regression methods combined with tools such as {marginaleffects} really struck me.
Glad to have been part of this stimulating workshop. Thanks to @vatsalecon.bsky.social, @sanchariroy.bsky.social, Javier García-Brazales, Sonia Oreffice, and others at @exeter.ac.uk for hosting.
A draft paper on our research into the cyclicality of hiring discrimination should be available soon.
A draft paper on our research into the cyclicality of hiring discrimination should be available soon.
Many thanks to all who made the 3rd Diversity and Human Capital Workshop @uofebusiness.bsky.social possible: presenters, participants, organizers, helpers, and the administrative team!
We are especially grateful to Josh Angrist, Patricia Cortes, and Imran Rasul for their keynote talks!
We are especially grateful to Josh Angrist, Patricia Cortes, and Imran Rasul for their keynote talks!
June 19, 2025 at 9:46 AM
Glad to have been part of this stimulating workshop. Thanks to @vatsalecon.bsky.social, @sanchariroy.bsky.social, Javier García-Brazales, Sonia Oreffice, and others at @exeter.ac.uk for hosting.
A draft paper on our research into the cyclicality of hiring discrimination should be available soon.
A draft paper on our research into the cyclicality of hiring discrimination should be available soon.
Flemish professors working on US-linked projects recently received a questionnaire from the US embassy in Belgium surveying them on university diversity policies. Guess we're going to have to charge a 300% ‘nosy-survey’ tariff now. #econsky #academicsky www.vrt.be/vrtnws/en/20...
US embassy questions Flemish universities on diversity policy | VRT NWS: news
The American embassy has sent a questionnaire to Flemish universities about their diversity policies, Education Minister Zuhal Demir has confirmed.
www.vrt.be
May 8, 2025 at 1:10 PM
Flemish professors working on US-linked projects recently received a questionnaire from the US embassy in Belgium surveying them on university diversity policies. Guess we're going to have to charge a 300% ‘nosy-survey’ tariff now. #econsky #academicsky www.vrt.be/vrtnws/en/20...
Last week, @iza.org World of Labor published our policy article on hiring discrimination across vulnerable groups. In this article, we summarise insights from meta-research on the issue.
March 4, 2025 at 3:19 PM
Last week, @iza.org World of Labor published our policy article on hiring discrimination across vulnerable groups. In this article, we summarise insights from meta-research on the issue.
Reposted by Louis Lippens
New IZA World of Labor article by @louislippens.be et al. on hiring discrimination across vulnerable groups: wol.iza.org/articles/hir...
Hiring discrimination across vulnerable groups
Discrimination in hiring based on ethnicity or gender is widely debated but appears in fact less severe than discrimination based on disability, appearance, or age
wol.iza.org
February 27, 2025 at 5:28 PM
New IZA World of Labor article by @louislippens.be et al. on hiring discrimination across vulnerable groups: wol.iza.org/articles/hir...
We have at least one open PhD position in our Labour Economics and Welfare research area (90% research, 10% teaching). Feel free to reach out for more details. Apply until 18 February 2025. #EconSky
📢 Spread the word!
We're hiring 7 PhD students in our department, including at least 2 in Quantitative & Empirical Macroeconomics: 👇👇
jobs.ugent.be/job/Ghent-As...
We're hiring 7 PhD students in our department, including at least 2 in Quantitative & Empirical Macroeconomics: 👇👇
jobs.ugent.be/job/Ghent-As...
Assistant Department of Economics
Assistant Department of Economics
jobs.ugent.be
January 17, 2025 at 2:04 PM
We have at least one open PhD position in our Labour Economics and Welfare research area (90% research, 10% teaching). Feel free to reach out for more details. Apply until 18 February 2025. #EconSky
WFH creates opportunities for people with a physical disability, who might otherwise not have been able to work full-time.
Work from home increases the employment of disabled individuals, from Nicholas Bloom, Gordon B. Dahl, and Dan-Olof Rooth https://www.nber.org/papers/w32943
September 18, 2024 at 7:31 PM
WFH creates opportunities for people with a physical disability, who might otherwise not have been able to work full-time.
Prof. Attila Lindner briefly presented this at #EALE2024 along with some key insights that, at the margin, minimum wages are primarily passed through to consumers and improve firm efficiency. Also interesting to see meta-science increasingly permeating economics.
Pleased to introduce the own-wage elasticity repository for minimum wage studies: quantifies the employment effect in an economically interpretable way. Most studies suggest small effect on jobs.
Will be regularly updated. Joint with @benzipperer.org
1/
economic.github.io/owe/
Will be regularly updated. Joint with @benzipperer.org
1/
economic.github.io/owe/
Minimum Wage Own Wage Elasticity Repository
Representative estimates from minimum wage studies
economic.github.io
September 10, 2024 at 3:00 PM
Prof. Attila Lindner briefly presented this at #EALE2024 along with some key insights that, at the margin, minimum wages are primarily passed through to consumers and improve firm efficiency. Also interesting to see meta-science increasingly permeating economics.
Reposted by Louis Lippens
Black Americans' employment rate exceeded (narrowly) white Americans' rate in Dec 2023, only the 2nd time in 52 years of data
This graph shows the ratio of Black to white Americans' rates, with Black Americans' rate stably about 5 to 10 percent lower than whites' rate, until recently.
This graph shows the ratio of Black to white Americans' rates, with Black Americans' rate stably about 5 to 10 percent lower than whites' rate, until recently.
January 6, 2024 at 11:12 PM
Black Americans' employment rate exceeded (narrowly) white Americans' rate in Dec 2023, only the 2nd time in 52 years of data
This graph shows the ratio of Black to white Americans' rates, with Black Americans' rate stably about 5 to 10 percent lower than whites' rate, until recently.
This graph shows the ratio of Black to white Americans' rates, with Black Americans' rate stably about 5 to 10 percent lower than whites' rate, until recently.
Reposted by Louis Lippens
When a minimum wage increases: "Racial inequality decreases because firms disproportionately reduce callbacks to lower-quality white applicants who benefited from discrimination under lower minimum wages."
research.upjohn.org/up_workingpa...
research.upjohn.org/up_workingpa...
November 21, 2023 at 12:36 PM
When a minimum wage increases: "Racial inequality decreases because firms disproportionately reduce callbacks to lower-quality white applicants who benefited from discrimination under lower minimum wages."
research.upjohn.org/up_workingpa...
research.upjohn.org/up_workingpa...
Really exciting and interesting work on labour market competition and its diminishing effects on wage inequality.
An update to my paper with David Autor & Annie McGrew.
The Unexpected Compression in wages has persisted, even as labor market tightness subsided.
Tl;dr ~40% of the rise in wage gap between 10th & 90th percentile in 1980-2019 was reversed in past 3 years.
1/
nber.org/system/files...
The Unexpected Compression in wages has persisted, even as labor market tightness subsided.
Tl;dr ~40% of the rise in wage gap between 10th & 90th percentile in 1980-2019 was reversed in past 3 years.
1/
nber.org/system/files...
November 14, 2023 at 1:07 PM
Really exciting and interesting work on labour market competition and its diminishing effects on wage inequality.
Reposted by Louis Lippens
New article in Nature Human Behavior co-led by Aaron Nichols! In a Registered Report, we ran a field study to test whether images of organizational diversity impact the quality and quantity of applicants from majority and minority groups. www.nature.com/articles/s41...
October 30, 2023 at 4:29 PM
New article in Nature Human Behavior co-led by Aaron Nichols! In a Registered Report, we ran a field study to test whether images of organizational diversity impact the quality and quantity of applicants from majority and minority groups. www.nature.com/articles/s41...
Reposted by Louis Lippens
Good piece by @ryanlcooper.com on the importance of full employment - both for ensuring people are able to find jobs, and for helping improve the quality of those jobs.
The low unemployment of the last couple years is good, actually, writes @ryanlcooper.com. "Big Fiscal has driven the employment rate among prime-age workers up to 80.9%, the highest level in more than 20 years and the 2nd-highest rate in American history."
Why the Full Employment Created by Bidenomics Should Be Celebrated
The economy has many problems. But the labor market hasn’t been doing this well in many decades.
prospect.org
October 10, 2023 at 2:09 PM
Good piece by @ryanlcooper.com on the importance of full employment - both for ensuring people are able to find jobs, and for helping improve the quality of those jobs.
Reposted by Louis Lippens
I wanted to consolidate a few thoughts on google, misinformation, large language models, enshittification, and the fate of the web as we know it.
It started when @carlzimmer.bsky.social shared this remarkable example of Google being fooled by machine-generated bullshit online.
1/n
It started when @carlzimmer.bsky.social shared this remarkable example of Google being fooled by machine-generated bullshit online.
1/n
October 8, 2023 at 4:21 AM
I wanted to consolidate a few thoughts on google, misinformation, large language models, enshittification, and the fate of the web as we know it.
It started when @carlzimmer.bsky.social shared this remarkable example of Google being fooled by machine-generated bullshit online.
1/n
It started when @carlzimmer.bsky.social shared this remarkable example of Google being fooled by machine-generated bullshit online.
1/n
If you want to verify that your bsky account is effectively yours and you own a custom domain, then I recommend you follow the steps in the blog post below. (The same applies if you just want a custom handle, like I did, of course 😀.)
How to set your domain as your handle
Using a domain as your handle helps with account identity, verification, and portability. Here's how to set your domain as your handle.
blueskyweb.xyz
October 5, 2023 at 10:11 AM
If you want to verify that your bsky account is effectively yours and you own a custom domain, then I recommend you follow the steps in the blog post below. (The same applies if you just want a custom handle, like I did, of course 😀.)
Introduction!
I'm a postdoc at Ghent University with an MSc in org. psychology and a joint PhD in economics & sociology. My research focuses mainly on work and the labour market and, more specifically, labour market discrimination.
I highlight some recent research below.
I'm a postdoc at Ghent University with an MSc in org. psychology and a joint PhD in economics & sociology. My research focuses mainly on work and the labour market and, more specifically, labour market discrimination.
I highlight some recent research below.
Louis Lippens
Louis Lippens, FWO postdoctoral researcher at Ghent University
louislippens.be
October 3, 2023 at 8:03 PM
Introduction!
I'm a postdoc at Ghent University with an MSc in org. psychology and a joint PhD in economics & sociology. My research focuses mainly on work and the labour market and, more specifically, labour market discrimination.
I highlight some recent research below.
I'm a postdoc at Ghent University with an MSc in org. psychology and a joint PhD in economics & sociology. My research focuses mainly on work and the labour market and, more specifically, labour market discrimination.
I highlight some recent research below.