P David Boll
pdavidboll.bsky.social
P David Boll
@pdavidboll.bsky.social
Economics PhD student @warwickecon.bsky.social . Interested in labour markets. Confusingly goes by middle name.
https://www.pauldavidboll.com/
🚨 New Version 🚨

The new and extended version of our paper on dealing with spatial unit roots in regressions, now
*forthcoming at the Stata Journal* under a new title!

w/ @essobecker.bsky.social @jvoth.bsky.social

Relevant to anyone who uses spatial data !

Link and more information in🧵(1/n)
November 5, 2025 at 8:35 PM
Reposted by P David Boll
It was time to donate again to the 🇺🇦 Kyiv School of Economics led by the amazing @tymofiibrik.bsky.social and @mylovanov.bsky.social 🇺🇦

If you want to support KSE in these tough times 👇

foundation.kse.ua/en
Home - KSE Charitable Foundation
foundation.kse.ua
March 1, 2025 at 8:05 PM
Reposted by P David Boll
so much fun working @essobecker.bsky.social and David Boll
🚨 New Working Paper 🚨

w/ @pdavidboll.bsky.social and @jvoth.bsky.social

Do you run regressions on spatial data? Then keep reading!

We present a guide and Stata package for methods by Müller and Watson (2024 ECTA) to deal with Spatial Unit Roots in Regressions.

Link in 🧵 (1/n)
January 22, 2025 at 1:05 PM
Reposted by P David Boll
🚨 New Working Paper 🚨

w/ @pdavidboll.bsky.social and @jvoth.bsky.social

Do you run regressions on spatial data? Then keep reading!

We present a guide and Stata package for methods by Müller and Watson (2024 ECTA) to deal with Spatial Unit Roots in Regressions.

Link in 🧵 (1/n)
January 22, 2025 at 12:38 PM
🚨 New Working Paper 🚨

w/ @essobecker.bsky.social @jvoth.bsky.social

Do you run regressions on spatial data? Then keep reading!

We present a guide and Stata package for methods by Müller and Watson (2024) to deal with Spatial Unit Roots in Regressions.

Link in🧵(1/n)
January 22, 2025 at 12:17 PM
🚨 Deadline approaching 🚨

PhD students in Econ and related fields, please submit your extended abstracts for our PhD conference *by 31st Jan*!

We pay for your travel, accommodation and food, and we always have great speakers and lots of fun!

More info and submission form below.

#EconSky
#EconPhD
🚨 Call for Papers 🚨

The 13th Warwick Economics PhD conference will take place 3-5 June 2025.

Applications are welcome from every field in economics. Accommodation and travel costs will be covered.

Keynotes by Prof Stefano Caria and Dr Amrita Kulka

The deadline is 31st January! Link in🧵
January 14, 2025 at 4:04 PM
Reposted by P David Boll
🚨 Deadline approaching! 🚨

Apply for the 13th Warwick Economics PhD conference, taking place from 3-5 June 2025.

Applications are welcome from every field in economics. Accommodation and travel costs will be covered.

Keynotes by Prof Stefano Caria and Dr Amrita Kulka

👉 deadline: 31st January!
🚨 Call for Papers 🚨

The 13th Warwick Economics PhD conference will take place 3-5 June 2025.

Applications are welcome from every field in economics. Accommodation and travel costs will be covered.

Keynotes by Prof Stefano Caria and Dr Amrita Kulka

The deadline is 31st January! Link in🧵
January 14, 2025 at 3:51 PM
Reposted by P David Boll
A great opportunity for PhD students to gather feedback on their work, learn from national and international colleagues, and build up networks. Submissions by 31st January 2025. Find out more: 👉 sites.google.com/view/warwick...
December 3, 2024 at 11:16 AM
🚨 Call for Papers 🚨

If you're a PhD student in Economics, please submit your extended abstracts! We always have great programmes, and are very generous with funding.

If you have any questions, write to us using the email on the website, or comment below for short questions.
🚨 Call for Papers 🚨

The 13th Warwick Economics PhD conference will take place 3-5 June 2025.

Applications are welcome from every field in economics. Accommodation and travel costs will be covered.

Keynotes by Prof Stefano Caria and Dr Amrita Kulka

The deadline is 31st January! Link in🧵
December 3, 2024 at 2:18 PM
Reposted by P David Boll
🚨 Call for Papers 🚨

The 13th Warwick Economics PhD conference will take place 3-5 June 2025.

Applications are welcome from every field in economics. Accommodation and travel costs will be covered.

Keynotes by Prof Stefano Caria and Dr Amrita Kulka

The deadline is 31st January! Link in🧵
December 3, 2024 at 2:16 PM
Reposted by P David Boll
Carmen Villa @carmenvillaecon.bsky.social specialises in Public Economics and Law and Economics.

Her JMP shows that the closure of youth clubs, due to austerity cuts, led to decreases in educational performance and rises in youth offending.

buff.ly/3OriDeT

#EconJobMarket
November 27, 2024 at 1:25 PM
Reposted by P David Boll
Sarthak Joshi's job market paper shows how the changing spatial distribution of work can exacerbate gender employment gaps when women face higher barriers to commuting than men.

Visit: buff.ly/49bSoCW

#EconJobMarket
November 27, 2024 at 1:24 PM
Reposted by P David Boll
Angelica's job market paper explores how preferences for shorter working hours drive women into informal employment due to the limited availability of part-time jobs in the formal sector. buff.ly/3ZgJEIi

#EconJobMarket
November 27, 2024 at 1:24 PM
Reposted by P David Boll
Xueying Zhao's JMP shows that a monopolist data seller can design and price information via a mechanism, which fully extracts the first-best surplus by strategically leveraging data correlations.

Visit: buff.ly/3YZ65QY

#EconJobMarket
November 27, 2024 at 1:20 PM
Reposted by P David Boll
Edoardo Tolva's job market paper uses the Russian airspace closure as a quasi-experiment to estimate the elasticity between transport modes and develops a model to measure its impact on welfare.

Find out more: buff.ly/4hTFEEZ

#EconJobMarket
November 27, 2024 at 1:17 PM
Reposted by P David Boll
Meet Puru Gupta!

His JMP derives a liquidity adjusted Black-Scholes equation for derivative pricing when underlying market is dominated by institutional investors, and implements a numerical algorithm for pricing European options in illiquid markets. buff.ly/3Zh8Puk
November 26, 2024 at 3:03 PM
Reposted by P David Boll
See-Yu Chan’s job market paper examines how the endogenous response of recruitment activities reconciles the puzzle of rising U.S. college wage premiums alongside declining job skill requirements for graduates since 1980.
Visit: buff.ly/4eFFL3V

#EconJobMarket
November 26, 2024 at 2:58 PM
Reposted by P David Boll
Gavin Hassall's job market paper studies how information gaps in central bank communications explain variation in financial markets and the macroeconomy. buff.ly/3V05mh9

#EconJobMarket
November 26, 2024 at 3:04 PM
Reposted by P David Boll
Samuel Marshall’s job market paper quantifies the roles of labor market power, job search costs, and migration costs on the distribution of labor in sub-Saharan Africa. buff.ly/4eD7baM
November 27, 2024 at 1:14 PM
Reposted by P David Boll
Bruno Souza is an applied and labour economist.

What happens to you when one of your co-workers is absent from the workplace? His JMP finds it can boost your wages and career trajectories in the medium run.

Website: buff.ly/3CCmwLx

#EconJobMarket
November 27, 2024 at 1:16 PM
Reposted by P David Boll
🚨📜I am excited to share my Job Market Paper, where I study the effects of youth clubs on education and crime. The paper highlights the broader value of after-school activities and the potential benefits of public provision. 1/10
November 13, 2024 at 12:43 PM
Reposted by P David Boll
To people who know the spatial labor literature: When we talk about spatial sorting of workers, we most often mean college vs non-college or similar. Is there any evidence on sorting *within* these groups? Eg, do we observe different degrees of sorting across skill or occupational groups?

#EconSky
November 9, 2024 at 7:40 PM
Has anyone else noticed a huge sudden increase in the arrival rate of new followers? I have gained ≈150 followers today, compared to a previous average of ≈5-10 per day, and it seems unlikely that I have suddenly become 15-30 times more interesting.
November 11, 2024 at 3:56 PM
To people who know the spatial labor literature: When we talk about spatial sorting of workers, we most often mean college vs non-college or similar. Is there any evidence on sorting *within* these groups? Eg, do we observe different degrees of sorting across skill or occupational groups?

#EconSky
November 9, 2024 at 7:40 PM