Center for Policy Research News
Schewe article on social forces on climate change behavior published in Rural Sociology
See related: Climate Change
Monnat article on teaching to the opioid epidemic published in Medical Teacher
See related: Addiction, Education, Health Policy, Longevity, United States
Heflin study on food insecurity, childhood health and cognitive development published in JFI
See related: Food Security
Wasylenko appointed Maxwell Advisory Board Professor of Economics
Ma discusses China's influence on US education on CNN
"Their (Chinese) classroom participation patterns right now really have pushed a lot of professors to think about how they can adjust the way they teach," says Yingyi Ma, associate professor of sociology and O'Hanley Faculty Scholar.
Burman op-ed on Trump's tax reform plan in Fortune
According to Leonard Burman, professor of public administration and international affairs, "Trump’s 'tax reform plan' isn’t tax reform and it isn’t a plan. To borrow an analogy from the president’s favorite sport, he should take a mulligan and swing again at tax reform after he’s brought on a tax policy team and they’ve had a chance to do their homework."
Rosenthal article on homeownership, housing capital gains and self-employment published in JUE
See related: Housing
Baltagi article on asymptotic power of the sphericity test published in Econometric Reviews
Burman weighs in on President Trump's tax plan in Forbes and on WCNY
“I think at the end of the day, you’re not going to see either the Trump or the House GOP tax plan. It will look a little more like George W. Bush’s 2001 tax bill—mostly just rate cuts,” says Leonard Burman, Paul Volcker Chair in Behavioral Economics.
Lee article on adaptive elastic net GMM estimation published in Jour of Business & Econ Statistics
Burman analysis of House GOP tax plan in Columbia Journal of Tax Law
"An Analysis of the House GOP Tax Plan," co-authored by Len Burman, Paul Volcker Chair in Behavioral Economics, examines the House GOP tax reform blueprint, which would significantly reduce marginal tax rates, increase standard deduction amounts, repeal personal exemptions and most itemized deductions, and convert business taxation into a destination-based cash flow consumption tax.
See related: Taxation, United States
Burman comments on Trump's tax plan in New York Times
Leonard Burman, professor of public administration and international affairs, opines that President Reagan "got people excited about the idea of fixing our broken tax system. It’s hard to imagine President Trump doing that.”
Schwartz discusses student success on With Good Reason Radio
Amy Ellen Schwartz, professor of economics and public administration and international affairs, says we need to have all of the "other stuff" such as school lunch, school buses, school facilities, and after school lined up to help make kids productive, successful people.
Burman discusses tax reform on NPR
Ma weighs in on decline in international student enrollment in Diverse
"I have encountered multiple requests from international students...They are all asking questions related to whether they need to prepare more when they apply for visas...in light of the current administration," says Yingyi Ma, associate professor of sociology.
Burman weighs in on the debate about taxes in New York Times
"A lot of the debate about taxes is really a debate about spending," says Leonard Burman, professor of public administration and international affairs. "What is the role of government, and what is the value of government spending? Those tend to be the real underlying question."
Flores-Lagunes article on finite sample evidence of IV estimators published in JAE
Hou featured in Wall Street Journal article on potential property tax in China
Burman chapter on tax expenditure limits published in The Economics of Tax Policy
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Center for Policy Research Events
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Paul Volcker Lecture in Behavioral Economics with Deirdre Nansen McCloskey
Maxwell Auditorium
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Deirdre Nansen McCloskey (University of Illinois at Chicago) will present the fifth annual Paul Volcker Lecture in Behavioral Economics. For more information about this lecture, please contact Katrina Fiacchi at 315.443.9040 or kfiacchi@syr.edu.
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