Tim de Silva
@timdesilva.me
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Economist at Stanford GSB and
@siepr.bsky.social
| Avid Racer Website: www.timdesilva.me
pinned post!
Curious about belief formation in the presence of fat tails? Check out my new paper (with several great co-authors) that we presented at the NBER Behavioral Finance Meeting:
t.co/79oNjGkHJv
Paper:
timhdesilva.github.io/files/papers...
Thanks
@profstefannagel.bsky.social
for a great discussion!
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https://www.youtube.com/live/TXv1-eH-icY?si=ujNMp_Q_a86DTQNL&t=22424
https://t.co/79oNjGkHJv
5 months ago
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Tim de Silva
The Quarterly Journal of Economics
about 2 months ago
Recently accepted by
#QJE
, āInsurance Versus Moral Hazard in Income-Contingent Student Loan Repayment,ā by Tim de Silva (
@timdesilva.me
):
doi.org/10.1093/qje/...
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Insurance Versus Moral Hazard in Income-Contingent Student Loan Repayment*
Abstract. Student loans with income-contingent repayment insure borrowers against income risk but can reduce their incentives to earn more. Using a change
https://doi.org/10.1093/qje/qjaf036
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Tim de Silva
NBER
4 months ago
A study of expectations formation when the underlying process has thick tails, from
@timdesilva.me
, Eugene Larsen-Hallock, Adam Rej, and David Thesmar
https://www.nber.org/papers/w33808
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This is awesome!
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4 months ago
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Tim de Silva
Owen Zidar
4 months ago
www.nytimes.com/interactive/...
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Trumpās Big Bill Would Be More Regressive Than Any Major Law in Decades
Estimates from the Congressional Budget Office, released Thursday, offer a detailed view into the effects on income groups.
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2025/06/12/upshot/gop-megabill-distribution-poor-rich.html
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New paper on belief formation in a world with āfatā tails! Check out my recent NBER presentation here:
www.youtube.com/live/TXv1-eH...
Ungated link:
www.timdesilva.me/files/papers...
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4 months ago
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Tim de Silva
SIEPR
5 months ago
Just released: Results from the largest-ever experiment on social media and emotional health by SIEPR's Hunt Allcott and Matthew Gentzkow. Here's what they found:
www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/202...
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Opinion | Could a social media detox improve our well-being?
We conducted the largest-ever experiment on social media and emotional health. Hereās what we found.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2025/04/21/social-media-election-politics-wellbeing/
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Curious about belief formation in the presence of fat tails? Check out my new paper (with several great co-authors) that we presented at the NBER Behavioral Finance Meeting:
t.co/79oNjGkHJv
Paper:
timhdesilva.github.io/files/papers...
Thanks
@profstefannagel.bsky.social
for a great discussion!
loading . . .
https://www.youtube.com/live/TXv1-eH-icY?si=ujNMp_Q_a86DTQNL&t=22424
https://t.co/79oNjGkHJv
5 months ago
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Tim de Silva
Toni Whited š·
7 months ago
rodneywhitecenter.wharton.upenn.edu/2025-summer-...
12 more days to apply to our summer school in structural estimation! It's a hands-on course in which you learn how to do SMM and then work on a problem set with your classmates. Open to PhD students in finance, accounting, econ. And faculty.
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2025 Summer School on Structural Estimation in Corporate Finance
https://rodneywhitecenter.wharton.upenn.edu/2025-summer-school/
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Steven Kelly
7 months ago
New paper: "Rushing to Judgement and the Banking Crisis of 2023" At the two-year anniversary of the crisis, Jonathan Rose and I present 7 facts that are overlooked in the standard account of the crisis:
www.chicagofed.org/publications...
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Great paper! I find the theoretical framework to be a really elegant way of seeing a lot of results in the literature in one place
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8 months ago
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Tim de Silva
SIEPR
9 months ago
"Itās vital that we preserve our reputation for rigor. Weāll fail more often than we succeed. But when we are successful, we will have played a critical role in advancing good economic policy. For me, thatās something worth striving for," writes SIEPR Director
@nealemahoney.bsky.social
. Full piece āļø
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Alex Imas
9 months ago
Delighted to receive the Journal of Finance DFA First Prize for "Selling Fast and Buying Slow: Heuristics and Trading Performance of Institutional Investors" We show that behavioral econ findings not limited to the lab, they show up amongst the most sophisticated market participants.
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Selling Fast and Buying Slow: Heuristics and Trading Performance of Institutional Investors
Are market experts prone to heuristics, and if so, do they transfer across closely related domainsābuying and selling? We investigate this question using a uniq
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3301277
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Joshua Goodman
9 months ago
A fantastic resource for those interested in the cutting edge of policy-relevant economics research. š
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Love this paper! Great example of how a null result can be super informative from both a positive and normative standpoint.
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9 months ago
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Rafe Meager (they/them)
9 months ago
this abstract is INSANE
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Anna Stansbury
9 months ago
This slowly dawned on me during my PhD - it was by being at seminars or conferences where I could see the true debate behind a paper and what people thought its contribution and flaws were, not by reading the published version. Science would be better served if everyone could see these debates
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Emma Wiles
9 months ago
My economist husband spent the last couple days, jubilantly stating āSaturday the holidays begin! Vacation starts! No more work!ā This morning he woke up excited: āno work today!!ā He is now making slides for an intro trade class that doesnāt exist āfor fun! This isnāt work!!ā
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Matthew Yglesias
9 months ago
Trump fixed the economy without even taking office
open.substack.com/pub/paulkrug...
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Love this paper, helps me think through a lot of things these days in the real economy and financial markets!
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10 months ago
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I like the point here that the shift from manufacturing to services is important for understanding the election!
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10 months ago
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Tim de Silva
SIEPR
10 months ago
With the holiday season upon us, SIEPR reflects on those who make our community special. We are thrilled to share our new batch of Why Econ profiles, which showcase researchers and students and why they have chosen to examine the world and make an impact through the prism of economics. To start...
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Such a great conference, sad I canāt make it this year!
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10 months ago
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John Holbein
10 months ago
Can you guess what happens when a Walmart Supercenter enters a community? ... ... ... ā¾EITC receipts in the community increase ā¾ workers' incomes go down as a direct result. "Walmart Supercenters gradually accumulate and exercise monopsony power, with negative consequences for workers."
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Matthew Yglesias
10 months ago
Iām always struck that the people repeating the bogus ā60% of Americans are living paycheck to paycheckā stat never follow it up with any proposals to increase the savings rate.
www.slowboring.com/p/this-econo...
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This economic myth needs to go away
Sixty percent of Americans are not struggling to get by
https://www.slowboring.com/p/this-economic-myth-needs-to-go-away
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John Schmitt
10 months ago
Basically, US and UK firms that violate minimum wage laws face little probability of getting caught and pay only small fines when they do. Via
@annastansbury.bsky.social
in
@ilrreview.bsky.social
journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1...
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Alex Imas
10 months ago
What to make of this? To me, the take-away is we need a much better understanding how the information environment maps onto people's mental representation of the decision problem. Attention/memory has a huge role to play, as they will interact with context to determine this representation. fin.
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Cary Frydman
10 months ago
Great thread. Itās possible that noise in cognitive representation of probabilities (or proportions) are driving some of these results. So to the extent that thereās more noise when probabilities arenāt explicitly presented in real world, perhaps youād get broader scope of PT-like behavior
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Exactly the kind of discussion I came to this platform for!
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10 months ago
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you reached the end!!
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