Every day millions of people deal with others they know nothing or very little about. A Norwegian tourist buys a carpet in Casablanca. A woman in Mexico City hails a cab on the street. A person with a never-before-experienced eye pain asks an ophthalmologist for advice.
Understanding trust: The role of false consensus
Jeffrey V. Butler, Paola Giuliano, Luigi Guiso, 18 December 2012
Topics: Frontiers of economic research
Tags: Culture, false consensus, trust
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- 5715 reads
Does language shape our economy? Female/male grammatical distinctions and gender economics
Victor Gay, Estefania Santacreu-Vasut, Amir Shoham, 29 August 2012
In his Nobel Prize lecture, Douglas North (1993) argued that cultural knowledge is transmitted via language. Yet, language may be more than a vehicle of transmission, as the linguist Benjamin L Whorf hypothesised (1956):
Topics: Frontiers of economic research, Gender
Tags: Culture, gender economics, language
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- 6494 reads
Laws and norms
Jean Tirole, Roland Bénabou, 21 November 2011
Vox readers can download CEPR Discussion Paper 8663 for free here. To learn more about subscribing to CEPR's Discussion Paper Series, please visit the CEPR pressoffice@cepr.org. To learn more about subscribing to CEPR's Discussion Paper Series, please visit the CEPR website.
URL: http://www.cepr.org/DP8663
Topics: Frontiers of economic research, Politics and economics
Tags: Culture, laws, norms, psychology, social attitudes, values
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- 5904 reads
Selecting World Heritage sites: A new proposal
Lasse Steiner, Bruno S Frey, 18 November 2011
The UNESCO World Heritage sites have become major attractions for cultural tourism and are icons of national identity. Being put on the UNESCO World Heritage List comes with considerable media coverage – and naturally governments invest substantial time and effort in order to gain an entry.
Topics: Frontiers of economic research, Politics and economics
Tags: Culture, UNESCO, world heritage
On the origins of gender roles: women and the plough
Alberto Alesina, Paola Giuliano, Nathan Nunn, 6 June 2011
Vox users can download CEPR Discussion Paper 8418 for free here. To learn more about subscribing to CEPR's Discussion Paper Series, please visit the CEPR website.
Journalists are entitled to free DP downloads on request; please contact pressoffice@cepr.org. To learn more about subscribing to CEPR's Discussion Paper Series, please visit the CEPR website.
URL: www.cepr.org/DP8418
Topics: Development, Frontiers of economic research, Labour markets
Tags: Culture, gender inequality, values
- 6902 reads
The geography of hate: How anti-Semitism in interwar Germany was influenced by the medieval mass murder of Jews
Nico Voigtländer, Hans-Joachim Voth, 22 May 2011
What causes some people to engage in hate crime, while others remain aloof? Scholars have examined the role of ignorance and political incentives in the formation of groups dominated by hatred (Glaeser 2005). What has remained underexplored is the extent to which cultural transmission predisposes people to act violently, in a fashion similar to that of their ancestors.
Topics: Frontiers of economic research, Politics and economics
Tags: Anti-Semitism, Culture, Germany
Divide and rule or the rule of the divided? The effect of national and ethnic institutions on African under-development
Elias Papaioannou, Stelios Michalopoulos, 15 November 2010
The conventional wisdom on the deep determinants of African development places colonisation at the centre of any explanation. An influential body of research suggests that the extractive colonial institutions that Europeans established in the late 19th century, crucially contributed to African underdevelopment.
Topics: Development, Institutions and economics, Politics and economics
Tags: Africa, Culture, development, growth, institutions
Does culture affect long-run growth?
Yuriy Gorodnichenko, Gérard Roland, 21 September 2010
The idea that culture is a central ingredient of economic development goes back to at least Max Weber who, in his classical work “The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism” (Weber 1905), argued that the protestant ethic of Calvinism was a very powerful force behind the development of capitalism in its early phases.
Topics: Frontiers of economic research, Macroeconomic policy
Tags: Culture, economic growth, institutions
Culture, institutions and the wealth of nations
Yuriy Gorodnichenko, Gérard Roland, 20 September 2010
Vox users can download CEPR Discussion Paper 8013 for free here. To learn more about subscribing to CEPR's Discussion Paper Series, please visit the CEPR website.
Journalists are entitled to free DP downloads on request; please contact pressoffice@cepr.org. To learn more about subscribing to CEPR's Discussion Paper Series, please visit the CEPR website.
URL: http://www.cepr.org/pubs/new-dps/dplist.asp?dpno=8013&action.x=13&action.y=11&action=ShowDP
Topics: Development, Institutions and economics, Productivity and Innovation
Tags: Culture, growth, institutions
- 5343 reads
Pop internationalism: Has half a century of world music trade displaced local culture?
Joel Waldfogel, Fernando Ferreira, 29 May 2010
Over the past half century the music world has become smaller. Advances in communication technologies have made the cultural products of one country more readily available to consumers in another. While lower trade costs are generally good news for consumers, trade in cultural goods encounters less enthusiasm, largely due to fear of US cultural hegemony.
Topics: International trade
Tags: Culture, globalisation, music
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