How do workers manage their mental energy over time?
In āCalling the shotsā, James Archsmith draws on data from 3 million+ MLB umpire decisions to uncover how accuracy shifts with pressure, fatigue & expectation. ā¾
Read the full article: bit.ly/4rxvJZV
#EconSky @econjim.bsky.social
Posts by UMD Department of Agricultural & Resource Economics
As vehicle climate standards are rolled back, new research from @econjim.bsky.social shows when gas prices are unpredictable, car buyers are willing to pay ~7% more for fuel-efficient vehicles, and 16% of that reflects risk avoidance.
Policy shapes markets. Uncertainty shapes behavior. #econsky
The repeal of the 2009 āendangerment findingā is one of the biggest shifts in U.S. vehicle policy in a decade.
Short-term: lower vehicle prices, higher profits.
Long-term: fewer EVs, higher fuel costs, ~$33B in projected societal costs by 2030.
Policy shapes markets. Markets shape outcomes. #econsky
šļø This Thursday: Join us in LeFrak Hall 1158 or on Zoom š» for the seminar "The Effects of Climate Change on Vulnerable Children with Dispersed Family Networks"with Keehoon Jung, doctoral student in @umdarec.bsky.social ⤵ļø
go.umd.edu/geog-seminar...
LaBubu at Marxās grave: Proof he nailed it? Or proof heās rolling in his grave.
The Trump administration is using #tariffs in a bid to support domestic auto productionābut at what cost? ššµ
Our new If/Then analysis shows that the costs to consumers and producers would significantly outweigh the benefits.
Read the full blog post! ā¬ļø
www.resources.org/common-resou...
New modeling shows auto tariffs could raise car prices by up to $6,700 and cost consumers up to $59B/yearāfar outweighing government revenue gains. What happens when trade policy hits the road? Read the @rff.org report by Josh Linn & Beia Spiller #EconSky #Climate #Policy #Trade
The NSF has frozen all new and existing research funding ā and quietly introduced a policy to screen proposals for āalignmentā with agency priorities. $739M in grants already cut. A stark reminder that how we fund science shapes what gets asked ā and who gets to ask it. #EconSky
Cheaper natural gas, more renewables, and lower demand made coal less profitable. Regulations played only a small roleāeconomics drove the closures and the big drop in emissions. Read more via @nytimes: www.nytimes.com/2025/04/09/c...
Why did so many U.S. coal plants shut down from 2005ā2015? Some blame regulationsābut a study co-authored by Josh Linn (AREC at UMD) points to market shifts. Read Linnās Paper:
This Women's History Month, we are highlighting female authors who bring economics, agriculture, and sustainability to life through fiction. Through fiction, we gain fresh perspectives on real-world challenges, deepening our understanding of the systems that shape our world today.
Sketch of a skinny, bearded man dressed in a suit facing a bearded monkey caricature who is seated on a desk atop a stack of books including origin of species. on the floor is the book descent of man.
Charles Darwin published his book Descent of Man #OnThisDay in 1871. In it he wrote: "It has often been asserted that manās origin can never be known, but ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge."
CEPR is now accepting submissions of papers and expressions of interest for a conference on āThe Economics of Longevity and Ageingā, to be held at London Business School from 31July - 2 August 2025. We welcome papers on a broad range of topics related to the economics of #longevity and ageing - both micro and macro, theoretical and applied. We are particularly interested in: How biological and functional measures of #health relate to economic outcomes and interventions to improve healthy life expectancy. Empirical work on the links between health and individual economic outcomes and their macroeconomic consequences, especially obesity. Valuing health and how to combine health and economic outcomes to give a welfare measure The role of longevity and ageing on life cycle behaviour How institutions should respond to the challenges of increasing longevity and population ageing. There is potential for papers to be published in a special issue of the Journal of the Economics of Ageing. We are especially keen to support junior researchers. Organised by: Julian Ashwin (Maastricht University), David Canning (Harvard University) and Johanna Wallenius (Stockholm School of Economics and CEPR), as part of the CEPR RPN āAgeing and Longevityā led by Andrew Scott (Ellison Institute of Technology Oxford and CEPR).
š¢ #CallForPapers
CEPR welcomes submissions of papers and expressions of interest in attending a #conference on "The Economics of Longevity and Ageing", to be held at London Business School from 31 July - 2 August.
šSubmit by: 28 Feb 2025
More details: cepr.org/events/econo...
#EconSky
Big ideas start with small conversations! AGNR hosted MD Secretary of Agriculture Kevin Atticks! AREC senior Serena Newton shared: "I appreciated the opportunity to engage with Secretary Atticks, who shared interesting insights about Maryland Department of Agriculture initiatives."
So helpful + great resource! Thanks to those who put this together and shared!
Post the amazing science things you have done with federal funding.
A bit late in the cycle, but I'm hiring a postdoc to work on natural resource drivers of US agricultural productivity.
Looking for someone w/ clear interest in the area & good geospatial data skills.
Email me for Qs.
Plz circulate w/ potential candidates.
academicjobsonline.org/ajo/jobs/29631
The NYT covers micro
This is really good work.
Fascinating story by AREC JMC @fnajeeb.bsky.social on how floods reshape resource sharing within households. š #ClimateEconomics #FloodResilience #SustainableDevelopment #Econ
Highly recommend @fnajeeb.bsky.social job market paper and if you want a little appetizer, might we recommend @politicory.bsky.social theard on his thoughts
1/ How do climate shocks reshape lives inside households? š š
My #EconJMP explores how climate shocks can change the way household members share resources, deepening intrahousehold inequalities. This has important implications for climate resilience and policy design. #EconSky
A front row seat to climate change adaptation: #UMD students led by AREC professor Steven Jaffee travelled to Vietnam this winter to examine climate resilience in relation to agriculture, natural resources management, energy, and urban flood management.
Science says 'Paws' for stress relief! Research shows that spending time with dogs can reduce stress hormones like cortisol and increase feel-good chemicals like oxytocin. Take a break from the books and let canine companionship boost your well being during finals! #AGNRTerps