Ben Sprung-Keyser
@bsprungkeyser.bsky.social
670 followers 170 following 5 posts
Assistant Professor at Wharton, Business Economics and Public Policy. Co-Director at Policy Impacts
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bsprungkeyser.bsky.social
Looking for a predoc position? I’m hiring!

Come work with me at Wharton. You will work on a variety of topics related to upward mobility, migration, and the effectiveness of government policy.

Apply by Feb 21: wd1.myworkdaysite.com/en-US/recrui...
Reposted by Ben Sprung-Keyser
joseph-s-shapiro.bsky.social
Excited for Fri's
#ASSA2025 8am New Frontiers in Environmental Economics!

🌐 www.aeaweb.org/conference/2...
🗺️ Room: Parc 55, Cyril Magnin 2
🔥 Trade, food, land, clean energy, bunching, air poll., MVPF, etc

w @bsprungkeyser.bsky.social @wolframschlenker.bsky.social @mattkahn1966.bsky.social et al
www.aeaweb.org
Reposted by Ben Sprung-Keyser
brendannyhan.bsky.social
“We find an additional $1 spent auditing taxpayers above the 90th income percentile yields more than $12 in revenue, while audits of below-median income taxpayers yield $5.”
Reposted by Ben Sprung-Keyser
lkatz42.bsky.social
Insightful and important analysis of the returns and costs of tax audits across the income distribution by Boning, Hendren, and Sprung-Keyser (@bsprungkeyser.bsky.social) now in the QJE (@qjeharvard.bsky.social)
bsprungkeyser.bsky.social
Also be sure to check out these papers on the long-run effects of Medicaid

Brown, Kowalski, and Lurie 2020: academic.oup.com/restud/artic...

Goodman-Bacon 2021: www.aeaweb.org/articles?id=...

Miller and Wherry 2018 jhr.uwpress.org/content/earl...

Wherry et al 2018 direct.mit.edu/rest/article...
bsprungkeyser.bsky.social
Our work, drawing upon estimates from Laura Wherry, Sarah Miller, Andrew Goodman-Bacon, and many others, suggests the long-term savings from these types of policies can offset much or all of their upfront costs. On average, $1 spent on medicaid for children saved $1.78 (cc: Nathan Hendren)