Friday, 10 July 2026

This week in research #134

Here's what caught my eye in research over the past week:

  • Wu and Lee use a theoretical model to show that higher military spending stimulates aggregate demand, thereby promoting employment and income growth, particularly among low-income groups, and consequently reducing income inequality
  • Wang (open access) finds using data from British Columbia that having larger proportions of female peers has a large positive effect on students' choice of a STEM major
  • Clark and Nielsen (open access) conduct a meta-analysis on the returns to education, including 79 studies that use changes in the minimum school leaving age to identify effects, finding that the average return to an additional year of education is 8.2 percent
  • Giuranno and Manni (open access) review the literature on the impact of TikTok on elections, concluding that TikTok functions as a fast-moving marketplace for political ideas in which algorithmic incentives may shape conditions relevant to electoral integrity
  • Collischon and Zimmermann (open access) unsurprisingly find zero effects of western Zodiac signs on wages, education, and managerial status among workers in Germany
  • Garcia et al. find that both social trust and civic pride contribute to the willingness to pay to prevent the relegation of a professional football (soccer) team, with social trust more relevant for those who attend games

Also, I am delighted to report that my Master's student, Josh McNamara, won the Jan Whitwell Prize for the best student research paper at the New Zealand Association of Economists conference last week. Josh has blossomed into a standout research student over the last couple of years, and will no doubt do great things in a PhD programme in the near future. Congratulations Josh!

Finally, I can also report a marker of my own mild fame. While in Scotland last week, I visited my ancestral family lands at Achnacarry in the western highlands, and the Clan Cameron Museum. My wife asked if they would add me to their list of famous Camerons, and after looking me up online (including my blog!), they agreed! So, I join the likes of former UK prime minister David Cameron, Pearl Jam drummer Matt Cameron, and others on the list.

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