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Petra Persson

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omitting citations of similar studies. The paper was updated to include a reference to a similar paper before being published. A comment criticised how the authors defined the control group, arguing that their definition risked finding a significant effect when there is none. Persson and Rossin-Slater agreed with the critique and said that their results were mostly unchanged after they re-estimated them using the control group suggested by the comment.
445:, identifying that each policy is either ineffective against trafficking or harm voluntary suppliers. Persson ultimately highlights an alternative policy combining the Dutch and Swedish models, where prostitution is licensed and johns who buy sex from unlicensed prostitutes are criminalized, which would restore the benchmark outcome whereby trafficking is decreased and voluntary prostitution increases. 416:
medications during childhood and anti-anxiety and depression medications in adulthood. Their findings suggest large potential welfare gains by preventing fetal stress from family ruptures and socioeconomic factors. After being accepted for publication, their preprint attracted criticism for allegedly
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despite family and friend investors being willing to accept below-market or negative returns. Persson finds that familial loans are associated with shadow costs and a lack of formal liability, which drives borrowers to formal lending markets. Specifically, Persson reviews the effects of social debt,
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Working with Yiqun Chen and Maria Polyakova, Persson explores the correlation between income and health, specifically through familial access to health expertise. Persson uses Sweden as an empirical setting, which has minimal inequality in terms of formal access to health care and still find strong
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difference. Persson further illustrates that access to intra-family expertise has a number of positive health impacts, increasing life expectancy, reducing lifestyle-related disease, and improving drug adherence. Persson further finds that the effects of lack of access to expertise are larger at
167:. Persson is best known for her work in Public and Labour Economics where her research focuses on the interactions between family decisions and the policy environment. Specifically, Persson's research agenda is centered on studying government policy, family wellbeing, and informal institutions. 355:. Persson employs administrative data from Sweden's “Double Days” reform whereby both parents could use full-time leave benefits at the same time for up to 30 days. Through this analysis, Persson finds that increasing a father's temporal flexibility reduces the risk of the mother experiencing 731: 329:
for matched but unmarried couples, and increases assertiveness of matching for both unmatched and unmarried individuals. Further, Persson's findings suggest that marriage is commonly used as a mechanism for long-term financial planning.
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system, including Social Security, health insurance, unemployment insurance, parental insurance, and targeting of social insurance. In Economics 300, Persson teaches third-year PhD students on the development of a research paper.
202:. Persson wrote her PhD dissertation on relationships and communication, with chapters on social insurance and the marriage market, attention manipulation and information overload, and paternalism and libertarianism. 350:
et al. (2016)'s finding that mothers face greater expectations to be "on call" for unforeseen domestic needs, Persson's paper analyzes father's demand for workplace flexibility and the spillover effects on
325:. Using data from Sweden's elimination of survivors' insurance in 1989, Persson finds that eliminating survivors’ insurance lowers the long-run rate of entry into marriage from cohabitation, raises 408:
effect of exposure to the death of a maternal loss compared to babies born who experience a loss within the first year of life. The authors find that this exposure is related to negative
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health complications. Moreover, Persson reaffirms that mothers currently bear a disproportionate burden from both career costs and a fathers' inability to respond to domestic shocks.
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with both voluntary and coerced workers. In this analysis, Persson attempts to identify a policy tool that would restore the benchmark outcome that would arise under a
214: 175: 221:. She currently works as an Assistant Professor in Economics at Stanford University and is a Faculty Research Fellow at the National Bureau of Economic Research. 502: 404:
study how exposure to maternal stress from familial ruptures affects later mental health. Specifically, they use empirical data from Sweden to isolate the
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where she has produced notable research on paternity leave, family ruptures, and maternal health. Previously, Persson was a Postdoctoral Fellow at the
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data from admissions lotteries to Swedish medical schools, Persson finds that access to intra-family medical expertise can explain 18% of the health-
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where borrowers provide disproportionate favors to compensate lenders for providing capital at below-market rates. Persson's research observes that
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Persson has focused on interactions between family decisions and the policy environment, with her research centered around three key themes:
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In her 2018 paper, “Social Insurance and the Marriage Market”, Persson analyzes how linking survivors’ insurance to marriage affects the
863: 256:, Persson teaches two PhD courses in the Department of Economics. In Economics 243, Persson examines household interactions with the 1530: 1129:"Long Work Hours, Part-Time Work, and Trends in the Gender Gap in Pay, the Motherhood Wage Penalty, and the Fatherhood Wage Premium" 818: 218: 1243:
Persson, Petra; Rossin-Slater, Maya (2018-04-01). "Family Ruptures, Stress, and the Mental Health of the Next Generation: Reply".
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where she completed her B.A. in Political Science and Mathematics. Persson went on to complete her M.Sc. in Economics at the
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intermediaries such as community lending pools can harness social capital while minimizing familial shadow costs.
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Lee, Samuel; Persson, Petra (2018-11-01). "Human Trafficking and Regulating Prostitution". Rochester, NY.
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Maternal and Infant Health Inequality: New Evidence from Linked Administrative Data (November 2022)
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In her academic career, Persson has worked in a number of academic affiliate and fellow positions:
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The Long-term Consequences of Teacher Discretion in Grading of High-Stakes Tests (October 2017)
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2016 - current: Faculty Research Fellow, National Bureau of Economic Research, Public Economics
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2014 - current: Research Affiliate, Institute for Evaluation of Labour Market Policy, Uppsala
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In reviewing the informal finance market, Persson investigates why borrowers tend to prefer
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as a Research Associate. Thereafter, Persson worked in postdoctoral fellow positions at the
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Through her academic career, Persson has received several grants and awards, including the
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When Dad Can Stay Home: Fathers’ Workplace Flexibility and Maternal Health (October 2019)
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Does Medicine Run in the Family: Evidence from Three Generations of Physicians in Sweden
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2012 - current: Research Affiliate, Research Institute of Industrial Economics, Stockholm
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2015 - current: Research Affiliate, Centre for Economic Policy Research, Public Economics
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Dissertation Fellowship in Population, Reproductive Health and Economic Development
524:, Handbook of the Economics of Prostitution, ed. Scott Cunningham and Manisha Shah. 1490: 426: 409: 130: 947: 433:
market without any coerced workers. Persson examines several policies, including
1325:"Family Ruptures, Stress, and the Mental Health of the Next Generation: Comment" 702:
Insurance without Commitment: Evidence from the ACA Marketplaces (December 2020)
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Family Spillover Effects of Marginal Diagnoses: The Case of ADHD (October 2022)
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2015 - current: Faculty Fellow, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research
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Targeting Precision Medicine: Evidence from Prenatal Screening (November 2022)
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Violence and Entry in Prostitution Markets: Implications for Prostitution Law
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women and public policy program in 2012. Additionally, Persson has worked at
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lower income brackets, which is commonly where access to expertise is lower.
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The Roots of Health Inequality and the Value of Intra-Family Expertise (2019)
1178:"When Dad Can Stay Home: Fathers' Workplace Flexibility and Maternal Health" 1145: 1128: 923: 454: 390:
Family Ruptures, Stress, and the Mental Health of the Next Generation (2016)
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A Taste of Their Own Medicine: Guideline Adherence and Access to Expertise
730:/IIE award in 2012, Spectrum Grant in 2016, and a research grant from the 1451: 1340: 1256: 1222: 1071:
Persson, Petra (2019-04-18). "Social Insurance and the Marriage Market".
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Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Development
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The Roots of Health Inequality and the Value of Intra-Family Expertise
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Family Ruptures, Stress, and the Mental Health of the Next Generation
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Take-Up, Drop-Out, and Spending in ACA Marketplaces (January 2019)
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Petra Persson, Amy Finkelstein, Maria Polyakova, Jesse M. Shapiro
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The Limits of Career Concerns in Federalism: Evidence from China
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RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences
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is a Swedish economist and Assistant Professor in Economics at
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Petra Persson, Maria Polyakova, Katja Hofmann, Anupam B. Jena
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2017 - current: Research Affiliate, CESifo Research Network
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Dissertation Fellowship, Center for Retirement Research
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Through this paper with Samuel Lee, Persson studies the
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as an IRiSS faculty fellow and Brown faculty fellow.
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Research Fellowship, Women and Public Policy Program
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Human Trafficking and Regulating Prostitution (2018)
140: 124: 83: 73: 47: 42: 28: 21: 1176:Persson, Petra; Rossin-Slater, Maya (2019-05-01). 1491:"Petra Persson | Economics | Stanford University" 312:Research on family behavior and government policy 556:Attention Manipulation and Information Overload 363:Research on family behavior and family wellbeing 737:Persson completed a research fellowship at the 317:Social Insurance and the Marriage Market (2018) 215:Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research 176:Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research 830:Spectrum Grant for Population Health Sciences 651:Human Trafficking and Regulating Prostitution 252:In her current role as Assistant Professor at 224:Professionally, Persson is a referee for the 219:Stanford Center for International Development 8: 503:Journal of the European Economic Association 205:Persson started her career as an Analyst at 170:Persson is a Faculty Research Fellow at the 641:Petra Persson, Yiqun Chen, Maria Polyakova 1434:Lee, Samuel; Persson, Petra (2016-09-01). 18: 1459: 1197: 1144: 1127:; Cha, Youngjoo; Bucca, Mauricio (2016). 1092: 594:Social Insurance and the Marriage Market 307:Family behavior and informal institutions 747: 474: 449:Financing from Family and Friends (2015) 1278:Willingham, Author Emily (2016-05-26). 997:"Information Book for Economics Majors" 892: 860:Distinguished Research Affiliate Award 845:Health, Working Life and Welfare Grant 1416: 1405: 1305: 1295: 373:socioeconomic gradients. Leveraging a 1485: 1483: 1481: 1479: 508:Petra Persson, Ekaterina Zhuravskaya 301:Family behavior and government policy 7: 304:Family behavior and family wellbeing 172:National Bureau of Economic Research 1436:"Financing from Family and Friends" 864:Ifo Institute for Economic Research 584:Petra Persson, Maya Rossin-Slater 537:Financing from Family and Friends 14: 1048:"Research and Teaching Statement" 819:Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences 182:Women and Public Policy Program. 749:Grants, fellowships, and awards 1526:21st-century Swedish economists 1440:The Review of Financial Studies 904:(Thesis). Columbia University. 902:Relationships and Communication 198:and her Ph.D. in Economics at 178:and Predoctoral Fellow at the 1: 1221:Persson, Petra (2019-02-01). 834:National Institutes of Health 342:assess, through a regression 230:International Economic Review 196:Stockholm School of Economics 101:Stockholm School of Economics 1329:The American Economic Review 1073:Journal of Political Economy 598:Journal of Political Economy 441:of buyers or suppliers, and 924:"Petra Persson - Biography" 541:Review of Financial Studies 242:National Science Foundation 238:Journal of Public Economics 1552: 1371:"What's best for the baby" 1024:"Network Members | CESifo" 660:Petra Persson, Samuel Lee 546:Petra Persson, Samuel Lee 527:Petra Persson, Samuel Lee 383:socioeconomic status (SES) 334:When Dad Stays Home (2019) 234:Journal of Labor Economics 209:, followed by work at the 1323:Matsumoto, Brett (2018). 674:American Economic Journal 655:American Economic Journal 636:American Economic Journal 560:Behavioural Public Policy 344:difference-in-differences 226:American Economic Journal 136: 38: 1531:Swedish women economists 1245:American Economic Review 1230:NBER Working Paper 25618 1182:NBER Working Paper 25902 849:Swedish Research Council 739:Harvard Kennedy School's 579:American Economic Review 397:American Economic Review 1536:Swedish women academics 1163:10.7758/rsf.2016.2.4.03 1146:10.7758/rsf.2016.2.4.03 900:Persson, Petra (2013). 617:British Medical Journal 522:Oxford University Press 1415:Cite journal requires 1004:economics.stanford.edu 804:Harvard Kennedy School 774:Hewlett Foundation/IIE 718:Recognition and awards 180:Harvard Kennedy School 977:syllabus.stanford.edu 973:"ECON 243 - Syllabus" 875:Brown Faculty Fellow 724:Fulbright Scholarship 466:Academic publications 265:Academic affiliations 1341:10.1257/aer.20161124 1257:10.1257/aer.20161605 581:, 108(4-5): 1214-52 192:Stockholm University 186:Education and career 91:Stockholm University 879:Stanford University 750: 743:Stanford University 543:, 29(9): 2341-2386 427:prostitution market 400:paper, Persson and 254:Stanford University 200:Columbia University 165:Stanford University 111:Columbia University 78:Stanford University 1452:10.1093/rfs/hhw031 1335:(4–5): 1253–1255. 1308:has generic name ( 1251:(4–5): 1256–1263. 952:siepr.stanford.edu 748: 728:Hewlett Foundation 600:, 128(1): 252-300 402:Maya Rossin-Slater 375:quasi-experimental 353:maternal wellbeing 340:Maya Rossin-Slater 884: 883: 685: 684: 638:, 14(3): 185-223 505:, 14(2): 338-374 471:Publications list 435:decriminalization 190:Persson attended 158: 157: 16:Swedish economist 1543: 1505: 1504: 1502: 1501: 1495:web.stanford.edu 1487: 1474: 1473: 1463: 1446:(9): 2341–2386. 1431: 1425: 1424: 1418: 1413: 1411: 1403: 1391: 1385: 1384: 1382: 1381: 1367: 1361: 1360: 1320: 1314: 1313: 1307: 1303: 1301: 1293: 1291: 1290: 1284:Retraction Watch 1275: 1269: 1268: 1240: 1234: 1233: 1227: 1218: 1212: 1211: 1201: 1173: 1167: 1166: 1148: 1121: 1115: 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Retrieved 1494: 1443: 1439: 1429: 1408:cite journal 1389: 1378:. Retrieved 1374: 1365: 1332: 1328: 1318: 1306:|first= 1287:. Retrieved 1283: 1273: 1248: 1244: 1238: 1229: 1216: 1199:10419/202732 1181: 1171: 1136: 1132: 1119: 1094:10419/129369 1076: 1072: 1066: 1055:. Retrieved 1051: 1042: 1031:. Retrieved 1027: 1018: 1007:. Retrieved 1003: 991: 980:. Retrieved 976: 966: 955:. Retrieved 951: 942: 931:. 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Index

Public Economics
Labour Economics
Socioeconomics
Stanford University
Stockholm University
BA
Stockholm School of Economics
MSc
Columbia University
PhD
Navin Kartik
web.stanford.edu/~perssonp
Stanford University
National Bureau of Economic Research
Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research
Harvard Kennedy School
Stockholm University
Stockholm School of Economics
Columbia University
Goldman Sachs
World Bank
Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research
Stanford Center for International Development
American Economic Journal
International Economic Review
Journal of Labor Economics
Journal of Public Economics
National Science Foundation
Stanford University
social insurance

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