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ECONOMICS AND MARKETS

Disoriented: In Asia, U.S. Still Guards the Fort but Surrenders the Bank (Spring 2008)

Fount of Knowledge: How Managers of Water Can Plumb Its Deep Uncertainties (Spring 2008)

Improved Valuations of Water-Efficiency Programs Can Help Water Managers Make the Most of Them (Spring 2008)

Newcomers’ Burden: Who, if Not Immigrants, Will Pay for the Baby Boomers’ Retirement? (Spring 2008)

Quick Fix: Drug Benefit Plans Driven by Short-Term Savings Could Be More Costly in the End (Fall 2007)

Alcohol Advertising and Marketing Appear to Influence Early Adolescent Drinking (Summer 2007)

RAND Study Informs U.S. Debate over Terrorism Risk Insurance (Summer 2007)

Delta Dawning: Gulf Coast Efforts Look Beyond Recovery Toward Lasting Renewal (Fall 2006)

Advanced Nations Will Benefit Most from Future Technologies, Study Finds (Summer 2006)

Airbus or Boeing Derivatives Favored for U.S. Air Force Tankers (Summer 2006)

Only Half in Flood-Prone Areas Purchase Flood Insurance (Spring 2006)

Better Resource Assessments Would Improve Resource Development (Fall 2005)

In Search of Energy Security: Will New Sources and Technologies Reduce Our Vulnerability to Major Disruptions? (Fall 2005)

Many Happy Returns: Early Childhood Programs Entail Costs, but the Paybacks Could Be Substantial (Fall 2005)

A Variety of Early Childhood Interventions Have Generated Favorable Economic Returns (Fall 2005)

What People in England Want When Choosing Their Own Hospitals (Fall 2005)

Suburban Sprawl, Body Sprawl: Are Land-Use Patterns Driven by Choice or by the Market? (Spring 2005)

Public Initiative: What the “Gene Revolution” Can Learn from the Green Revolution (Fall 2004)

Plots and Curves: What Mexican Sex Workers Can Teach Economists About Preventing HIV (Summer 2004)

Securities Fraud Class Actions: 70 Years Young (Summer 2004)

Swollen Waistlines, Swollen Costs: Obesity Worsens Disabilities and Weighs on Health Budgets (Spring 2004)

Laboratories of Reform: State Health Insurance Experiments Yield Lessons for the Nation (Fall 2003)

Molecular Manipulation: How Tiny Particles Are Becoming Big Business (Fall 2003)

Reducing High Fertility Rates Can Yield Economic Benefits (Spring 2003)

Harvard Business Scholar Asks: “Globalization for Whom?” (Summer 2002)

Dutch Students Know How to Take a Free Ride (Spring 2002)

State Energy Crisis Spurs Quest for National Strategy (Spring 2001)

Competitive Jolt: For Electricity Deregulation to Work, Surge Capacity Is Just the Beginning (Fall 2000)

If Wealth Is the Chicken, Health Is the Egg (Fall 1999)

Open Your Market and Say “Ahh”: “Contagion Indicators” for an Ailing Global Economy (Winter 1998-99)


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