Benjamin Crost
University of California, Berkeley
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Publication
Featured researches published by Benjamin Crost.
Journal of Health Economics | 2012
Benjamin Crost; Santiago Guerrero
This paper exploits the discontinuity created by the minimum legal drinking age of 21 years to estimate the causal effect of increased alcohol availability on marijuana use. We find that consumption of marijuana decreases sharply at age 21, while consumption of alcohol increases, suggesting that marijuana and alcohol are substitutes. We further find that the substitution effect between alcohol and marijuana is stronger for women than for men. Our results suggest that policies designed to limit alcohol use have the unintended consequence of increasing marijuana use.
The Economic Journal | 2018
D. Mark Anderson; Benjamin Crost; Daniel I. Rees
Drawing on county-level data from Kansas for the period 1977-2011, we examine whether plausibly exogenous increases in the number of establishments licensed to sell alcohol by the drink are related to violent crime. During this period, 86 out of 105 counties in Kansas voted to legalize the sale of alcohol to the general public for on-premises consumption. We provide evidence that these counties experienced substantial increases in the total number of establishments with on-premises liquor licenses (e.g., bars and restaurants). Using legalization as an instrument, we show that a 10 percent increase in drinking establishments is associated with a 4 percent increase in violent crime. Reduced-form estimates suggest that legalizing the sale of alcohol to the general public for on-premises consumption is associated with an 11 percent increase in violent crime.
International Journal of Biotechnology | 2008
Benjamin Crost; Bhavani Shankar
The farm-level success of Bt-cotton in developing countries is well documented. However, the literature has only recently begun to recognise the importance of accounting for the effects of the technology on production risk, in addition to the mean effect estimated by previous studies. The risk effects of the technology are likely very important to smallholder farmers in the developing world due to their risk-aversion. We advance the emergent literature on Bt-cotton and production risk by using panel data methods to control for possible endogeneity of Bt-adoption. We estimate two models, the first a fixed-effects version of the Just and Pope model with additive individual and time effects, and the second a variation of the model in which inputs and variety choice are allowed to affect the variance of the time effect and its correlation with the idiosyncratic error. The models are applied to panel data on smallholder cotton production in India and South Africa. Our results suggest a risk-reducing effect of Bt-cotton in India, but an inconclusive picture in South Africa.
Economics and Human Biology | 2017
Benjamin Crost; Andrew Friedson
HighlightsUnemployment increases mortality for the working age population.The increase is driven by education group specific unemployment, not state level unemployment.This connects two strands of the literature that show general unemployment as bad for the health of the elderly and job loss as bad for the health of the working aged. ABSTRACT A series of influential papers have documented that state level mortality rates decrease during economic downturns. In this paper, we estimate the effect of education specific unemployment rates on mortality, which provide a more exact measure of the likelihood of being directly impacted by a recession. We find that the unemployment rate of an education group in a given state is positively related to mortality in that group. A 1% increase in the group‐specific unemployment rate is associated with an approximately 0.015% increase in the group‐specific mortality rate, which is consistent with the hypothesis that, while state‐level unemployment may have indirect health benefits, being personally affected by a recession has a detrimental effect on health.
Archive | 2012
Benjamin Crost; Christian P. Traeger
The precise consequences of climate change remain uncertain. We incorporate damage uncertainty into a joint model of climate and the economy, an integrated assessment model. First, both the science and the integrated assessment community analyze uncertainty by means of sensitivity analysis and Monte-Carlo simulations. These methods have serious limitations in deriving a carbon tax or cap under uncertainty: they do not incorporate the interaction between stochastic climate impacts and economic policy. We derive the optimal climate policies accounting for the full interaction between uncertain damage realizations, optimal policy response, and climatic feedback. Second, state of the art integrated assessment relies on the standard economic model. Modern decision theory and its applications to finance show that this discounted expected utility model is incapable of simultaneously capturing adequate risk premia and a reasonable discount rate, leading to the equity premium and the risk-free rate puzzles. We follow the finance literature in disentangling risk aversion from the propensity to smooth consumption over time, which gives rise to a model reflecting correctly the risk-free discount rate and the risk premia. We find that optimal mitigation efforts are twice as high in the comprehensive risk model as compared to the entangled standard model.
The American Economic Review | 2014
Benjamin Crost; Joseph H. Felter; Patrick B. Johnston
Journal of Agricultural Economics | 2007
Benjamin Crost; Bhavani Shankar; Richard Bennett; Stephen Morse
Department of Agricultural & Resource Economics, UCB | 2011
Benjamin Crost; Christian P. Traeger
Economics Letters | 2013
Benjamin Crost; Christian P. Traeger
Nature Climate Change | 2014
Benjamin Crost; Christian P. Traeger