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Dive into the research topics where Jeremy Jackson is active.

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Featured researches published by Jeremy Jackson.


Applied Economics | 2015

Economic freedom and social capital

Jeremy Jackson; Art Carden; Ryan A. Compton

This article brings together two growing literatures, social capital and economic freedom, to examine whether economic freedom contributes to social capital. More specifically, using US state-level data from 1986 to 2004 and both OLS and System GMM dynamic panel estimation, we find that there is no clear trade-off between economic freedom and either the level or growth of social capital.


Contemporary Economic Policy | 2017

A NOTE ON THE NONLINEAR EFFECT OF MINIMUM WAGE INCREASES

Aspen Gorry; Jeremy Jackson

We use a labor search model with worker experience to assess the effects of minimum wage increases. Minimum wages can have nonlinear effects on unemployment as higher minimum wages become binding for larger portions of the underlying productivity distribution. The model is used to assess the increases proposed by the Obama Administration from


Journal of Agricultural & Food Industrial Organization | 2013

Conflict over Cooperation: Why So Much Disagreement over the Proposed Dairy Market Stabilization Program?

Jeremy Jackson; Cameron S. Thraen; Marin Bozic

7.25 an hour to


Archive | 2018

Happy Partisans and Ideologues: State versus National

Jeremy Jackson

9.00 and then to


Journal of Marketing for Higher Education | 2018

Undergraduate choice of major and major satisfaction: an expanded role for personality measures

Andrew Pritchard; Julie Fudge; Elizabeth Crisp Crawford; Jeremy Jackson

10.10 per hour. We find that minimum wage increases have large effects on youth unemployment. These large effects cast doubt on using past empirical estimates of the effects of minimum wages that do not account for potential nonlinearities.


Applied Economics Letters | 2017

Economic freedom and social capital: pooled mean group evidence

Jeremy Jackson

Abstract The creation of a Dairy Market Stabilization Program (DMSP) is a current topic of contention in the discussion of United States federal dairy policy. DMSP is designed to speed up income over feed cost (IOFC) margin recovery through triggered disincentives for milk production. This federally mandated supply control with its price-enhancing benefits to producers has proven to be controversial. The controversy surrounding DMSP implementation is illuminated by the construction of a stylized prisoner’s dilemma game in which DMSP acts as an enforceable commitment mechanism to restrict supply and prop up prices when feed costs experience an adverse shock. Volatile and high feed costs are likely to be the norm for the foreseeable future resulting in large expected benefits to milk producers if DMSP is implemented. The game shows that differing dairy management styles lead to different incentives regarding DMSP implementation as producer groups from feed-growing regions oppose DMSP in an effort to raise the costs of their rivals in feed-buying regions. Opposition to DMSP by feed growers can lead to increased market share and profitability in the future.


Applied Economics | 2014

Livestock emissions regulation with unknown damages and strategic technology adoption

Joleen C. Hadrich; Jeremy Jackson

The political party of elected officials can affect the happiness of the voting public through several different channels. Partisan voters will be happier whenever a member of their party controls political office regardless of the policies implemented. It is hypothesized that congruence between individual party identity and state politician affiliations should have a greater impact on citizen happiness than congruence with politicians at the national level due to results from the literature on Tiebout sorting. It is further hypothesized that individuals with extreme ideological views may report greater happiness as their ideology fulfills basic psychological needs for certainty and structure. Using data from the Generalized Social Survey the effect of party congruence of individuals with national and state politicians on happiness is estimated. The effect of extreme ideological political views on happiness is also estimated. Results find that congruence with presidential party affiliation has a much greater impact on happiness than congruence with national legislative affiliation, gubernatorial, or state legislative affiliation contradicting the hypothesis. Those who possess extreme political views are also found to report higher levels of happiness.


Public Choice | 2013

Tax earmarking, party politics and gubernatorial veto: theory and evidence from US states

Jeremy Jackson

ABSTRACT Students’ personality traits are among the most important determinants of students’ choice of major and their satisfaction with that major. A survey of 849 students at three public universities and one private university in two regions of the United States finds that a student’s personality also affects the power of non-personality influences on the choice of major. These influences, in turn, affect the likelihood that a student will be satisfied with the major. These findings will allow academic advisors and counselors to draw additional value from personality measurements often used in helping students choose their majors.


Journal of Happiness Studies | 2017

Free to Be Happy: Economic Freedom and Happiness in US States

Jeremy Jackson

ABSTRACT This article uses annual US-state-level data from 1986 to 2004 and pooled-mean group estimation based on Pesaran et al. (1999) to examine whether economic freedom influences social capital. We find economic freedom has a negative effect on our social capital measure. This result is driven by the labour market component of freedom which is indicative of the relationship between labour market freedom and Olson-type group social capital.


Economics Bulletin | 2011

A legislative bargaining approach to earmarked public expenditures

Jeremy Jackson

Livestock emissions have been identified as a contributor to greenhouse gas build-up yet have remained unregulated in the US. A game-theoretic model in the style of Tarui and Polasky (2005) was analysed where the dairy industry strategically chooses to abate air emissions with technology adoption and herd size decisions while a regulator chooses a tax rate on emissions to satisfy the desires of competing interest groups. This model allows the effects of potential air emission regulation on the dairy industry to be evaluated. Results demonstrate that dairy farms react to the increased cost of air regulation by decreasing herd size rather than investing in air emission abatement technology in the short run. This suggests that incentives may need to be put in place to induce adoption in emissions abatement technology at the livestock level in the long run.

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Julie Fudge

North Dakota State University

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Marin Bozic

University of Minnesota

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