Greg Kaplan
Economist
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Economics
Why Is Greg Kaplan Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Greg Kaplan is professor of economics at the University of Chicago. His research encompasses macroeconomics, labor economics and applied microeconomics, with a focus on distributional issues. Education and Career Greg Kaplan graduated with a BCom from Macquarie University in 2000. He went on to further study at the London School of Economics and received an MSc in economics in 2002. He got a PhD from New York University in 2009. Following his graduation with a PhD from New York University in 2009, worked at the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis for a year. He then became assistant professor at the University of Pennsylvania. He left Philadelphia for an assistant professorship at Princeton University in 2012 and was promoted to full professor in 2015. The University of Chicago appointed him professor in economics in 2016.
Greg Kaplan's Published Works
Published Works
- Monetary Policy According to HANK (2016) (852)
- A Model of the Consumption Response to Fiscal Stimulus Payments (2011) (784)
- The Wealthy Hand-to-Mouth (2014) (455)
- How Much Consumption Insurance Beyond Self-Insurance? (2009) (300)
- The Housing Boom and Bust: Model Meets Evidence (2017) (280)
- Understanding the Long‐Run Decline in Interstate Migration (2017) (234)
- When Inequality Matters for Macro and Macro Matters for Inequality (2017) (134)
- Microeconomic Heterogeneity and Macroeconomic Shocks (2018) (131)
- Interstate Migration Has Fallen Less Than You Think: Consequences of Hot Deck Imputation in the Current Population Survey (2010) (128)
- The Great Lockdown and the Big Stimulus: Tracing the Pandemic Possibility Frontier for the U.S (2020) (109)
- Non-Durable Consumption and Housing Net Worth in the Great Recession: Evidence from Easily Accessible Data (2016) (98)
- Inflation at the Household Level (2016) (95)
- Consumption and House Prices in the Great Recession: Model Meets Evidence (2015) (88)
- What Would You Do With $500? Spending Responses to Gains, Losses, News, and Loans (2018) (85)
- Some Unpleasant Markup Arithmetic: Production Function Elasticities and Their Estimation from Production Data (2020) (74)
- The Great Lockdown and the Big Stimulus: Tracing the Pandemic Possibility Frontier for the U.S. (2020) (65)
- How Much Insurance in Bewley Models (2008) (40)
- Understanding the Long-Run Decline in Interstate Migration (2012) (39)
- The Changing (Dis-)Utility of Work (2018) (32)
- A Further Look at the Propagation of Monetary Policy Shocks in HANK (2020) (25)
- A Note on Unconventional Monetary Policy in HANK (2016) (19)
- The Marginal Propensity to Consume in Heterogeneous Agent Models (2022) (13)
- A Tale of Two Stimulus Payments: 2001 versus 2008 (2014) (11)
- Lifetime Earnings in the United States over Six Decades (2021) (5)
- The Glass Ceiling and the Paper Floor: Changing Gender Composition of Top Earners since the 1980s (2021) (4)
- A sharp drop in interstate migration? Not really New data procedures led to misperception of dramatic decline in U.S. population mobility (2011) (4)
- No More Excuses! A Toolbox for Solving Heterogeneous Agent Models with Aggregate Shocks (2016) (3)
- A Further Look at the Propagation Mechanism of Monetary Policy Shocks in HANK (2019) (3)
- Inequality, Heterogeneity, and Consumption in the Journal of Political Economy (2017) (2)
- Comments and Discussion (2014) (2)
- OPTIMAL TAXATION WITH ENDOGENOUS DEFAULT UNDER INCOMPLETE (2009) (2)
- The Past, Present, and Future of Economics: A Celebration of the 125-Year Anniversary of the JPE and of Chicago Economics (2017) (2)
- Migration in a flattening world (2011) (1)
- Two Assets and Kinked Adjustment Costs (2017) (0)
- The Distribution of Lifetime Incomes: Direct Measurements Using Sixty Years of Administrative Data (2014) (0)
- Earning Admission: Real Strategies for Getting into Highly Selective Colleges (2016) (0)
- Did the Housing Bust Cause the Great Recession (2013) (0)
- Inflation at the Household Level: Web Appendix (2016) (0)
- 1 Household ’ s Problem : Linear Complementaritsy Problem + Finite Differences (2019) (0)
- NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES THE MONEY VALUE OF A MAN (2012) (0)
- Comment on "The Lost Ones: The Opportunities and Outcomes of Non-College-Educated Americans Born in the 1960s" (2019) (0)
- IMES Discussion Paper Series 2017-E-4 June 2017 Monetary Policy According to HANK (2017) (0)
- Discussion of “The Lost Ones: The Opportunities and Outcomes of Non-College Educated Americans Born in the 1960’s”∗ (2019) (0)
- Discriminating Dispersion in Prices (2014) (0)
- The Pandemic Possibility Frontier: Distributional Effects of Policy Responses to COVID-19∗ (2020) (0)
- Heterogeneity and Business Cycles in Macroeconomics , So Far (2018) (0)
- Amplification of Uncertainty in Illiquid Markets ∗ ( JOB MARKET PAPER ) Elias (2009) (0)
- Replication data for: Microeconomic Heterogeneity and Macroeconomic Shocks (2019) (0)
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