1. How has evidence about the effectiveness of wearing of face masks in combating COVID-19 evolved over time?
2. Why have many countries changed their policies towards the wearing of face masks over time? Why are there still significant differences in policies towards the waring of face masks across countries and even across different areas within the same countries? Please focus on factors influencing policy context.
3. How would you assess the performance the policy of the World Health Organization (WHO) on the wearing of face masks? What might be the optimal policy of the WHO on the wearing of face masks?
4. What lessons can you draw about the influence of policy context on policy- making?
Category: Economics
Any topic (writer’s choice)
Any topic (writer’s choice)
1. How has evidence about the effectiveness of wearing of face masks in combating COVID-19 evolved over time?
2. Why have many countries changed their policies towards the wearing of face masks over time? Why are there still significant differences in policies towards the waring of face masks across countries and even across different areas within the same countries? Please focus on factors influencing policy context.
3. How would you assess the performance the policy of the World Health Organization (WHO) on the wearing of face masks? What might be the optimal policy of the WHO on the wearing of face masks?
4. What lessons can you draw about the influence of policy context on policy- making?
The Great Recession of 2008 – Causes and Consequences
Once you have selected a topic, be sure to conduct a thorough Review of Literature on the subject. The minimum length of your course paper is 10 pages, double-spaced without the title page and the page on references. There is no upper page limit for your paper. Additional guidance will be provided during the first week of the course.
Organize your paper with five sections:
Introduction and objective. Make sure the objective is specific.
Literature Review. Conduct a search on the topic of your paper and summarize works of others similar to what you are writing on. Be sure to follow APA guidelines. The following link contains basics of APA style guidelines:
http://www.apastyle.org/learn/tutorials/basics-tutorial.aspx
Analysis: Analyze your topic with reference to the objective.
Summary and conclusion.
References. Provide at least five references, at least two of which must be scholarly books and /or journals.
You are welcome to send your topic and the objective of your paper to your instructor by the end of the first week so that she/he may provide additional guidance.
Notes
Refereed papers are academic papers that were criticized and reviewed by experts before being published. More information can be found in http://jerz.setonhill.edu/writing/academic/sources/journals/index.htmlhttp://www.yukoncollege.yk.ca/~agraham/guides/guidec.shtml.
To find the academic articles that you need for your paper (at least one), go to the following full text databases in our library: Business Source Premier (EBSCO), Emerald Management Xtra, LexisNexis Academic, ProQuest Databases and ProQuestDissertations and Thesis. These databases are in http://library.nu.edu/FindResources/ResourceFinder.cfm. Databases have different sources or information, and you always have to combine them. Economists would say that databases are complements rather than substitutes, in other words, try more than one database.
Short papers are nice pieces of art. Your paper will be evaluated not in terms of right/wrong but on rational coherence and quality of the argument.
Any topic (writer’s choice)
Referee Report
Pretend that you are a peer reviewer for a top general-interest journal, say the American Economic Review. Your job is to advise the editor on whether or not to accept the paper. I expect reports with no less than 3 pages and no more than 4 pages. You will also have to give a 10 min presentation (5-6 slides) summarizing the paper.
A good referee report takes the following format:
1) An introduction that provides a very short overview of the main thrust of the paper (1 paragraph).
2) A summary of the paper, focusing on the main points of the paper and the points that will be important to your critique. A summary that is typically one paragraph and contains a brief statement of the question addressed by the author, an outline of how the author answers the question at hand, and a brief synopsis of the results. (2-3 paragraphs)
3) Referees outline both the strengths and weaknesses of the methodology used by the authors. Many referees make the mistake of only noting what they do not like about the paper. Spend some time discussing what you like and found innovative as well. (3-4 paragraphs)
4) Finally, most referees make some suggestions about how to improve the paper. This can include such details as catching typos, to suggestions about how to motivate or structure the paper, and most importantly, other models or estimation results that can be run that help bolster the hypothesis the author is testing. (2-3 paragraphs)
5) A concluding section (1-2 paragraphs)
The answers required for a good referee report of experimental economics papers:
1. What is the purpose of this paper?
2. Does the paper accomplish what it set out to do?
3. Is the purpose best served by the design? Is there any confound of the design?
4. Is there a relevant and important literature that the author does not cite and/or use when it should be cited and/or used?
5. If the paper contains theory (explicit or implicit), does it hold up upon closer scrutiny? Is there an alternative theory that is better suited that the author has ignored?
6. Are the hypotheses best tested by the statistics tests the authors used? Do the tests or regressions well address possible issues like: the censored data, session fixed effect, individual dependence, and highly correlated dependent variables?
7. Are the tables and figures self-contained and easy to comprehend, and could you, if needed, replicate them?
8. Is this paper well structured?
9. Are the conclusions overstated?
Any topic (writer’s choice)
Referee Report
Pretend that you are a peer reviewer for a top general-interest journal, say the American Economic Review. Your job is to advise the editor on whether or not to accept the paper. I expect reports with no less than 3 pages and no more than 4 pages. You will also have to give a 10 min presentation (5-6 slides) summarizing the paper.
A good referee report takes the following format:
1) An introduction that provides a very short overview of the main thrust of the paper (1 paragraph).
2) A summary of the paper, focusing on the main points of the paper and the points that will be important to your critique. A summary that is typically one paragraph and contains a brief statement of the question addressed by the author, an outline of how the author answers the question at hand, and a brief synopsis of the results. (2-3 paragraphs)
3) Referees outline both the strengths and weaknesses of the methodology used by the authors. Many referees make the mistake of only noting what they do not like about the paper. Spend some time discussing what you like and found innovative as well. (3-4 paragraphs)
4) Finally, most referees make some suggestions about how to improve the paper. This can include such details as catching typos, to suggestions about how to motivate or structure the paper, and most importantly, other models or estimation results that can be run that help bolster the hypothesis the author is testing. (2-3 paragraphs)
5) A concluding section (1-2 paragraphs)
The answers required for a good referee report of experimental economics papers:
1. What is the purpose of this paper?
2. Does the paper accomplish what it set out to do?
3. Is the purpose best served by the design? Is there any confound of the design?
4. Is there a relevant and important literature that the author does not cite and/or use when it should be cited and/or used?
5. If the paper contains theory (explicit or implicit), does it hold up upon closer scrutiny? Is there an alternative theory that is better suited that the author has ignored?
6. Are the hypotheses best tested by the statistics tests the authors used? Do the tests or regressions well address possible issues like: the censored data, session fixed effect, individual dependence, and highly correlated dependent variables?
7. Are the tables and figures self-contained and easy to comprehend, and could you, if needed, replicate them?
8. Is this paper well structured?
9. Are the conclusions overstated?
Any topic (writer’s choice)
Referee Report
Pretend that you are a peer reviewer for a top general-interest journal, say the American Economic Review. Your job is to advise the editor on whether or not to accept the paper. I expect reports with no less than 3 pages and no more than 4 pages. You will also have to give a 10 min presentation (5-6 slides) summarizing the paper.
A good referee report takes the following format:
1) An introduction that provides a very short overview of the main thrust of the paper (1 paragraph).
2) A summary of the paper, focusing on the main points of the paper and the points that will be important to your critique. A summary that is typically one paragraph and contains a brief statement of the question addressed by the author, an outline of how the author answers the question at hand, and a brief synopsis of the results. (2-3 paragraphs)
3) Referees outline both the strengths and weaknesses of the methodology used by the authors. Many referees make the mistake of only noting what they do not like about the paper. Spend some time discussing what you like and found innovative as well. (3-4 paragraphs)
4) Finally, most referees make some suggestions about how to improve the paper. This can include such details as catching typos, to suggestions about how to motivate or structure the paper, and most importantly, other models or estimation results that can be run that help bolster the hypothesis the author is testing. (2-3 paragraphs)
5) A concluding section (1-2 paragraphs)
The answers required for a good referee report of experimental economics papers:
1. What is the purpose of this paper?
2. Does the paper accomplish what it set out to do?
3. Is the purpose best served by the design? Is there any confound of the design?
4. Is there a relevant and important literature that the author does not cite and/or use when it should be cited and/or used?
5. If the paper contains theory (explicit or implicit), does it hold up upon closer scrutiny? Is there an alternative theory that is better suited that the author has ignored?
6. Are the hypotheses best tested by the statistics tests the authors used? Do the tests or regressions well address possible issues like: the censored data, session fixed effect, individual dependence, and highly correlated dependent variables?
7. Are the tables and figures self-contained and easy to comprehend, and could you, if needed, replicate them?
8. Is this paper well structured?
9. Are the conclusions overstated?
Any topic (writer’s choice)
Referee Report
Pretend that you are a peer reviewer for a top general-interest journal, say the American Economic Review. Your job is to advise the editor on whether or not to accept the paper. I expect reports with no less than 3 pages and no more than 4 pages. You will also have to give a 10 min presentation (5-6 slides) summarizing the paper.
A good referee report takes the following format:
1) An introduction that provides a very short overview of the main thrust of the paper (1 paragraph).
2) A summary of the paper, focusing on the main points of the paper and the points that will be important to your critique. A summary that is typically one paragraph and contains a brief statement of the question addressed by the author, an outline of how the author answers the question at hand, and a brief synopsis of the results. (2-3 paragraphs)
3) Referees outline both the strengths and weaknesses of the methodology used by the authors. Many referees make the mistake of only noting what they do not like about the paper. Spend some time discussing what you like and found innovative as well. (3-4 paragraphs)
4) Finally, most referees make some suggestions about how to improve the paper. This can include such details as catching typos, to suggestions about how to motivate or structure the paper, and most importantly, other models or estimation results that can be run that help bolster the hypothesis the author is testing. (2-3 paragraphs)
5) A concluding section (1-2 paragraphs)
The answers required for a good referee report of experimental economics papers:
1. What is the purpose of this paper?
2. Does the paper accomplish what it set out to do?
3. Is the purpose best served by the design? Is there any confound of the design?
4. Is there a relevant and important literature that the author does not cite and/or use when it should be cited and/or used?
5. If the paper contains theory (explicit or implicit), does it hold up upon closer scrutiny? Is there an alternative theory that is better suited that the author has ignored?
6. Are the hypotheses best tested by the statistics tests the authors used? Do the tests or regressions well address possible issues like: the censored data, session fixed effect, individual dependence, and highly correlated dependent variables?
7. Are the tables and figures self-contained and easy to comprehend, and could you, if needed, replicate them?
8. Is this paper well structured?
9. Are the conclusions overstated?
Any topic (writer’s choice)
Referee Report
Pretend that you are a peer reviewer for a top general-interest journal, say the American Economic Review. Your job is to advise the editor on whether or not to accept the paper. I expect reports with no less than 3 pages and no more than 4 pages. You will also have to give a 10 min presentation (5-6 slides) summarizing the paper.
A good referee report takes the following format:
1) An introduction that provides a very short overview of the main thrust of the paper (1 paragraph).
2) A summary of the paper, focusing on the main points of the paper and the points that will be important to your critique. A summary that is typically one paragraph and contains a brief statement of the question addressed by the author, an outline of how the author answers the question at hand, and a brief synopsis of the results. (2-3 paragraphs)
3) Referees outline both the strengths and weaknesses of the methodology used by the authors. Many referees make the mistake of only noting what they do not like about the paper. Spend some time discussing what you like and found innovative as well. (3-4 paragraphs)
4) Finally, most referees make some suggestions about how to improve the paper. This can include such details as catching typos, to suggestions about how to motivate or structure the paper, and most importantly, other models or estimation results that can be run that help bolster the hypothesis the author is testing. (2-3 paragraphs)
5) A concluding section (1-2 paragraphs)
The answers required for a good referee report of experimental economics papers:
1. What is the purpose of this paper?
2. Does the paper accomplish what it set out to do?
3. Is the purpose best served by the design? Is there any confound of the design?
4. Is there a relevant and important literature that the author does not cite and/or use when it should be cited and/or used?
5. If the paper contains theory (explicit or implicit), does it hold up upon closer scrutiny? Is there an alternative theory that is better suited that the author has ignored?
6. Are the hypotheses best tested by the statistics tests the authors used? Do the tests or regressions well address possible issues like: the censored data, session fixed effect, individual dependence, and highly correlated dependent variables?
7. Are the tables and figures self-contained and easy to comprehend, and could you, if needed, replicate them?
8. Is this paper well structured?
9. Are the conclusions overstated?
Any topic (writer’s choice)
Referee Report
Pretend that you are a peer reviewer for a top general-interest journal, say the American Economic Review. Your job is to advise the editor on whether or not to accept the paper. I expect reports with no less than 3 pages and no more than 4 pages. You will also have to give a 10 min presentation (5-6 slides) summarizing the paper.
A good referee report takes the following format:
1) An introduction that provides a very short overview of the main thrust of the paper (1 paragraph).
2) A summary of the paper, focusing on the main points of the paper and the points that will be important to your critique. A summary that is typically one paragraph and contains a brief statement of the question addressed by the author, an outline of how the author answers the question at hand, and a brief synopsis of the results. (2-3 paragraphs)
3) Referees outline both the strengths and weaknesses of the methodology used by the authors. Many referees make the mistake of only noting what they do not like about the paper. Spend some time discussing what you like and found innovative as well. (3-4 paragraphs)
4) Finally, most referees make some suggestions about how to improve the paper. This can include such details as catching typos, to suggestions about how to motivate or structure the paper, and most importantly, other models or estimation results that can be run that help bolster the hypothesis the author is testing. (2-3 paragraphs)
5) A concluding section (1-2 paragraphs)
The answers required for a good referee report of experimental economics papers:
1. What is the purpose of this paper?
2. Does the paper accomplish what it set out to do?
3. Is the purpose best served by the design? Is there any confound of the design?
4. Is there a relevant and important literature that the author does not cite and/or use when it should be cited and/or used?
5. If the paper contains theory (explicit or implicit), does it hold up upon closer scrutiny? Is there an alternative theory that is better suited that the author has ignored?
6. Are the hypotheses best tested by the statistics tests the authors used? Do the tests or regressions well address possible issues like: the censored data, session fixed effect, individual dependence, and highly correlated dependent variables?
7. Are the tables and figures self-contained and easy to comprehend, and could you, if needed, replicate them?
8. Is this paper well structured?
9. Are the conclusions overstated?
RE: Week 4 Discussion(Economics)
Watch this video (Oligopolies and Monopolistic Competition) to help you prepare for this weeks discussion:
Reply to these prompts using the company for which you currently work, a business with which you’re familiar, or a dream business you want to start:
With your selected business in mind, determine if it is competitive, monopolistic competitive, an oligopoly, or pure monopoly. Explain how you drew your conclusion about its market structure.
How does the business/firm in this industry determine the price it will charge for the products or services it sells?
Have a conversation with your peers:
Read one of your peers posts and share an insight or question you have about that business and its market structure.
Please no citations or references. Only one paragraph with a question at the end followed by the answer.