Assistant Professor of Economics
University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Fields: Public Economics, Economics of Education, Labor Economics
Email: andrew.bibler@unlv.edu
I am an applied microeconomist at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas working in public economics, labor economics, and the economics of education. My research uses quasi-experimental designs to understand individual and firm responses to government policy. Recent work includes estimating downstream effects of school choice lotteries on students and neighborhoods, and using market data to estimate tax compliance rates in homesharing and international trade markets.
Select Papers:
Estimating Tax-Dependent Compliance: Theory and Evidence from Trade Wars (with Yuting Gao, Laura Grigolon, and Mark Tremblay) Working Paper
When Opportunity Costs Others: The Spillover Effects of School Choice on Criminality (with Stephen Billings and Stephen Ross) AEJ: Applied Economics (2nd Round R&R)
Identifying Tax Compliance from Variation in Tax Policy: Theory and Empirics (with Laura Grigolon, Keith Teltser, and Mark Tremblay) AEJ: Economic Policy (forthcoming)
Universal Cash Transfers and Labor Market Outcomes (with Mouhcine Guettabi and Matt Reimer)
Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 42(1), 198-224 (2023).
Inferring Tax Compliance from Pass-Through: Evidence from Airbnb Tax Enforcement Agreements (with Keith Teltser and Mark Tremblay) Review of Economics and Statistics, 103(4), 636-651 (2021).
Win or Lose: Residential Sorting After a School Choice Lottery (with Stephen Billings)
Review of Economics and Statistics, 102(3), 457-472 (2020).