Oscar O'Flaherty

I am a PhD Candidate in the Department of Economics at Vanderbilt University. My research addresses applied macroeconomic questions with a focus on business cycles and fiscal policy. In particular, I am in interested in understanding how pricing-setting by firms affects the transmission of shocks throughout the economy. I also study optimal fiscal policies in response to regional and local business cycles.

I am currently on the 2021-2022 job market and available for interviews at the ASSA 2022 Virtual Annual Meeting.

Link to CV

Email: oscar.oflaherty@vanderbilt.edu

Research Highlight

Stay-at-Home Orders in a Fiscal Union (with Mario Crucini) Link to Paper Media: (VoxEU, Vanderbilt Unity & Democracy)

State and local governments throughout the United States attempted to mitigate the spread of Covid-19 using stay-at-home orders to limit social interactions and mobility. We study the economic impact of these orders and their optimal implementation in a fiscal union. Using an event study framework, we find that stay-at-home orders caused a 4 percentage point decrease in consumer spending and hours worked. These estimates suggest a $10 billion decrease in spending and $15 billion in lost earnings. We then develop an economic SIR model with multiple locations to study the optimal implementation of stay-at-home orders. In the model, local governments can mitigate the spread of the virus through a consumption tax. From a national welfare perspective, the model suggests that it is optimal for locations with higher infection rates to set stricter mitigation policies. This occurs as a common, national policy is too restrictive for the economies of mildly infected areas and causes greater declines in consumption and hours worked than are optimal.

Hours Worked Event Study Results

Consumer Spending Event Study Results

Optimal Policy Model Results

2020 SEA Presentation

SEAPresentationOFlaherty.mov