Northwestern Events Calendar

May
17
2024

Economic History Lunch Seminar

When: Friday, May 17, 2024
12:00 PM - 1:30 PM CT

Where: Kellogg Global Hub, 3301, 2211 Campus Drive, Evanston, IL 60208 map it

Audience: Faculty/Staff - Post Docs/Docs - Graduate Students

Contact: Economics   (847) 467-7263

Group: Department of Economics: Economic History Lunch Seminar

Category: Academic, Lectures & Meetings

Description:

Yifan Zhang & Zincy Wei (Northwestern):

Zincy Wei (Prizes and Patents) and Yifan Zhang (The Persistence of Son Preference). 

Title: Prizes and Patents: Evidence from National Industry Expositions 

Abstract: How do ex-post innovation prizes encourage innovation when patenting is available as an alternative? Specifically, does the cost of patenting affect the decision to enter award competitions? And how does winning a prize affect inventors’ future performance? To study these questions, we construct a unique individual-by-product panel dataset from French national industry expositions in Paris. The lunch presentation will focus on the semi-automated linking algorithm with which we carefully link individuals across expositions. We will also present two complementary individual-level research designs with which we plan to answer the posed research questions.

 

Title: The Persistence of Son Preference: Cultural Transmission of Chinese Migrants in Taiwan

Abstract: This study explores the persistence and transmission of son preference. Son preference is measured by exploiting a cultural feature, ancestor worship, which emphasizes the importance of having a son in China. To isolate the effect of son preference culture from institutions, a historical experiment, Kuomingtang's (KMT) Retreat to Taiwan, is employed to explore the cultural transmission of son preference. Between 1945 and 1954, KMT resettled approximately one million Chinese in Taiwan, without regard for their cultural background, to meet the party's needs. This bold move resulted in local Taiwanese and Chinese migrants being exposed to groups with vastly different son preference beliefs and behaviors. By combining KMT Retreat and the introduction of sex-selective abortion in 1985, I identify the effect of migrants' ancestor worship on sex selection by using a difference-in-differences framework. The effect is stronger for culturally closer groups and when adopting migrant cultures is less costly. Additionally, I dissect the cultural transmission of son preference in three categories: transmission from migrants to locals, through family, and within migrant communities. I also find migrants' ancestor worship permanently altered individuals' beliefs about ancestors, family, and sons. 

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