- David Albouy
David Yves Albouy (pronounced al-bwee) is Assistant Professor of Economics at the
University of Michigan and a Faculty Research Fellow at theNational Bureau of Economic Research . His interests are in public andurban economics , as well as inpolitical economy andlabor economics .General
David Albouy was born in
Paris ,France , and raised in theWashington D.C. area. He received his B.A. fromMcGill University in 2000 in History, Philosophy, and Economics. He then earned an M.A. in Economics fromYale University in 2002, and a Ph. D. in Economics from theUniversity of California, Berkeley in 2007. Albouy is a citizen of theUnited States of America andFrance and is a native speaker of English and French.Research
Albouy analyzed the wage gap between native English (
Anglophone ) and French (Francophone ) speakers inCanada from 1971 to 2001. He finds that the wage gap in the province ofQuebec was closed by lowering the wages of Anglophones as well as by raising the wages of Francophones, and therefore gap closed more within Quebec than in Canada as a whole. Because the wages of Anglophones fell in Quebec, it appears that the mass-migration of Anglophones out of the province was driven by lost job opportunities, rather than by a deteriorating quality-of-life.Later, Albouy discredited a key data series in an influential paper by the
John Bates Clark Medal winnerDaron Acemoglu and his co-authors,Simon Johnson andJames A. Robinson , entitled "The Colonial Origins of Comparative Development: An Empirical Investigation." The data collected by the authors on potential European settler mortality rates was based mainly on mortality rates of European soldiers in the mid-nineteenth century, sometimes mixed with data from Latin-American bishops and African laborers, and never from European settlers. Furthermore, over half of the sample contains rates taken from other countries, often based on mistaken or conflicting evidence. Acemoglu et al. have replied that there is "no foundation" to any of the criticisms raised by Albouy. [http://www.economicprincipals.com/issues/05.10.30.html]Albouy’s current research focuses on regional inequalities of federal taxes and spending, which journalist
Malcom Gladwell writes is "one of the best-kept secrets in American politics." Because federal taxes and transfers are not indexed to local wage levels, taxes are too high in large, expensive cities, where the most productive jobs are, and that workers have a tax incentive to live in nicer or less-productive areas, where wages are lower. This phenomenon has artificially boosted the population in low-density areas and in the South, and has lowered GDP by about a quarter of a percent.Albouy also challenges economic quality-of-life measurements for different cities, based on how high the cost-of-iving in a city is relative to its local wage-level. By neglecting federal taxes, non-housing costs, and income from non-labor sources, previous research had falsely concluded that households in large cities had much higher disposable-income levels, believed to be compensation for urban disamenities such as congestion and pollution. Thus it was presumed that small cities, like Sioux Falls, SD, were much better places to live than large cities, like San Francisco, CA. Albouy's revised quality-of-life estimates find larger cities to be much more amenable, and reveal that people strongly prefer to live in areas with sunshine, mild seasons, and close to the ocean.
Other research documents that federal spending across states is influenced by Congressional representation: states with members in the majority party receive greater federal grants, particularly for transportation. Furthermore, states with more Republican members receive greater military spending, while states with more Democrats receive more education grants.
Teaching
Albouy teaches
undergraduate courses at theUniversity of Michigan in Government Expenditures and Urban Economics and a graduate course in Government Revenues. [http://www.lsa.umich.edu/cg/cg_results.aspx?termArray=w_08_1670&cgtype=ug&cgtype=gr&allsections=true&keyword=albouy&show=20]Awards
2007 National Tax Association Outstanding Doctoral Dissertation Award 2007 UC Berkeley Department of Economics Graduate Student Award for Public Policy Research
2006-2007 UC Berkeley Chancellor’s Dissertation-Year Fellowship
2005 Graduate Fellow of the American Academy of Political & Social Science
External links
* [http://www-personal.umich.edu/~albouy/ Personal Website at the University of Michigan ]
* [http://www.nber.org/authors/david_albouy NBER Publications by David Albouy]
* [http://www.lsa.umich.edu/econ/detail/0,2484,9760%255Fpeople%255Fecon5004,00.html University of Michigan, Department of Economics Website]
* [http://ideas.repec.org/e/pal128.html David Yves Albouy at IDEAS]
* [http://www.bus.umich.edu/OTPR/newsletters/Vol12-1Summer2007.htm University of Michigan Tax Research News]
* [http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/news/opinion/story.html?id=27dd3d2d-6e6a-46ff-921d-67d144496c82 Hitting Anglophones in the Wallet]
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