Site is currently under maintenance
Some features may be unavailable or limited during this time. We apologize for any inconvenience and appreciate your patience.

Published on 01 January 2018 |

Version 2.0

Replication Data for "When Do You Get Economists as Policy-Makers?"

View Dataset
Hallerberg, Mark;Wehner, Joachim

Description

Stata data and do files to reproduce analysis (Stata 14.2).Abstract: We analyze when economists become top-level “economic policy-makers,” focusing on financial crises and the partisanship of a country’s leader. We present a new dataset of the educational and occupational background of 1200 political leaders, finance ministers, and central bank governors from 40 developed democracies from 1973 to 2010. We find that left leaders appoint economic policy-makers who are more highly trained in economics and finance ministers who are less likely to have private finance backgrounds but more likely to be former central bankers. Finance ministers appointed during financial crises are less likely to have a financial services background. A leader’s exposure to economics training is also related to appointments. This suggests one crucial mechanism for affecting economic policy is through the selection of certain types of economic policy-makers.

Citations (1)

Mentions (0)

Metrics

Dataset Index

0.7

FAIR Score

15%

Citations

1

Mentions

0

Metrics Over Time

Publication Details

DOI

Publisher

Harvard Dataverse

Assigned Domain

Subfield

General Economics, Econometrics and Finance

Field

Economics, Econometrics and Finance

Domain

Social Sciences

Confidence Score

72%

Source

Scholar Data Model

Keywords

Social SciencesFinancial crisisFinance ministryCentral bankFinanceFiscal policyMonetary policyPartisanship

Normalization Factors

FT

15.38

CTw

1.00

MTw

1.00