Resources by carol.reyes.dulong

CEO Dismissal and Turnover Dataset for S&P 1500 Firms (1992–2022)

Creators: Richard J. Gentry, Joseph Harrison, Timothy Quigley, Steven Boivie
Publication Date: 2023-11-09
Creators: Richard J. Gentry, Joseph Harrison, Timothy Quigley, Steven Boivie

This dataset captures CEO departures across S&P 1500 firms from 1992 to 2022, with qualitative codes identifying the reason for each turnover (e.g., dismissal, retirement, new opportunity). Each entry includes company and executive identifiers, tenure details, and announcement/departure dates. The data support alignment with Execucomp and are intended for research in corporate governance, executive leadership, firm performance, and succession planning. Regularly updated, this open-access dataset includes supporting notes and source references.

Agricultural, Climate, and Water Management Data for Australia’s Murray–Darling Basin

Creators: Will Rafey, UCLA Department of Economics
Publication Date: 2023-01-18
Creators: Will Rafey, UCLA Department of Economics

This dataset collection compiles key information on agriculture, climate, and water resource management in Australia’s Murray–Darling Basin. It brings together information from multiple sources, including ABARES, the Bureau of Meteorology (BoM), and the Australian Water Markets Report (AWMR). The collection includes crop calendars and coefficients, irrigation production estimates (GVIAP), monthly climate indicators such as rainfall and evapotranspiration, and economic data on water prices and allocations. Geospatial boundary files and supporting metadata are also provided to enable spatial and temporal analysis. The collection supports research on agricultural planning, water use efficiency, and environmental policy in the basin.

Geospatial and Environmental Exposure Data for U.S. Census-Based Analysis (2000–2016)

Creators: Janet Currie, Princeton University; John Voorheis, United States Census Bureau; Reed Walker, University of California-Berkeley
Publication Date: 2022-12-20
Creators: Janet Currie, Princeton University; John Voorheis, United States Census Bureau; Reed Walker, University of California-Berkeley

This dataset collection contains publicly available geospatial, environmental, and demographic data used to examine the relationship between PM2.5 exposure and population characteristics across the United States from 2000 to 2016. It includes annual satellite-based and monitor-based PM2.5 estimates (Di et al., EPA, van Donkelaar), county-level nonattainment status under the Clean Air Act, and geographic boundary files for U.S. states, census blocks, and commuting zones. Demographic data at the tract and block level are provided via IPUMS NHGIS and the U.S. Census Bureau. These files are designed for spatial matching, environmental exposure assignment, and policy-related research on air quality and health disparities.

Indonesia Social Protection and Poverty Metrics Dataset

Creators: Abhijit Banerjee, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Rema Hanna, Harvard Kennedy School; Benjamin Olken, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Elan Satriawan, Gadjah Mada University and TNP2K; Sudarno Sumarto, SMERU and TNP2K
Publication Date: 2022-11-30
Creators: Abhijit Banerjee, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Rema Hanna, Harvard Kennedy School; Benjamin Olken, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Elan Satriawan, Gadjah Mada University and TNP2K; Sudarno Sumarto, SMERU and TNP2K

This dataset collection compiles diverse data sources related to poverty measurement, household-level participation in social assistance programs, and aid distribution in Indonesia. It includes official statistics on provincial poverty thresholds from the national statistics agency (BPS), covering multiple periods and regions. De-identified household survey data from the BSPN program captures demographic characteristics, program awareness, assistance received, and interview metadata, enabling analysis of targeting and delivery effectiveness. Additionally, the collection features survey responses from distribution points for major aid programs such as Rastra and BPNT, documenting the type of distributors, geographic locations, and operational details of aid delivery. These datasets are designed to support empirical research on poverty dynamics, social protection coverage, and policy implementation performance.

U.S. and Global Financial Market Reactions to Monetary Policy

Creators: Yuriy Gorodnichenko, University of California-Berkeley; Tho Pham, University of Reading; Oleksandr Talavera, University of Birmingham
Publication Date: 2022-12-05
Creators: Yuriy Gorodnichenko, University of California-Berkeley; Tho Pham, University of Reading; Oleksandr Talavera, University of Birmingham

This dataset collection integrates detailed data on U.S. monetary policy decisions, media coverage, and high-frequency financial market responses across a variety of global asset classes. It includes parsed FOMC statements and meeting minutes, sentiment and volume metrics from newspaper media coverage, and monetary policy shocks based on Swanson’s event-study methodology. Complementing these are a series of data files containing estimated intraday asset price responses covering currencies (EUR, GBP, JPY), U.S. Treasuries (IEF, IEI), inflation-protected securities (TIPS), gold, and equities, aligned with monetary policy announcement timing. These datasets enable empirical research into the transmission of monetary policy through financial markets, central bank communication, and global asset price dynamics.

Creators: Elisa Macchi, MIT

This dataset collection compiles a range of data sources related to body weight perceptions, demographic characteristics, and obesity prevalence across countries. It includes individual-level experimental and survey data on how people perceive others based on physical appearance and descriptive information, as well as their associated beliefs and attitudes. Additional files provide demographic details, regional obesity rates for the U.S. and Europe, global GDP per capita data, and country-level health indicators from sources like IPUMS DHS and the World Bank. The datasets are suitable for research on health perception, socioeconomic evaluation, and international comparisons in public health.

Creators: Diego Daruich, USC

This collection includes data from two major long-term studies in the United States: the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID) and the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (NLSY). These datasets follow individuals and families over time to track changes in income, education, employment, and family characteristics.

The data help researchers and policymakers understand how people’s lives develop across generations, such as how early-life conditions, schooling, and job experiences affect income and well-being later in life. The files include information on household income, cost of living adjustments, age and education patterns, and cognitive skill measures. The datasets are widely used to study social mobility, inequality, and the impact of education and economic policy.

U.S. Political Behavior, Social Identity, and Demographic Patterns

Creators: Leonardo Bursztyn, The University of Chicago and NBER; Thomas Chaney, University of Southern California, Sciences Po, and CEPR; Tarek A. Hassan, Boston University, NBER, and CEPR; Aakaash Rao, Harvard University
Publication Date: 2023-12-12
Creators: Leonardo Bursztyn, The University of Chicago and NBER; Thomas Chaney, University of Southern California, Sciences Po, and CEPR; Tarek A. Hassan, Boston University, NBER, and CEPR; Aakaash Rao, Harvard University

This collection compiles datasets from large-scale U.S. surveys, administrative records, and demographic sources to examine political behavior, social identity, and civic engagement. It includes national election studies (such as CCES and Nationscape), implicit association tests (IAT), marriage pattern data, county-level demographics from the census, political donation records, and geographic indicators. These datasets support in-depth analysis of voter preferences, polarization, social attitudes, demographic influences, and regional variation in political and social behavior across the United States.

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