Daniel Benjamin photo

Email Address
617-548-8948
C.V.

Daniel J. Benjamin

Research Fellow, Institute for Social Research, 2006-present

Assistant Professor, Dartmouth College, 2006-present

 

Ph.D., Economics, Harvard University
M.Sc., Mathematical Economics, London School of Economics
A.M., Statistics, Harvard University
A.B., Economics, Harvard University

Dr. Benjamin does research in "psychological economics," incorporating ideas and methods from psychology into economic analysis. Current work includes an empirical analysis of the importance of politicians' "charisma" (as measured by laboratory subjects) in determining election outcomes, and a theoretical analysis of how individuals' concern for fairness affects the efficiency of economic exchange. Ongoing work addresses how economic preferences are determined.

Recent Publications

Journal Articles

Benjamin, Daniel J. (2003).  “Do 401(k)s Increase Saving?  Evidence From Propensity Score Subclassification,” Journal of Public Economics 87(5-6), 1259-90.

Rind, B., and Benjamin, D. (1994).  “Effects of Public Image Concerns and Self-Image on Compliance,”Journal of Social Psychology 134(1), 19-25.

Conference Papers

Benjamin, Daniel J., and Laibson, David I. (2003). “Good Policies for Bad Governments: Behavioral Political Economy.” Presented at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston’s Conference on How Humans Behave: Implications for Economics and Economic Policy, Cape Cod, 10 June 2003.

Chabris, C., Benjamin, D., and Simons, D. (1998). “How well do chess masters remember famous chess positions? Implications for theories of spatial expertise.” Presented at the Workshop on Object Perception and Memory, Dallas, 19 November 1998.

Research Papers in Progress

Benjamin, Daniel J. (2006).  "The Rotten Firm Theorem."  Dartmouth College and Institute for Social Research mimeo, December.

Benjamin, Daniel J., and Jesse M. Shapiro (2006).  "Thin-slice forecasts of gubernatorial elections."  NBER Working Paper 12660, November.

Benjamin, Daniel J., James J. Choi, and A. Joshua Strickland (2006).  “Social identity and preferences.” Dartmouth College and Institute for Social Research mimeo, September.

Benjamin, Daniel J., Sebastian A. Brown, and Jesse M. Shapiro (2006).  “Who is ‘Behavioral’?  Cognitive ability and anomalous preferences.”  Harvard University mimeo, May.