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Ricardo Perez-Truglia

Institution: National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)

Primary Field: Public (weighted toward more recent publications)

Homepage: http://ricardotruglia.bol.ucla.edu/

First Publication: 2011

Most Recent: 2025

RePEc ID: ppr99 ↗

Publication Scores

Scores use coauthorship adjustment: α/n credit per paper, where n = number of authors. α = 2.02: calibrated so average adjusted count equals average raw count (a zero-sum adjustment).

Period S (4x) A (2x) B (1x) C (½x) Total Percentile
Last 5 Years 8.07 12.92 0.00 0.00 20.99 99%
Last 10 Years 20.18 20.32 4.71 0.00 45.21 99%
All Time 22.20 23.68 7.74 0.00 53.62 98%

Publication Statistics

Raw Publications 25
Coauthorship-Adjusted Count 25.14

Publications (25)

Year Article Journal Tier Authors
2025 Betting on the House: Subjective Expectations and Market Choices American Economic Journal: Applied Economics A 2
2025 Where Do My Tax Dollars Go? Tax Morale Effects of Perceived Government Spending American Economic Journal: Applied Economics A 4
2025 My Taxes Are Too Darn High: Why Do Households Protest Their Taxes? American Economic Journal: Economic Policy A 3
2024 Listen to her: Gender differences in information diffusion within the household Journal of Public Economics A 3
2023 Tax Audits as Scarecrows: Evidence from a Large-Scale Field Experiment American Economic Journal: Economic Policy A 5
2023 The Old Boys' Club: Schmoozing and the Gender Gap American Economic Review S 2
2023 The salary taboo privacy norms and the diffusion of information Journal of Public Economics A 2
2022 Choosing Your Pond: Location Choices and Relative Income Review of Economics and Statistics A 2
2022 Your Place in the World: Relative Income and Global Inequality American Economic Journal: Economic Policy A 3
2022 Expectations with Endogenous Information Acquisition: An Experimental Investigation Review of Economics and Statistics A 4
2022 How Much Does Your Boss Make? The Effects of Salary Comparisons Journal of Political Economy S 2
2020 The Effects of Income Transparency on Well-Being: Evidence from a Natural Experiment American Economic Review S 1
2019 Giving to charity to signal smarts: evidence from a lab experiment Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics B 2
2018 Sympathy for the diligent and the demand for workfare Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization B 2
2018 Shaming tax delinquents Journal of Public Economics A 2
2018 Markets, trust and cultural biases: evidence from eBay Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics B 1
2018 Political Conformity: Event-Study Evidence from the United States Review of Economics and Statistics A 1
2017 Inflation Expectations, Learning, and Supermarket Prices: Evidence from Survey Experiments American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics A 3
2017 Partisan Interactions: Evidence from a Field Experiment in the United States Journal of Political Economy S 2
2016 Learning from Potentially Biased Statistics Brookings Papers on Economic Activity B 3
2015 Losing my religion: The effects of religious scandals on religious participation and charitable giving Journal of Public Economics A 2
2015 Conveniently Upset: Avoiding Altruism by Distorting Beliefs about Others' Altruism American Economic Review S 4
2013 Biased perceptions of income distribution and preferences for redistribution: Evidence from a survey experiment Journal of Public Economics A 3
2013 A test of the conspicuous–consumption model using subjective well-being data Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics B 1
2011 Deconstructing the hedonic treadmill: Is happiness autoregressive? Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics B 2