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Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR)

Welcome to SIEPR

Supporting nonpartisan economic policy research. Convening leaders from academia, government and business. Inspiring the next generation of economic experts. 

Learn more about SIEPR's mission and the people behind it.

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"Evidence matters. And it can shift policy in a positive direction."

 

A new podcast from SIEPR

Time to hit play

What if you could walk Stanford’s campus alongside leading minds as they unpack the ideas shaping the economy, business and public policy? Introducing Econ To Go, where Stanford economics meets your everyday life — served with a side of coffee. The video podcast series launches on Feb. 24!

Cutting through the AI noise

AI & the Economy

There’s a lot of speculation about how AI will reshape the U.S. economy. And the hype swings from doomsday to utopia. At a recent Policy Forum, the "godmother of AI" and U.S. Senator Mark Kelly joined other policy experts and business leaders for deep discussions into what’s actually happening and what’s coming next. 

Read our recap here and watch the highlights.

How to fix California's child care crunch

Policy Impact

A SIEPR policy brief outlines the economic cost of California’s broken child care market and sheds light on the public investment needed for a universal child care program. Reforms, the researchers find, would not only fix the market but also generate enough returns to exceed upfront costs.

What draws our scholars and students to economic policy?

Why Econ

Priyanka Parikh became a SIEPR predoc to explore life as a researcher. After fully immersing herself in economic policy research, she realized she wanted to train as a health economist. Learn more about what drives Priyanka and others featured in our Why Econ series.

The US budget math is looking dangerous

Not Adding Up?

Cries over a potential U.S. debt crisis have grown over the years. Now the danger is real, says Jared Bernstein, a Distinguished Policy Fellow at SIEPR. He explains why and breaks down the budget math in this policy brief, co-authored by SIEPR's Adam Shaw and predoctoral fellow Daniel Posthumus.

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