Richard Musgrave Visiting Professorship 2024: Henrik Kleven

The Richard Musgrave Visiting Professorship 2024 was awarded to Henrik Kleven by CESifo and the International Institute of Public Finance (IIPF). Henrik Kleven is the Lynn Bendheim Thoman, Class of 1977, and Robert Bendheim, Class of 1937, Professor of Economics and Public Affairs at Princeton University. Previously, he has held positions at the London School of Economics and the University of Copenhagen.

Portrait Henrik Kleven CESifo Guest 2023

More about Henrik Kleven

Henrik Kleven is the Lynn Bendheim Thoman, Class of 1977, and Robert Bendheim, Class of 1937, Professor of Economics and Public Affairs at Princeton University. He is appointed jointly by the Department of Economics and the School of Public and International Affairs. Previously, he has held positions at the London School of Economics and the University of Copenhagen. He received his PhD from the University of Copenhagen in 2003. He has served as Co-Editor of the American Economic Review and Chief Editor of the Journal of Public Economics. He is a Fellow member of the CESifo Network and a Research Associate at NBER.

His research focuses on questions in public economics, labor economics, and inequality. This includes research on the effects and optimal design of public policies (such as tax policy, welfare, and family policy) as well as research on gender inequality in the labor market. His work has been published in all leading academic journals of economics. It is regularly cited in top media outlets, and it has influenced policy making in several countries.

Henrik Kleven is currently studying how child penalties -- i.e., the effects of parenthood on women relative to men — affect gender inequality in labor market outcomes. He is especially interested in understanding how general child penalties are, how they vary with political and cultural institutions, and how they evolve with economic development. In a recent paper, he and his co-authors Camille Landais and Gabriel Leite-Mariante develop a global atlas of child penalties. The atlas is based on nationally representative micro data from 134 countries, covering more than 95% of the global population. In a related paper, Henrik Kleven develops an innovative approach to estimating child penalties based on cross-sectional data and pseudo-event studies around childbirth.

Lecture

Professor Kleven delivered the 16th CESifo and IIPF Richard Musgrave Lecture on Thursday, 21 March 2024. The title of his lecture was "The Child Penalty Atlas”.

Proceedings were livestreamed and a recording of the lecture may be found below.

We are very grateful for the sponsorship by Hannover Re.

 

Video

Richard Musgrave Lecture: The Child Penalty Atlas (Welcome)

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Richard Musgrave Lecture: The Child Penalty Atlas (Laudation)

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Richard Musgrave Lecture: The Child Penalty Atlas

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Richard Musgrave Lecture: The Child Penalty Atlas (Discussion)

Contact
Katja Gramann

Katja Gramann

Research Network Manager and Conference Organizer
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CV Foto Barbara Hebele

Barbara Hebele

Executive Assistant
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+49(0)89/9224-1901
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