Monday, 1 December, 2025

14:00 | Room 402 | Applied Micro Research Seminar

Gregor Pfeifer (The University of Sydney) "Abortion Access and Long-Run Household Outcomes: Evidence from Population-Wide Administrative Data"

Gregor Pfeifer, Ph.D.

The University of Sydney, Australia


Abstract: This paper uses individual-level, linked administrative data on the universe of pregnant females and their families in Australia to study the long-run impacts of abortion on a comprehensive set of outcomes covering the entire household domain. We exploit the unexpected listing of the abortion pill on the Australian national health insurance plan on August 1, 2013, and see a dramatic first-stage reduction in births. Follow-on analyses reveal positive, persistent female labor market reactions, while existing partners do not change their labor supply. However, partners do show significant improvements with their mental health up to ten years after the event. Pre-existing kids in the household are also affected: income per kid rises, and they are more likely to attend University in the future; boys show better mental health; and girls’ use of oral contraceptives increases.

17:30 | Room 7 | For Study Applicants

Filip Matějka & Jan Zápal: Fundamental Social Issues from the Point of View of Economics


Optional course for students of Charles University - The lectures are conducted in Czech 



In the lecture series "Fundamental Social Issues from the Point of View of Economics" Filip Matějka and Jan Zápal, professors at CERGE-EI, address current global problems and demonstrate how economics views these issues.

The course is intended for students of all disciplines and academic years who wish to seek answers to questions (or understand why it is difficult to answer) such as: What can governments do, and what can markets do? What about social inequality, the future of work, global warming, threats to democracy, media, and (dis)information? The aim of this course is to familiarize students with the fundamental concepts and ways of thinking of modern economics using real-world social problems.

A total of 6 lessons will take place every Monday from 5:30 PM to 8:30 PM at CERGE-EI, Politických vězňů 7, Prague 1, in room 7.

Nov 10, 2025: Markets, their functions and regulation. Welfare. Government interventions.
Nov 17, 2025: Democracy and how it works.
Nov 24, 2025: Inequality, how to measure it, how it changes, and what to do about it.
Dec 01, 2025: Environmental problems, global warming, economic diagnosis and solutions.
Dec 08, 2025: Information and media, how agents process it, do markets provide it.
Dec 15, 2025: ... surprise

Course code in SIS: JCM039

You can find the course page with current information here.