Matthew is Director of the Survey Research Center and Lawrence R. Klein Collegiate Professor of Economics at the University of Michigan and a research associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research. Among his current research interests are consumption, saving, work, retirement, and portfolio choices of households, improving the quality of national economic statistics, and the use of big data for economic analysis and measurement.
Selected publications
- Reconsidering the Consequences of Worker Displacements: Firm versus Worker Perspective
- Minding Your Ps and Qs: Going from Micro to Macro in Measuring Prices and Quantities
- How Individuals Respond to a Liquidity Shock: Evidence from the 2013 Government Shutdown
- Heterogeneity in Expectations, Risk Tolerance, and Household Stock Shares: The Attenuation Puzzle
- Portfolio rebalancing in general equilibrium
- Older Americans Would Work Longer If Jobs Were Flexible
- Long-Term-Care Utility and Late-in-Life Saving
- How Worker Productivity and Wages Grow with Tenure and Experience: The Firm Perspective