Michelle J. White


Professor of Economics, University of California, San Diego, and
Research Associate, NBER

Department of Economics
University of California, San Diego
9500 Gilman Dr.
La Jolla CA 92093-0508
Phone: (858) 534-2783;
E-mail: miwhite AT ucsd.edu



Biographical sketch:

A fairly complete list of published articles:

Papers on bankruptcy:

  • "Did Bankruptcy Reform Increase Financial Distress?" NBER Digest, November 2007. Summary of "Bankruptcy Reform and Credit Cards" (below).

  • "Bankruptcy Reform and Credit Cards," NBER working paper 13265, August 2007. J. of Economic Perspectives, Fall 2007, pp. 175-199.

  • "Personal Bankruptcy: Abuse Prevention versus Debtor Protection," Economie publique/Public Economics, no. 18-19, pp. 3-27, 2006.

  • "Bankruptcy Reform Gave Creditors Too Much," Opinion piece in Washington Post online edition, August 21, 2006.

  • "Abuse or Protection?" Regulation vol. 29:3, pp. 28-35, Fall 2006.

  • "Abuse or Protection: The Economics of Bankruptcy Reform under BAPCPA," University of Illinois Law Review, vol. 2007:1, pp. 275-304 (2007).

  • "Bankruptcy and Small Business -- Lessons from the U.S. and Recent Reforms," in CESifo DICE Report, 2006.

  • "Economic Analysis of Corporate and Personal Bankruptcy Law," NBER working paper 11536, July 2005. This paper will be published under the title, "Bankruptcy Law," in Handbook of Law and Economics, edited by A.M. Polinsky and Steven Shavell. Elsevier.

  • "Economics of Corporate and Personal Bankruptcy Law." To be published in The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics, 2nd edition, 2008. (This is a much shorter version of the previous paper.)

  • "Personal Bankruptcy: Insurance, Work Effort, Opportunism and the Efficiency of the 'Fresh Start'." Preliminary draft presented at the Am. Law & Economics Assn. Conference, New York, May 2005.

  • "Bankruptcy and Consumer Behavior: Theory and Evidence From the U.S. In The Economics of Consumer Credit, edited by Giuseppe Bertola, Richard Disney, and Charles Grant. MIT Press, 2006.

  • "Bankruptcy and Small Firms' Access to Credit," with Jeremy Berkowitz. RAND J. of Economics, vol. 35:1, pp. 69-84, Spring 2004. (NBER working paper number 9010.) Stata file of variables not in the NSSBF dataset.
  • List of Variables.

  • "Personal Bankruptcy and the Level of Entrepreneurial Activity," with Wei Fan. Journal of Law & Economics, vol. 46:2, October 2003, pp. 543-568. (NBER working paper 9340.)

  • "Bankruptcy and the Market for Mortgage and Home Improvement Loans," with Emily Y. Lin. Journal of Urban Economics, vol. 50:1, July 2001 (138-162).

  • "The Household Bankruptcy Decision," with Scott Fay and Erik Hurst, American Economic Review, vol. 92:3, June 2002, pp. 708-718. Link to data for this paper.

  • "An Optimal Personal Bankruptcy System and Proposed Reforms," with Hung-jen Wang. Journal of Legal Studies, vol. XXIX(1), January 2000, pp. 255-286. Programs and parameter values for this paper.
  • "Bankruptcy and Small Business." Regulation, vol. 24:2, Summer 2001.

  • "Sovereigns in Distress: Do They Need Bankruptcy?" Brookings Papers on Economic Activity , issue 1, 2002, pp. 287-319.

  • "What's Wrong with Personal Bankruptcy Law and How to Fix It," Regulation, vol. 22:3, Fall 1999.

  • "Why It Pays to File for Bankruptcy: A Critical Look at Incentives under U.S. Bankruptcy Laws and A Proposal for Change," University of Chicago Law Review, vol. 65:3, pp. 685-732, Summer 1998. SAS dataset used in this paper.
  • SAS program used in this paper.

  • "Why Don't More Households File for Bankruptcy?" Journal of Law, Economics, and Organization, vol. 14:2, pp. 205-231, October 1998. (Note: data and program used in this paper are the same as those listed above for Univ. of Chic. L.R. paper.)

  • "Personal Bankruptcy and Credit Supply and Demand," with R. Gropp and J.K. Scholz, in Quarterly Journal of Economics, vol. 112, pp. 217-251, Feb. 1997.

  • "Corporate Bankruptcy," in The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics and the Law, P. Newman, ed. Macmillan Press, 1998.

  • "Corporate Bankruptcy as a Filtering Device: Chapter 11 Reorganizations and Out-of-Court Debt Restructurings," J. of Law, Economics and Organization, vol. 10, Oct. 1994, pp. 268-295.

  • "The Corporate Bankruptcy Decision," J. of Economic Perspectives, vol. 3, Spring 1989, pp. 129-152.

  • "The Costs of Corporate Bankruptcy: A U.S.-European Comparison," in Corporate Bankruptcy: Economic and Legal Perspectives. J. Bhandari and L. Weiss, eds. Cambridge University Press, 1996. Tables for this paper.
  • Papers on asbestos litigation:

  • "Asbestos Litigation: The Problem of Forum Shopping and Procedural Innovations, and Potential Solutions," edited transcript of talk at the Manhattan Institute, Sept. 2005.

  • "Asbestos Litigation: Procedural Innovations and Forum-Shopping," August 2005. Journal of Legal Studies, vol. 35, no. 2, pp. 365-398, June 2006. NBER working paper 9362, December 2002.

  • "Asbestos and the Future of Mass Torts," Journal of Economic Perspectives, vol. 18:2, Spring 2004. NBER working paper 10308, February 2004.

  • "Resolving the 'Elephantine Mass'," Regulation, Summer 2003.

  • "Why the Asbestos Genie Won't Stay in the Bankruptcy Bottle." University of Cincinnati Law Review, vol. 70:4, Summer 2002, pp. 1319-1340.

    Papers in public/urban economics:

  • "Property Tax Limitations and Mobility: The Lock-In Effect of California's Proposition 13," with Nada Wasi. NBER working paper 11108, February 2005. Brookings-Wharton Papers on Urban Affairs, pp. 59-88, Fall 2005.

  • "The `Arms Race' on American Roads: The Effect of Sport Utility Vehicles and Pickup Trucks on Traffic Safety." Journal of Law & Economics, October 2004, vol. XLVII(2), pp. 333-356. For a description of this article, see "Are bigger vehicles safer? It depends on whether you're a passenger or a target," by Hal R. Varian, New York Times, Dec. 18, 2003, p. C2. NBER working paper 9302, Nov. 2002, is an earlier version.

  • "In-State versus Out-of-State Students: The Divergence of Interest between Public Universities and State Governments,'' with Jeff Groen. NBER working paper 9603, April 2003. J. of Public Economics, vol. 88:9-10, pp. 1793-1814, August 2004.

  • "Urban Models with Decentralized Employment: Theory and Empirical Work," in Handbook of Regional and Urban Economics, vol. 3, Applied Urban Economics. Paul Cheshire and Edwin Mills, eds., Elsevier Science, 1999.

  • "Measuring the Benefits of Homeowning: Effects on Children," with Richard K. Green, J. of Urban Economics, vol. 41, 1997, pp. 441-461.

  • "Why are Taxes So Complex and Who Benefits? Tax Notes, vol. 47, April 16, 1990, p. 341.

  • "Urban Commuting is Not Wasteful," J. of Political Economy, vol. 96:5, October 1988, pp. 1097-1110.

  • "A Model of Residential Location Choice and Commuting by Men and Women Workers," J. of Regional Science, vol. 17:1, April 1977, pp. 41-52.

    Papers in law & economics:

  • "No-fault for Motor Vehicles: An Economic Analysis," with Yu-ping Liao. American Law and Economics Review, vol.4:2, 2002, pp. 258-294.

  • "Empirical Comparisons of the Contributory versus Comparative Negligence Rules," in The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics and the Law, P. Newman, ed. Macmillan Press, 1998.

  • "Medical Malpractice: An Empirical Examination of the Litigation Process," with Henry Farber. RAND J. of Economics, vol. 22:2, 1991, pp. 199-217.

  • "Legal Complexity and Lawyers' Benefit from Litigation," International Rev. of Law and Economics, vol. 12:3, 1992, pp. 381-395.

  • "The Value of Liability in Medical Malpractice," Health Affairs, vol. 13:4, Fall 1994, pp. 75-87.

  • "Contract Breach and Contract Discharge Due to Impossibility: A Unified Theory," Journal of Legal Studies, vol. 17:2. 1988, pp. 353-376.

  • "An Empirical Test of the Comparative and Contributory Negligence Rules in Accident Law," RAND J. of Economics, vol. 20:3, 1989, pp. 308-330.