Gaurab Aryal
· Associate ProfessorVerifiedBoston University · Economics
Active 2010–2025
About
Gaurab Aryal is an associate professor in the field of empirical industrial organization. He uses game theory and econometrics methods to study markets and industries, focusing on areas with and without informational frictions. His current research includes designing auctions for annuities and high-speed internet for schools, measuring market values of pharmaceutical drugs, analyzing mergers, and understanding the causal link between competition and productivity.
Research topics
- Computer Science
- Economics
- Labour economics
- Economic growth
Selected publications
SSRN Electronic Journal · 2025-01-01
preprintOpen access1st authorCorrespondingThe Benefits from Bundling Demand in K-12 Broadband Procurement
National Bureau of Economic Research · 2025-02-01
reportOpen access1st authorCorrespondingWe study a new market design for K-12 school broadband procurement that switched from schoolspecific bidding to a system that bundled schools into groups.Using an event study approach, we estimate the program reduced internet prices by 37% per Mbps per month while increasing bandwidth by 500%.These benefits occurred by mitigating exposure risk in broadband procurement -the risk that providers win too few contracts to cover fixed infrastructure costs.Using a bounds approach, we show robustness of our estimates and document that participants saved at least as much as their federal subsidies and experienced substantial welfare gains.
Bridging Retrospective and Prospective Merger Analyses: The Case of US Airline Mergers
SSRN Electronic Journal · 2025-01-01
preprintOpen access1st authorCorrespondingThe Benefits from Bundling Demand in K-12 Broadband Procurement
SSRN Electronic Journal · 2025-01-01
articleOpen access1st authorCorrespondingBridging Quasi-Experimental and Structural Approaches for Robust Evaluation of US Airline Mergers
arXiv (Cornell University) · 2025-03-20
preprintOpen access1st authorCorrespondingWe bridge quasi-experimental and structural approaches for robust merger evaluation. First, we show that the difference-in-differences (DiD) equation is the "reduced form" of a structural model, where demand and cost parameters identify price effects of mergers even when the DiD approach faces identification challenges. Second, we propose a $\textit{synthetic GMM}$ approach by applying synthetic DiD weights to structural moment conditions to improve estimates when only a few treated markets are available. Applying this methodology to three airline mergers, we find modest efficiency gains entirely offset by increased coordination. The synthetic GMM refinement sharpens findings, uncovering anti-competitive effects standard approaches miss.
Econometrics of insurance with multidimensional types
Quantitative Economics · 2025-01-01 · 1 citations
articleOpen access1st authorCorrespondingIn this paper, we address the identification and estimation of insurance models where insurees have private information about their risk and risk aversion. The model includes random damages and allows for several claims, while insurees choose from a finite number of coverages. We show that the joint distribution of risk and risk aversion is nonparametrically identified despite bunching due to multidimensional types and a finite number of coverages. Our identification strategy exploits the observed number of claims as well as an exclusion restriction, and a full support assumption. Furthermore, our results apply to any form of competition. We propose a novel estimation procedure combining nonparametric estimators and GMM estimation that we illustrate in a Monte Carlo study.
The Benefits from Bundling Demand in K-12 Broadband Procurement
arXiv (Cornell University) · 2024-02-11
preprintOpen access1st authorCorrespondingWe study a new market design for K-12 school broadband procurement that switched from school-specific bidding to a system that bundled schools into groups. Using an event study approach, we estimate that the program reduced internet prices by \$9.17 (55\%) per Mbps per month while increasing bandwidth by 380.06 Mbps (136\%). These benefits resulted primarily from mitigating exposure risk in broadband procurement - the risk that providers win too few contracts to cover their fixed infrastructure costs. Using a bounds approach, we show robustness of our estimates and document that participants saved between \$1.61 million and \$3.48 million, while their existing federal E-rate subsidy was \$2.47 million, and experienced substantial welfare gains.
Bundling Demand in K-12 Broadband Procurement
2024-07-08
article1st authorCorrespondingAccess to affordable high-speed broadband is necessary for schools to achieve educational goals. High-speed broadband enhances digital learning, research, and communication among K-12 students. In the US, the federal government promotes connectivity and access to telecommunication services among schools by providing subsidies ("E-rate"). As a condition of the subsidy program, schools must use competitive bidding to choose their internet service providers (ISPs).
Bundling Demand in K-12 Broadband Procurement
SSRN Electronic Journal · 2024-01-01
articleOpen access1st authorCorrespondingCommon Subcontracting and Airline Prices
The Review of Economics and Statistics · 2024-02-09 · 6 citations
article1st authorCorrespondingAbstract In the U.S. airline industry, independent regional airlines fly passengers on behalf of several national airlines across different markets, giving rise to common subcontracting. On the one hand, we find that subcontracting is associated with lower prices, consistent with the notion that regional airlines tend to fly passengers at lower costs than major airlines. On the other hand, we find that common subcontracting is associated with higher prices. These two countervailing effects suggest that the growth of regional airlines can have anticompetitive implications for the industry.
Frequent coauthors
- 23 shared
Maria F. Gabrielli
- 18 shared
Federico Ciliberto
Center for Economic and Policy Research
- 15 shared
Dong-Hyuk Kim
- 11 shared
Quang Vuong
- 10 shared
Manudeep Bhuller
University of Oslo
- 10 shared
Isabelle Perrigne
- 8 shared
Benjamin T. Leyden
Cornell University
- 6 shared
Fabian Lange
Education
Ph.D.
The Pennsylvania State University
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