Resume-aware faculty matching

Find professors who actually fit you

Upload your resume. Four AI agents analyze your background, rank the faculty who fit, inspect their recent research, and help you draft outreach — grounded in their actual work, not templates.

Free to startNo credit cardCancel anytime
Top matches Balanced preset
Dr. Sarah Chen
Stanford · Interpretability · NLP
91
Dr. Marcus Holloway
MIT · Robotics · RL
84
Dr. Aisha Okonkwo
CMU · Fairness · HCI
82
Nova · Professor Researcher · re-ranking top 20…
Mara Faccio

Mara Faccio

· ProfessorVerified

Purdue University · Finance

Active 1908–2026

h-index56
Citations25.7k
Papers16029 last 5y
Funding
See your match with Mara Faccio — sign in to PhdFit.Sign in

Research topics

  • Monetary economics
  • Economics
  • Finance
  • Econometrics
  • Labour economics
  • Business
  • Macroeconomics

Selected publications

  • Taxes and Financial Distress: Evidence from Establishment-Level Data

    SSRN Electronic Journal · 2026-01-01

    preprintOpen access1st authorCorresponding
  • When Tax Shields Shrink: Interest Deductibility Limitations and Corporate Innovation

    SSRN Electronic Journal · 2026-01-01

    preprintOpen access
  • TWO CENTURIES OF PRESIDENTIAL PUZZLES

    SSRN Electronic Journal · 2026-01-01

    preprintOpen access1st authorCorresponding
  • Taxes and Financial Distress: Evidence from Establishment-Level Data

    SSRN Electronic Journal · 2026-01-01

    preprintOpen access1st authorCorresponding
  • Taxes and Financial Distress: Evidence from Establishment-Level Data

    National Bureau of Economic Research · 2026-04-01

    reportOpen access1st authorCorresponding

    We use establishment-level data to examine the relation between corporate taxes and financial distress.Using a border discontinuity design, we document that higher corporate income tax rates significantly increase financial distress, particularly for geographically concentrated firms, with sizable spillovers across establishments.We further investigate how taxes affect establishmentlevel financial distress by exploiting the interest limitation rule introduced by the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.Using a difference-in-differences design, we find that affected firms experience a decline in financial distress.This occurs because the reduced tax advantage of debt induces firms to deleverage, reducing financial distress through capital structure adjustments.

  • Taxes and Private Firms’ Capital Structure Choices

    National Bureau of Economic Research · 2025-04-01 · 4 citations

    reportOpen access1st authorCorresponding

    Using limitations to the deductibility of interest payments triggered by the introduction of interest ceiling rules globally, we show that affected private firms reduce leverage relative to unaffected firms.In support of a causal effect of taxes on corporate capital structure choices, we show that the results hold for firms near the thresholds triggering the limitations, in a propensity score matched sample, and in countries required to adopt the interest ceiling rules.In contrast, falsification tests show no reduction in leverage for affected firms around pseudo-reform years.Furthermore, within a country, firms with a higher fraction of nondeductible interest payments are less responsive to tax rate changes.More broadly, across 93 countries, we document that private firms tend to decrease leverage in response to tax rate cuts and increase leverage in response to corporate tax rate hikes.

  • Exposing the Revolving Door in Executive Branch Agencies

    Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis · 2025-01-20 · 11 citations

    articleOpen accessSenior authorCorresponding

    Abstract We develop an extensive mapping of the revolving door phenomenon by examining the work experience of 420,153 individuals in top corporate positions at 12,869 firms. More than half of these firms have at least one such individual with prior experience in one of 187 executive branch agencies. We find that firms are more likely to receive procurement contracts following the appointment of a former regulator transitioning within 2 years of leaving the agency, a result consistent with the “knowledge” hypothesis. Less-complex contracts signed following the appointment of former regulators are more likely to be renegotiated, increasing costs for the government.

  • <p>Corporate Income Taxes Around the Globe</p>

    SSRN Electronic Journal · 2025-01-01

    preprintOpen access1st authorCorresponding
  • The Externalities Of Corporate Political Connections: Evidence From The Supply Chain

    SSRN Electronic Journal · 2025-01-01

    preprintOpen accessSenior author
  • Taxes and Private Firms’ Capital Structure Choices

    SSRN Electronic Journal · 2025-01-01

    articleOpen access1st authorCorresponding

Frequent coauthors

  • Luigi Zingales

    University of Chicago

    63 shared
  • Randall Mørck

    56 shared
  • Xu Jin

    41 shared
  • Asís Martínez-Jerez

    36 shared
  • Mary Spence

    Children's Hospital Colorado

    36 shared
  • Raphael Amit

    University of Pennsylvania

    36 shared
  • Bernard Yeung

    36 shared
  • Ronald Lauder

    University of Pennsylvania

    36 shared
  • Resume-aware match score
  • Save to shortlist
  • AI-drafted outreach

See your match with Mara Faccio

PhdFit ranks faculty by your research interests, methods, and publications — grounded in their actual work, not templates.

  • Free to start
  • No credit card
  • 30-second signup