Research Staff
Lars Nesheim
cemmap and UCL
Lars Nesheim is a Professor of Economics at UCL and Co-Director of the Centre for Microdata Methods and Practice (cemmap). He teaches industrial organization, econometrics and urban economics. His research interests focus on structural econometrics, computational economics, industrial organization, urban economics, economic dynamics and hedonic models. He is an academic advisor to the Competition Commission, to OFCOM, and to KPMG.
Selected Publications
Many controversies that beset the digital economy turn on the role of advertising and its use […]
Which housing characteristics are important for understanding homeownership rates? How are housing characteristics priced in the […]
The multinomial logit model with random coefficients is widely used in applied research. This paper is […]
Previous version
We propose a demand model where consumers simultaneously choose a few different goods from a large […]
The multinomial logit model with random coefficients is widely used in applied research. This paper is […]
Latest version
Using the English Housing Survey, we estimate a supply side selection model of the allocation of […]
Random utility models are widely used to study consumer choice. The vast majority of applications make […]
In structural economic models, individuals are usually characterized as solving a decision problem that is governed […]
There is policy interest in using tax to change food purchasing behaviour. The literature has not […]
We present evidence from 260,000 online auctions of second-hand cars to identify the impact of public […]