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{HtmlEncodeMultiline(EmailPreheader)} | MORAL REGULATION AND CULTURAL PRODUCTION: EVIDENCE FROM HOLLYWOOD |
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| ABSTRACT Moral regulation is widespread across societies, yet its consequences have seldom been examined empirically. We study the Hays Code (July 1934–1960s), which imposed systematic moral guidelines on American cinema. Using a regression-discontinuity design, with non-U.S. films providing a comparison group, we find that the moral compliance of U.S. films rose sharply after 1935 and remained high for two decades. The Code also reshaped protagonists and political tone: protagonists became less likely to be women or working class, and political tones grew more conservative. Filmmakers adapted both by increasing compliance within genres and by shifting across them: less-compliant Drama declined while more-compliant Western and Action rose. Companies with a larger market size and immigrant film directors exhibited stronger responses. These findings reveal how moral constraint, market, and identity jointly shape cultural production and how well-intentioned moral regulation can produce broad and often unintended spillovers. |
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PRESENTER Ruixue Jia University of California San Diego |
RESEARCH FIELDS Political Economy Economic History Education Labor Economics |
DATE: 10 December 2025 (Wednesday) |
VENUE: Meeting Room 5.1, Level 5 School of Economics Singapore Management University 90 Stamford Road Singapore 178903 |
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