This dissertation contains three empirical essays that study how government policies impact the economy. Chapter 1 measures how much higher income taxes on U.S. top 1% earners "trickle down" and reduce other workers' wages via geographically concentrated spillovers. While trickle-down effects feature prominently in tax policy debates, relatively little is known about their magnitude. The paper uses an exposure design that combines time-series variation in the federal marginal tax rate for top 1% earners with cross-sectional variation in the top 1% income share across local labor markets. Intuitively, the design asks whether workers in local labor markets where top 1% earners account for a larger share of economic activity are more adversely...