National Bureau of Economic Research
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Long-Term Impacts of Residential Racial Desegregation Programs
article
Growing up in racially and economically segregated neighborhoods can have long-lasting effects. In 1966, Black families in Chicago sued the public housing authority over housing policies that segregated Black families. In response, the Chicago Housing Authority created a voucher program that would assist these families in moving to middle-income neighborhoods. Initially, families were relocated to predominantly White neighborhoods. After experiencing difficulty finding enough White neighborhoods willing to accept Black residents, program administrators began to relocate families to revitalizing Black neighborhoods as well.
In The Long-Run Effects of America’s Largest Residential Racial Desegregation Program: Gautreaux (NBER Working Paper 33427), Eric Chyn, Robert Collinson, and Danielle H. Sandler compare...
From the NBER Reporter: Research, program, and conference summaries

A Long-Run Reevaluation of War on Poverty Programs
article
Over sixty years ago in 1964, the launch of the War on Poverty represented one of the largest and most comprehensive attempts to improve wellbeing in US history. President Lyndon Johnson’s administration invested billions of dollars in American education, health, employment, and community development. Many of these programs targeted the roots of poverty, seeking to provide a “hand up, not a handout.” Johnson aimed “not only to relieve the symptom of poverty, but to cure it and, above all, to prevent it.”
My research with collaborators digs deeper into the workings of specific War on Poverty programs, seeking evidence about their effects on generational poverty and economic mobility. Our long-run perspective takes advantage of newly available data. Large-scale data…
From the NBER Bulletin on Health

Policy Changes and Pharmaceutical Innovation Combine to Increase Naloxone Access
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Naloxone, which reverses the effects of an opioid overdose, is a critical tool for responding to the opioid crisis. However, prior to the 2010s, two barriers hindered its widespread distribution and use in the United States. One was legal access: Naloxone required a prescription from a healthcare provider. Another was that naloxone was administered by injection and therefore required training for proper use.
In 2010, Illinois became the first state to adopt a dispensing naloxone access law (NAL) that permitted individuals to obtain naloxone directly from pharmacists, eliminating the need for an individual prescription. By 2015, another 35 states had implemented dispensing NALs. These policy initiatives were complemented by the introduction of Narcan, the first FDA-approved naloxone nasal spray, in 2016. This new…
From the NBER Bulletin on Entrepreneurship

Immigrant Entrepreneurship in the US
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Immigrants to the US are more entrepreneurial than the native population and overrepresented among high-growth startups and venture-backed tech firms. In Immigrant Entrepreneurship: New Estimates and a Research Agenda (NBER Working Paper 32400), Saheel Chodavadia, Sari Pekkala Kerr, William Kerr, and Louis Maiden use business surveys and administrative employment records to provide new evidence on the prevalence and predictors of immigrant...
Featured Working Papers
Randall Akee, Maggie R. Jones, and Emilia Simeonova find that tribal casino operations increase American Indian employment in casino-related industries between 2 and 4 percent. Workers in these industries experience an average wage boost of about $2000, relative to a base of $12,000 per year, when they join this industry.
Hema Shah, Lisa A. Gennetian, Katherine Magnuson, Hirokazu Yoshikawa, Laura R. Stilwell, Kimberly Noble, and Greg Duncan find that in response to receipt of cash transfers, Latino families increased child-focused expenditures by nearly one-third of the transfer amount, while Black families reduced maternal work hours and increased time spent with children on early learning activities.
Standardized transfer pricing reforms in Chile, Colombia, Spain, and Uruguay led to substantial increases in the use of transfer pricing consultants, with larger effects in countries that were the least strict before reform, according to Dina Pomeranz and Juan Carlos Suárez Serrato.
David M. Cutler, Ellen Meara, and Susan Stewart find that over time, the fraction of individuals reporting health impairments in their 50s has increased, especially for pain and cognitive impairment. Nevertheless, the overall capacity for work of those in their early 60s remains high.
Firm effects explain 20 percent of the variation in early career wage growth and the sorting of women to slower-growth firms accounts for a fifth of the gender gap in career wage growth, with larger effects for women who have a child within five years of entering work, according to David Card, Francesco Devicienti, Mariacristina Rossi, and Andrea Weber.
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