NBER Publications by Greg Duncan
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| January 2006 | Neighborhoods and Academic Achievement: Results from the Moving to Opportunity Experiment
with Lisa Sanbonmatsu, Jeffrey R. Kling, Jeanne Brooks-Gunn: w11909
Families originally living in public housing were assigned housing vouchers by lottery, encouraging moves to neighborhoods with lower poverty rates. Although we had hypothesized that reading and math test scores would be higher among children in families offered vouchers (with larger effects among younger children), the results show no significant effects on test scores for any age group among over 5000 children ages 6 to 20 in 2002 who were assessed four to seven years after randomization. Program impacts on school environments were considerably smaller than impacts on neighborhoods, suggesting that achievement-related benefits from improved neighborhood environments are alone small. |
| March 1989 | Measurement Error In Cross-Sectional and Longitudinal Labor Market Surveys: Results From Two Validation Studies
with John Bound, Charles Brown, Willard L Rodgers: w2884
This paper reports evidence on the error properties of survey reports of labor market variables such as earnings and work hours. Our primary data source is the PSID Validation Study, a two-wave panel survey of a sample of workers employed by a large firm which also allowed us access to its very detailed records of its workers earnings. etc. The second data source uses individuals' 1977 and 1978 (March Current Population Survey) reports of earnings, matched to Social Security earnings records. In both data sets, individuals: reports of earnings are fairly accurately reported, and the errors are negatively related to true earnings. The latter property reduces the bias due to measurement error when earnings are used as an independent variable, but (unlike the classical-error case) leads to so... |
| 1985 | Economic Consequences of Marital Instability
with Saul D. Hoffman
in Horizontal Equity, Uncertainty, and Economic Well-Being, Martin David and Timothy Smeeding, editors
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