Thursday, April 13 |
7-9 p.m. |
Pre-conference Reception Bin 105 | 105 N 18th Street | Lincoln, Nebraska |
Friday, April 14 |
8 a.m. |
Breakfast and Check-In (UNL College of Business | Howard L. Hawks Hall | 730 N. 14th Street | Lincoln, Nebraska) |
8:30 a.m. |
Welcome HLH 018 |
8:40 a.m. |
Keynote Address HLH 018
Anna Aizer (Brown University), “Health and the Intergenerational Transmission of Economic Status”
Anna Aizer is the Maurice R. Greenberg Professor of Economics at Brown University. She is a labor and health economist with interests in the area of child health and well-being. She is also co-director of the NBER's program on Children and the Editor in Chief of the Journal of Human Resources. Her current work considers the mechanisms behind the intergenerational transmission of poverty. In particular, she focuses on the roles played by health insurance and access to medical care, domestic violence, exposure to environmental toxins, the role of stress, discrimination in the labor market, job training and poor children's greater interaction with the juvenile justice system in explaining why the children of poor mothers are more likely to grow up to be poor themselves.
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9:30 a.m. |
Break |
9:45 a.m. |
Session I: HLH 018
30-Minute Presentations
- Amelia Hawkins (Brandeis University), “The Long-Term Effects of Income for At-Risk Infants: Evidence from Supplemental Security Income”
- Bryan Stuart (Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia), “The Effects of Racial Segregation on Intergenerational Mobility: Evidence from Historical Railroad Placement”
- Briana Ballis (University of California, Merced), “Does Poor Health Widen Racial Disparities in Childhood and Adulthood?”
8-Minute "Flash" Talks
- Rebecca Jack (University of Nebraska–Lincoln), “The Parenthood Gap: Firms and Earnings Inequality After Kids”
- Eric Nielsen (Federal Reserve Board), “The Effect of Maternal Labor Supply on Children: Evidence from Bunching”
- So Yoon Ahn (University of Illinois at Chicago), “Spousal Bargaining Power and Consumption of Married Couples in the US: Evidence from Scanner Data”
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11:45 a.m. |
Lunch
Box lunches in Atrium
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12:10 p.m. |
Keynote Address In Atrium
Christopher Walters (University of California, Berkeley), “Using Correspondence Experiments to Measure Employer-Specific Discrimination”
Christopher Walters is an Associate Professor of Economics at the University of California, Berkeley. He is a Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research, a Faculty Affiliate at the MIT School Effectiveness and Inequality Initiative (SEII), an affiliate of J-PAL North America, and a co-editor of the American Economic Journal: Applied Economics and associate editor of the Journal of Political Economy. His research focuses on the topics in labor economics and the economics of education, including early childhood programs, school effectiveness, and labor market discrimination.
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1 p.m. |
Break |
1:15 p.m. |
Session II: HLH 018
30-Minute Presentations
- Yotam Shem-Tov (UCLA), “How Replaceable is a Low-Wage Job?”
- Joanna Venator (Boston College), “Dual-Earner Migration Decisions, Earnings, and Unemployment Insurance”
- Garrett Anstreicher (University of Wisconsin), “To Grandmother’s House We Go: Childcare Time Transfers and Female Labor Mobility”
8-Minute "Flash" Talks
- Elena Falcettoni (Federal Reserve Board), “The Determinants of Physicians’ Location Choice: Understanding the Rural Shortage”
- Jacob Bastian (Rutgers University), “Does Working Cause Women to Vote Less and Become More Politically Conservative?”
- Matthew Staiger (Opportunity Insights, Harvard University), “The Intergenerational Transmission of Employers and the Earnings of Young Workers”
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3:15 p.m. |
Break |
3:30 p.m. |
Session III: HLH 018
30-Minute Presentations
- Elizabeth Luh (University of Michigan), “Criminal Court Fees, Earnings, and Expenditures: A Multi-state RD Analysis of Survey and Administrative Data”
- Andrew Simon (University of Chicago), “Skills, Majors, and Jobs: Does Higher Education Respond?”
- Andrew Garin (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign), “The Long-Run Impacts of Public Industrial Investment on Regional Development and Economic Mobility: Evidence from World War II”
8-Minute "Flash" Talks
- Samuel Young (Census Bureau/Arizona State University), “Unionization, Employer Opposition, and Establishment Closure”
- Tania Barham (CU Boulder), “The Benefits of Subsidized Employment: How and for Whom?”
- Yifan Gong (University of Nebraska–Lincoln), “The Role of Non-Pecuniary Considerations: Location Decisions of College Graduates from Low Income Backgrounds”
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5:30 p.m. |
Conclude, Depart for Reception at the Sheldon Museum of Art
UNL Campus | 12th and R Streets | Lincoln, Nebraska
Heavy hors d’oeuvres | Hosted bar with beer and wine
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