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The Impact of a Boston Desegregation Busing Program on Student Outcomes
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The Metropolitan Council for Educational Opportunity (METCO) program in Boston is a voluntary program for urban students and suburban school districts, that busses non-White students from Boston to wealthier, Whiter suburbs. In Busing to Opportunity? The Impacts of the METCO Voluntary School Desegregation Program on Urban Students of Color (NBER Working Paper 32864), Elizabeth Setren examines how participation in the METCO program affected students over the period 1991 through 2020.
METCO students attend schools where a much higher percentage of the students plan to go to a four-year college than in the Boston public school
From the NBER Bulletin on Health
Digital Health Technology and Patient Outcomes
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Digital health technologies, such as remote monitoring devices and telemedicine services, have attracted considerable interest due to their potential to reduce healthcare costs and improve patient outcomes. These innovations could, however, exacerbate health disparities if adoption rates are lower among underserved communities.
In Equity and Efficiency in Technology Adoption: Evidence from Digital Health (NBER Working Paper 32992), researchers Itzik Fadlon, Parag Agnihotri, Christopher Longhurst, and Ming Tai-Seale analyze a remote...
From the NBER Reporter: Research, program, and conference summaries
SNAP Eligibility Enforcement and Program Adoption
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The US safety net provides a wide variety of supports for low-income families from food assistance like the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) to wage subsidies like the Earned Income Tax Credit. However, receipt of these benefits among eligible households is not automatic — households must actively apply to each program from which they seek benefits. Enrollment processes often include lengthy procedures associated with demonstrating need or complying with other eligibility criteria during both the initial application and recertification periods.
The benefits of completing these administrative requirements are substantial — for example, the average SNAP participant receives roughly $2,500 per year in benefits. However, recent research on administrative burdens in government programs suggests that…
From the NBER Bulletin on Retirement and Disability
Inflation’s Impact on Social Security Disability Program Beneficiaries
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Social Security Disability (SSD) program beneficiaries, like other consumers, have been negatively affected by inflation over the past several years. In a survey from June of 2023, more than half (59 percent) of SSD program beneficiaries reported higher prices for the disability-related goods and services they need to purchase, and more than one-quarter reported reducing food spending to cover disability-related costs, Zachary Morris and Stephanie Rennane found in Examining the Impact of Inflation on the Economic Security of Disability Program Beneficiaries (NBER RDRC Paper NB23-08).
Using new survey data, the researchers found that 82 percent of beneficiaries reported out-of-pocket expenses related to their disability, with average annual spending of $4,412 and median spending...
From the NBER Bulletin on Entrepreneurship
“Third Places” Boost Local Economic Activity
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Sociologists have argued that “third places” like cafés, which provide opportunities for individuals to socialize and exchange ideas outside of home and work, improve neighborhood life. But what about the relationship between such places and economic activity? In Third Places and Neighborhood Entrepreneurship: Evidence from Starbucks Cafés (NBER Working Paper 32604), researchers Jinkyong Choi, Jorge Guzman, and Mario L. Small use data on US business registrations between 1990 and 2022 from the Startup Cartography Project to examine whether the opening of a Starbucks in a neighborhood with no previous cafés affects local entrepreneurship...
Featured Working Papers
“Buy Now, Pay Later” arrangements increase merchants’ sales by 20 percent, driven primarily by customers who have low creditworthiness, a study by Tobias Berg, Valentin Burg, Jan Keil, and Manju Puri finds.
From 1950 to 2021, economics papers by Hispanic, Asian, and, especially, Black scholars received between 5.1 and 9.6 percent fewer citations than those by Whites, as scholars tended to cite others from their own racial group, Marlène Koffi, Roland Pongou, and Leonard Wantchekon find.
Female patients cared for by male physicians with one additional daughter, compared to one additional son, are 5.5 percent less likely to die from female-specific cancers, a study of Danish data by Mette Gørtz, Ida L. Kristiansen, and Tianyi Wang finds.
Deforestation induced by international trade results in poorer health outcomes in Brazilian cities, even those far from trade activities, according to Xinming Du, Lei Li, and Eric Zou. They estimate that trade-related deforestation has accounted for more than 700,000 premature deaths over the past two decades.
In a cross-country study of the global automobile industry, Panle Jia Barwick, Hyuk-Soo Kwon, Shanjun Li, Yucheng Wang, and Nahim B. Zahur find a positive relationship between policy support for electric vehicles (EVs) and innovation activity, with a 10 percent increase in EV financial incentives for automakers and battery producers leading to a four percent increase in EV innovations.
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