Publications by authors named "Joseph Ferrie"

There has been longstanding and widespread interdisciplinary interest in understanding intergenerational processes, or the extent to which conditions repeat themselves across generations. However, due to the difficulty of collecting longitudinal, multigenerational data on early life conditions, less is known about the extent to which offspring experience the same early life conditions that their parents experienced in their own early lives. Using data from a socioeconomically diverse, White U.

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The Flint, Michigan water crisis renewed concern about lead toxicity in drinking water. While lead in drinking water has been shown to negatively affect cognition among children, much less is known about its long-term consequences for late-life cognition. Using a nationally representative sample of U.

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Almond (2006) argues that in utero exposure to the 1918 influenza pandemic reduced the 1919 birth cohort's adult socioeconomic status (SES). We show that this cohort came from lower-SES families, which is incompatible with Almond's cohort-comparison identification strategy. The adult SES deficit is reduced after background characteristics are controlled for; it is small and statistically insignificant in models that include household fixed effects.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study uses data from 1850 to 2015, analyzing 5 million household and population records to explore trends in intergenerational social mobility in the U.S.
  • While intergenerational mobility has declined over the last 150 years, the rate of decline is slower than previously believed, with occupational rank correlations rising particularly for those born before 1900.
  • Although overall rank-based measures of mobility have remained stable, absolute mobility for the non-farm population increased for cohorts born before 1900 but has decreased for those born after 1940.
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Does the lack of wealth constrain parents' investments in the human capital of their descendants? We conduct a nearly fifty-year followup of an episode in which such constraints would have been plausibly relaxed by a random allocation of substantial wealth to families. We track descendants of participants in Georgia's Cherokee Land Lottery of 1832, in which nearly every adult white male in Georgia took part. Winners received close to the median level of wealth - a large financial windfall orthogonal to participants' underlying characteristics that might have also affected their children's human capital.

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We estimate the long-run impact of cash transfers to poor families on children's longevity, educational attainment, nutritional status, and income in adulthood. To do so, we collected individual-level administrative records of applicants to the Mothers' Pension program-the first government-sponsored welfare program in the United States (1911-1935)-and matched them to census, WWII, and death records. Male children of accepted applicants lived one year longer than those of rejected mothers.

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Article Synopsis
  • Higher exposure to water-borne lead among male WWII U.S. Army enlistees was linked to lower intelligence test scores.
  • Urban residence and water pH levels were used to estimate lead exposure, with those living in areas with lower pH (6) scoring six points lower on intelligence tests compared to those in areas with neutral pH (7).
  • The study suggests that increased exposure over time resulted in lower scores, highlighting a lack of awareness about the dangers of lead in water systems during that period.
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