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https://hdl.handle.net/2142/120417
Description
Title
Essays on applied microeconomics
Author(s)
Rodrigues Silva Tabak, Daniel
Issue Date
2023-04-26
Director of Research (if dissertation) or Advisor (if thesis)
Marx, Benjamin M.
Doctoral Committee Chair(s)
Marx, Benjamin M.
Committee Member(s)
Christensen, Peter
Garin, Andrew L.
Bartik, Alexander W.
Department of Study
Economics
Discipline
Economics
Degree Granting Institution
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Degree Name
Ph.D.
Degree Level
Dissertation
Keyword(s)
Welfare removal
SNAP
TANF
Medicaid
Indiana
Crime
financial wellbeing.
Abstract
This paper investigates the effect of losing welfare benefits on local household financial
distress and crime. We estimate this effect using a quasi-experiment in which Indiana
outsourced and automated the processing of TANF, food stamps, and Medicaid applications.
Using consumer credit panel data, we explore this variation to find that the Indiana
welfare automation program significantly increased the number of accounts in collections,
collections balances, bankruptcy filings, and decreased credit scores. Using data from
the Uniform Crime Reporting series, we find that welfare automation policy has also
increased crime, primarily property crimes. In the second paper I use a propensity score
matching strategy to estimate the returns to for-profit higher education on labor outcomes.
We estimate that grant recipients had a relative increase in wages 0.40% four years after
receiving the grant(Average Treatment on the Treated). Further, I evaluate potential
heterogeneity in treatment effects on race, gender, and age. The unique empirical setting
allows for estimating the impact for an extensive range of ages. I find consistently large
returns even for older recipients. In the third paper, motivated by the literature in the
intersection of economics and political science, I investigate if black mayor’s breakthrough
elections might have contributed to the phenomenon of White flight from US cities. Our
results suggest there were some demographic changes associated with the event of the
breakthrough election, but we cannot fully separate or identify these effects from secular
effects in U.S. cities.
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