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Daniel Aaronson

Other affiliations: Federal Reserve System
Bio: Daniel Aaronson is an academic researcher from Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago. The author has contributed to research in topics: Minimum wage & Unemployment. The author has an hindex of 29, co-authored 102 publications receiving 4187 citations. Previous affiliations of Daniel Aaronson include Federal Reserve System.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the importance of teachers in Chicago public high schools using matched student-teacher administrative data was estimated using a simple linear regression model, showing that one standard deviation, one semester improvement in teacher quality raises student math scores by 0.13 grade equivalents.
Abstract: We estimate the importance of teachers in Chicago public high schools using matched student‐teacher administrative data. A one standard deviation, one semester improvement in math teacher quality raises student math scores by 0.13 grade equivalents or, over 1 year, roughly one‐fifth of average yearly gains. Estimates are relatively stable over time, reasonably impervious to a variety of conditioning variables, and do not appear to be driven by classroom sorting or selective score reporting. Also, teacher quality is particularly important for lower‐ability students. Finally, traditional human capital measures—including those determining compensation—explain little of the variation in estimated quality.

1,009 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Aaronson et al. as discussed by the authors introduced an approach based on the observation that the latent factors associated with neighborhood choice do not vary across siblings, and therefore, family residential changes provided a source of neighborhood background variation that is free of the family-specific heterogeneity biases associated with neighbourhood selection.
Abstract: Studies that attempt to measure the impact of neighborhoods on children's outcomes are susceptible to bias because families choose where to live. As a result, the effect of family unobservables, such as the importance parents place on their children's welfare, and other unobservables that are common to geographically clustered households, may be mistakenly attributed to neighborhood influences. Previous studies that attempt to correct for this selection bias have used questionable instrumental variables. This paper introduces an approach based on the observation that the latent factors associated with neighborhood choice do not vary across siblings. Therefore, family residential changes provide a source of neighborhood background variation that is free of the family-specific heterogeneity biases associated with neighborhood selection. Using a sample of multichild families whose children are separated in age by at least three years, I estimate family fixed effect equations of children's educational outcomes. The fixed effect results suggest that the impact of neighborhoods may exist even when family-specific unobservables are controlled. This finding is robust to many changes to estimation techniques, outcome measures, variable definitions, and samples but is sensitive to the exact formulation of the neighborhood measure. Daniel Aaronson is a researcher at the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago. He thanks Joe Altonji, Becky Blank, Greg Duncan, Judy Hellerstein, Sandy Jencks, Bruce Meyer, John Karl Scholz, Lauren Sinai, and the reviewers for helpful suggestions. He takes responsibility for all errors and omissions. The views expressed in this paper are those of the author and are not necessarily those of the Federal Re

365 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article found that homeownership is correlated with higher school attainment, and that some of the homeownership effect found by Green and White is driven by family characteristics associated with homeownership, especially residential stability.

337 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors estimate trends in intergenerational economic mobility by matching men in the Census to synthetic parents in the prior generation, finding that mobility increased from 1950 to 1980 but has declined sharply since 1980.
Abstract: We estimate trends in intergenerational economic mobility by matching men in the Census to synthetic parents in the prior generation. We find that mobility increased from 1950 to 1980 but has declined sharply since 1980. While our estimator places greater weight on location effects than the standard intergenerational coefficient, the size of the bias appears to be small. Our preferred results suggest that earnings are regressing to the mean more slowly now than at any time since World War II, causing economic differences between families to become more persistent. However, current rates of positional mobility appear historically normal.

239 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors found that after a minimum wage increase, household income rises on average by about $250 per quarter and spending by roughly $700 per quarter for households with minimum wage workers, and that most of the spending response is caused by a small number of households who purchase vehicles.
Abstract: Immediately following a minimum wage hike, household income rises on average by about $250 per quarter and spending by roughly $700 per quarter for households with minimum wage workers. Most of the spending response is caused by a small number of households who purchase vehicles. Furthermore, we find that the high spending levels are financed through increases in collateralized debt. Our results are consistent with a model where households can borrow against durables and face costs of adjusting their durables stock. (JEL D12, D14, D91, J38)

196 citations


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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide a unified and comprehensive theory of structural time series models, including a detailed treatment of the Kalman filter for modeling economic and social time series, and address the special problems which the treatment of such series poses.
Abstract: In this book, Andrew Harvey sets out to provide a unified and comprehensive theory of structural time series models. Unlike the traditional ARIMA models, structural time series models consist explicitly of unobserved components, such as trends and seasonals, which have a direct interpretation. As a result the model selection methodology associated with structural models is much closer to econometric methodology. The link with econometrics is made even closer by the natural way in which the models can be extended to include explanatory variables and to cope with multivariate time series. From the technical point of view, state space models and the Kalman filter play a key role in the statistical treatment of structural time series models. The book includes a detailed treatment of the Kalman filter. This technique was originally developed in control engineering, but is becoming increasingly important in fields such as economics and operations research. This book is concerned primarily with modelling economic and social time series, and with addressing the special problems which the treatment of such series poses. The properties of the models and the methodological techniques used to select them are illustrated with various applications. These range from the modellling of trends and cycles in US macroeconomic time series to to an evaluation of the effects of seat belt legislation in the UK.

4,252 citations

ReportDOI
TL;DR: This article examined the frequency of price changes for 350 categories of goods and services covering about 70 percent of consumer spending, on the basis of unpublished data from the Bureau of Labor Statisti...
Abstract: We examine the frequency of price changes for 350 categories of goods and services covering about 70 percent of consumer spending, on the basis of unpublished data from the Bureau of Labor Statisti...

1,417 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the effects of various types of education and training on the productivity of teachers in promoting student achievement were studied. But they did not find a consistent relationship between formal professional development training and teacher productivity, and they found no evidence that teachers' pre-service training or college entrance exam scores are related to productivity.

1,263 citations

Book ChapterDOI
TL;DR: The authors summarizes what has been learned from recent research on intergenerational transmission of earnings status, using a simple theoretical model to highlight several key concepts, and discusses the connections among three related empirical literatures: on sibling correlations in earnings, on the intragenerational elasticity of offspring's earnings with respect to parents' earnings or income, and on neighborhood effects.
Abstract: This chapter summarizes what has been learned from recent research on intergenerational transmission of earnings status. The chapter begins by using a simple theoretical model to highlight several key concepts. Then it reviews (and discusses the connections among) three related empirical literatures: on sibling correlations in earnings, on the intergenerational elasticity of offspring’s earnings with respect to parents’ earnings or income, and on neighborhood effects. © 1999 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

1,188 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Miles Corak1
TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the underlying drivers of opportunity that generate the relationship between inequality and intergenerational mobility, and explain why America differs from other countries, how intergeneration mobility will change in an era of higher inequality, and how the process is different for the top 1 percent.
Abstract: My focus is on the degree to which increasing inequality in the high-income countries, particularly in the United States, is likely to limit economic mobility for the next generation of young adults. I discuss the underlying drivers of opportunity that generate the relationship between inequality and intergenerational mobility. The goal is to explain why America differs from other countries, how intergenerational mobility will change in an era of higher inequality, and how the process is different for the top 1 percent. I begin by presenting evidence that countries with more inequality at one point in time also experience less earnings mobility across the generations, a relationship that has been called “The Great Gatsby Curve.” The interaction between families, labor markets, and public policies all structure a child's opportunities and determine the extent to which adult earnings are related to family background—but they do so in different ways across national contexts. Both cross-country compa...

1,169 citations