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Daniel L. Millimet
Researcher at Southern Methodist University
Publications - 164
Citations - 5760
Daniel L. Millimet is an academic researcher from Southern Methodist University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Estimator & Childhood obesity. The author has an hindex of 38, co-authored 159 publications receiving 5196 citations. Previous affiliations of Daniel L. Millimet include Virginia Tech & Binghamton University.
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Strategic Interaction and the Determination of Environmental Policy across U.S. States
TL;DR: The authors examined whether U.S. states are engaged in strategic environmental policymaking and found that states are influenced by their neighbors, and the effect operates within a five-year window.
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Effects of Environmental Regulations on Manufacturing Plant Births: Evidence from a Propensity-Score-Matching Estimator
TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of air quality regulation on economic activity were examined using a unique county-level data set for New York State from 1980 to 1990, using a seminonparametric method based on propensity score matching.
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Empirical Tests of the Pollution Haven Hypothesis When Environmental Regulation is Endogenous
Daniel L. Millimet,Jayjit Roy +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors circumvent the lack of a traditional instrument within a model incorporating geographic spillovers utilizing three novel identification strategies, and consistently find evidence of environmental regulation being endogenous, a negative impact of own environmental regulation on inbound FDI in pollution-intensive sectors, particularly when measured by employment, and larger effects of environmental regulations once endogeneity is addressed.
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The Environmental Kuznets Curve: Real Progress or Misspecified Models?
TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore the importance of modeling strategies when estimating the emissions-income relationship using U.S. state-level panel data on nitrogen oxide and sulfur dioxide emissions, using the standard parametric framework as well as a more flexible semiparametric alternative.
Posted Content
Credit Programs for the Poor and the Health Status of Children in Rural Bangladesh
Omar Haider Chowdhury,Shahidur R. Khandker,Daniel L. Millimet,Daniel L. Millimet,Mark M. Pitt +4 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the impact of participation in group-based credit programs, by gender of participant, on the health status of children by gender in rural Bangladesh is investigated, and women's credit is found to have a large and statistically significant impact on two of three measures of the healthiness of both boy and girl children.