Place, peers, and the teenage years: Long-run neighborhood effects in Australia
By: Deutscher, Nathan
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BookPublisher: American Economic Journal: Applied Economics Description: 12(2), Apr, 2020: p.220-249.Subject(s): Australia, Teenagers| Item type | Current location | Call number | Vol info | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Indian Institute of Public Administration | 12(2), Apr, 2020: p.220-249 | Available | AR124419 |
I use variation in the age at which children move to show that where an Australian child grows up has a causal effect on their adult income, education, marriage, and fertility. In doing so, I replicate the findings of Chetty and Hendren (2018a) in a country with less inequality, more social mobility, and different institutions. Across all outcomes, place typically matters most during the teenage years. Finally, I provide suggestive evidence of peer effects using cross-cohort variation in the peers of permanent postcode residents: those born into a richer cohort for their postcode tend to end up with higher incomes themselves. - Reproduced


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