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Author:Rapaport, Carol 

Report
Housing demand and community choice: an empirical analysis

Housing demand reflects the household's simultaneous choice of neighborhood, whether to own or rent the dwelling, and the quantity of housing services demanded. Existing literature emphasizes the final two factors, but overlooks the choice of community. This paper develops an econometric model that incorporates all three components, and then estimates this model using a sample of households in Tampa, Florida. Incorporating community choice increases the price elasticity of demand and reduces the differential between white and comparable nonwhite households. The results are robust to the ...
Staff Reports , Paper 16

Journal Article
Welfare reform four years later: progress and prospects - summary of observations and recommendations

Economic Policy Review , Issue Sep , Pages 3-5

Journal Article
Commentary on two papers (Wolfe and Geronimus) on poverty's effects on health status

Economic Policy Review , Volume 5 , Issue Sep , Pages 37-39

Report
What do we really know about trends in outpatient medical expenditures for children, 1977-1987?

This analysis of outpatient medical expenditures for children identifies which children experience a relative decline in medical expenditures between 1977 and 1987. The paper also evaluates some standard methodologies used in medical demand estimation. Our semiparametic approach models expenditures simultaneously with the choice of insurance plan and the decision to incur any expenditures. Children in poor families and Hispanic children witness a decline in expenditures relative to other children. Children on Medicaid and black children experience stable expenditures over time. These results ...
Staff Reports , Paper 97

Journal Article
Health insurance trends point to an increase in uninsured children in New York and New Jersey

Between 1988 and 1997, the percentage of children in New York and New Jersey receiving public health insurance increased modestly, while the percentage of children with private insurance showed a sharp decline. The net effect of these changes has been a marked rise in the share of Second District children without any health insurance.
Current Issues in Economics and Finance , Volume 6 , Issue Feb

Journal Article
Measuring the effects of the September 11 attack on New York City

The attack on the World Trade Center had an enormous financial, as well as emotional, impact on New York City. This article measures the short-term economic effects on the city's labor force and capital stock through June 2002, the end of the recovery process at the World Trade Center site. Using a lifetime-earnings loss concept, the authors estimate that the nearly 3,000 workers killed in the attack lost $7.8 billion in prospective income. Moreover, the employment impact in the key affected sectors - such as finance, air transportation, hotels, and restaurants - translated into an estimated ...
Economic Policy Review , Volume 8 , Issue Nov , Pages 5-20

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