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Marcos A. Rangel
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Journal Articles
Publisher: Journals Gateway
The Review of Economics and Statistics (2019) 101 (4): 616–630.
Published: 01 October 2019
FIGURES
Abstract
View articletitled, Agricultural Fires and Health at Birth
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for article titled, Agricultural Fires and Health at Birth
Fire has long served as a tool in agriculture, but the practice's link with economic activity has made its health consequences difficult to study. Drawing on data from satellite-based fire detection systems, air monitors, and vital records in Brazil, we study how in utero exposure to smoke from sugarcane harvest fires affects health at birth. Exploiting daily changes in fire location and wind direction for identification, we find that late-pregnancy smoke exposure decreases birthweight, gestational length, and in utero survival. Fires less associated with smoke exposure predict improved health, highlighting the importance of disentangling pollution from its economic correlates.
Includes: Supplementary data
Journal Articles
Publisher: Journals Gateway
The Review of Economics and Statistics (2015) 97 (1): 1–13.
Published: 01 March 2015
Abstract
View articletitled, On the Blurring of the Color Line: Wages and Employment for Black Males of Different Skin Tones
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for article titled, On the Blurring of the Color Line: Wages and Employment for Black Males of Different Skin Tones
We evaluate the role skin color plays in earnings and employment for black males in the NLSY97. By applying a novel, scaled measure of skin tone to a nationally representative sample and by estimating the evolution of labor market differentials over time, we bridge a burgeoning literature on skin color with more established literatures on wage differentials and labor market discrimination. We find that while intraracial wage gaps widen with experience, gaps between the lightest-skinned black workers and whites remain constant, suggesting that a blurring of the color line elicits subtle yet meaningful variation in earnings differentials over time.