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Long-Term Neighborhood Effects on Low-Income Families: Evidence from Moving to Opportunity

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2013

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American Economic Association
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Ludwig, Jens, Greg J. Duncan, Lisa A. Gennetian, Lawrence F. Katz, Ronald C. Kessler, Jeffrey R. Kling, and Lisa Sanbonmatsu. 2013. “Long-Term Neighborhood Effects on Low-Income Families: Evidence from Moving to Opportunity.” American Economic Review 103, no. 3: 226–231.

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Abstract

We examine long-term neighborhood effects on low-income families using data from the Moving to Opportunity (MTO) randomized housing-mobility experiment. This experiment offered to some public-housing families but not to others the chance to move to less-disadvantaged neighborhoods. We show that ten to 15 years after baseline, MTO: (i) improves adult physical and mental health; (ii) has no detectable effect on economic outcomes or youth schooling or physical health; and (iii) has mixed results by gender on other youth outcomes, with girls doing better on some measures and boys doing worse. Despite the somewhat mixed pattern of impacts on traditional behavioral outcomes, MTO moves substantially improve adult subjective well-being.

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General Welfare, Welfare and Poverty: Government Programs; Provision and Effects of Welfare Programs, Urban, Rural, Regional, Real Estate, and Transportation Economics: Regional Migration, Regional Labor Markets, Population, Neighborhood Characteristics

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Long-Term Neighborhood Effects on Low-Income Families:… : DASH Story 2015-10-02
Doing research for a presentation for work--I've looked for this precise paper forever but because it was a conference proceeding, I couldn't easily access it without Interlibrary Loan and all the time that entails.