Economic Policy
"Malpractice at the Bernanke Federal Reserve"
"Elizabeth Warren and the Inspector General of the 'Independent' Bureau of Consumer financial Protection"
"Ben Bernanke Versus Ben Bernanke: Fed Chair Flip-Flops With QE2"
"The GAO Must Perform a Diligent Independent Audit of the More Than $2 Trillion Issued By the Fed"
"When Five Hundred Economists Are Not Enough"
"Stop the Federal Reserve From Shredding Its Records"
"The Fed's Backroom Bailout Policy"
"The Painful History of Fed Transparency"
Does Debt Discourage Employment and Payment of Child Support? Evidence from a Natural Experiment
Substantial declines in employment and earnings among disadvantaged men may be exacerbated by child support enforcement policies that are designed to help support families but may have the unintended consequence of discouraging fathers' employment. Disentangling causal effects is challenging because high child support debt may be both a cause and a consequence of unemployment and low child support order compliance. We used childbirth costs charged in unmarried mothers' Medicaid-covered childbirths, from Wisconsin administrative records, as an exogenous source of variation to identify the impact of debt. We found that greater debt has a substantial negative effect on fathers' formal employment and child support payments, and that this effect is mediated by fathers' prebirth earnings histories.