cover image: On the Determinants of Young Adult Outcomes: Impacts of Randomly Assigned Neighborhoods For Children in Military Families

20.500.12592/5g28zrl

On the Determinants of Young Adult Outcomes: Impacts of Randomly Assigned Neighborhoods For Children in Military Families

11 Jul 2024

Using the quasi-random assignment of 760,000 children in U.S. military families, we show that neighborhood attributes experienced during childhood have powerful impacts on SAT scores, college-going and earnings. For earnings and college going outcomes, location during high school is twice as important as location during elementary school, and for SAT scores, location during middle school has the strongest impact. There is little evidence of positive interactions in neighborhood quality across ages groups. Importantly, the same locations benefit children with equal potency across race or sex. Twenty years of exposure in a 1 standard deviation "better" county raises SAT composite scores by 10 points (1.8 percentiles), raises college attendance by 1.7 percentage points, earnings by 2.2 percentile points, and lowers EITC receipt by 10%. Impacts are three times more potent when we measure neighborhood quality at the zip code level: twenty years of exposure to a one (county level) standard deviation better zip code raises college going by 6.7 percentage points, SAT composite by 38 points and income percentile at age 25 by 6.1 points. By equalizing average neighborhood quality for Black and White families, we estimate that the Army's quasi-random assignment reduces Black-white earnings gaps among the children of Army personnel by 23%.
education economics of education labor economics labor studies health, education, and welfare children and families

Authors

Laura Kawano, Bruce Sacerdote, William L. Skimmyhorn, Michael Stevens

Acknowledgements & Disclosure
We thank Luke Gallagher for his assistance with the data on military personnel and their children. We thank Mason Parris-Bacon, Chuyang Guo and Matt Whalen for excellent research assistance. The views expressed in this paper are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the policy of the U.S. Department of Treasury, the U.S. Military Academy, the Department of the Army, or the Department of Defense. Any taxpayer data used in this research was kept in a secured IRS data repository, and all results have been reviewed to ensure that no confidential information is disclosed. The views expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Bureau of Economic Research. William L. Skimmyhorn I have received grant support from the TIAA Institute, the Social Security Administration and the Virginia Department of Veterans Services and financial compensation from the USAA Education Foundation, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, the Urban Institute, and ABT Associates.
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3386/w32674
Pages
69
Published in
United States of America

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