Jesse Gregory
University of Wisconsin-Madison
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jesse Gregory.
The American Economic Review | 2013
Matías Busso; Jesse Gregory; Patrick Kline
This paper empirically assesses the incidence and efficiency of Round I of the federal urban Empowerment Zone (EZ) program using confidential microdata from the Decennial Census and the Longitudinal Business Database. Using rejected and future applicants to the EZ program as controls, we find that EZ designation substantially increased employment in zone neighborhoods and generated wage increases for local workers without corresponding increases in population or the local cost of living. The results suggest the efficiency costs of first Round EZs were relatively small.
Social Science & Medicine | 2013
Narayan Sastry; Jesse Gregory
We examined the effects of Hurricane Katrina on disability-related measures of health among adults from New Orleans, U.S.A., in the year after the hurricane, with a focus on differences by age, race, and sex. Our analysis used data from the American Community Survey to compare disability rates between the pre-Katrina population of New Orleans with the same population in the year after Katrina (individuals were interviewed for the study even if they relocated away from the city). The comparability between the pre- and post-Katrina samples was enhanced by using propensity weights. We found a significant decline in health for the adult population from New Orleans in the year after the hurricane, with the disability rate rising from 20.6% to 24.6%. This increase in disability reflected a large rise in mental impairments and, to a lesser extent, in physical impairments. These increases were, in turn, concentrated among young and middle-aged black females. Stress-related factors likely explain why young and middle-aged black women experienced worse health outcomes, including living in dwellings and communities that suffered the most damage from the hurricane, household breakup, adverse outcomes for their children, and higher susceptibility.
Demography | 2014
Narayan Sastry; Jesse Gregory
Using individual data from the restricted version of the American Community Survey, we examined the displacement locations of pre–Hurricane Katrina adult residents of New Orleans in the year after the hurricane. More than one-half (53 %) of adults had returned to—or remained in—the New Orleans metropolitan area, with just under one-third of the total returning to the dwelling in which they resided prior to Hurricane Katrina. Among the remainder, Texas was the leading location of displaced residents, with almost 40 % of those living away from the metropolitan area (18 % of the total), followed by other locations in Louisiana (12 %), the South region of the United States other than Louisiana and Texas (12 %), and elsewhere in the United States (5 %). Black adults were considerably more likely than nonblack adults to be living elsewhere in Louisiana, in Texas, and elsewhere in the South. The observed race disparity was not accounted for by any of the demographic or socioeconomic covariates in the multinomial logistic regression models. Consistent with hypothesized effects, we found that following Hurricane Katrina, young adults (aged 25–39) were more likely to move further away from New Orleans and that adults born outside Louisiana were substantially more likely to have relocated away from the state.
Archive | 2016
Christine E. Peterson; Narayan Sastry; Michael S. Rendall; Bonnie Ghosh-Dastidar; Jesse Gregory
The Displaced New Orleans Residents Survey (DNORS) is a study of individuals and families who resided in New Orleans, Louisiana, prior to Hurricane Katrina. DNORS assessed the medium-term social, demographic, health, and economic outcomes of this population in the fifth year after Hurricane Katrina struck New Orleans, which occurred on 29 August 2005. Fieldwork for DNORS was conducted in 2009 and 2010. This document provides an overview of DNORS, and serves as a users’ guide and codebook for researchers interested in the public use or restricted versions of the DNORS data.
Social Security Bulletin | 2011
Arif Mamun; Paul O'Leary; David Wittenburg; Jesse Gregory
Journal of Vocational Rehabilitation | 2007
David Stapleton; Gina Livermore; Jesse Gregory
Journal of Vocational Rehabilitation | 2007
David Wittenburg; Thomas M. Fraker; David Stapleton; Craig V. D. Thornton; Jesse Gregory; Arif Mamun
2017 APPAM Fall Research Conference | 2017
Morris A. Davis; Jesse Gregory; Daniel Hartley; Kegon Teng Kok Tan
Mathematica Policy Research Reports | 2010
Arif Mamun; Paul O'Leary; David Wittenburg; Jesse Gregory
Archive | 2016
Christine E. Peterson; Narayan Sastry; Michael S. Rendall; Madhumita Ghosh Dastidar; Jesse Gregory