The Long-Run Effects of the 1930s Redlining Maps on Children

Author:

Aaronson Daniel1,Hartley Daniel1,Mazumder Bhashkar1,Stinson Martha2

Affiliation:

1. Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago.

2. US Census Bureau.

Abstract

We estimate the long-run effects of the 1930s Home Owners Loan Corporation (HOLC) redlining maps by linking children in the full count 1940 census to 1) the universe of Internal Revenue Service (IRS) tax data in 1974 and 1979 and 2) the long form 2000 census. We use two identification strategies to estimate the potential long-run effects of differential access to credit along HOLC boundaries. The first strategy compares cross-boundary differences along HOLC boundaries to a comparison group of boundaries that had statistically similar preexisting differences as the actual boundaries. A second approach only uses boundaries that were least likely to have been chosen by the HOLC based on our statistical model. We find that children living on the lower-graded side of HOLC boundaries had significantly lower levels of educational attainment, reduced income in adulthood, and lived in neighborhoods during adulthood characterized by lower educational attainment, higher poverty rates, and higher rates of single-parent households. (JEL G21, I26, I32, J13, N32, R23, R31)

Publisher

American Economic Association

Subject

Economics and Econometrics

Reference43 articles.

1. Aaronson, Daniel, Daniel Hartley, and Bhashkar Mazumder. 2021b. "Data and Code for The Effects of the 1930s HOLC "Redlining" Maps." American Economic Association [publisher], Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2021-10-25. https://doi.org/10.3886/ E127803V1.

2. Aaronson, Daniel, Jacob Faber, Daniel Hartley, Bhashkar Mazumder, and Patrick Sharkey. 2021. "The Long-Run Effects of the 1930s HOLC `Redlining' Maps on Place-Based Measures of Economic Opportunity and Socioeconomic Success." Regional Science and Urban Economics 86: Article 103622

3. Automated Linking of Historical Data

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