Anna Christina Raute University College London
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ANNA CHRISTINA RAUTE annaraute.wordpress.com [email protected] UNIVERSITY COLLEGE LONDON Placement Director: Orazio Attanasio [email protected] Graduate Student Coordinator: Daniella Fauvrelle [email protected] Office Contact Information: Home Contact Information: Department of Economics, 22 Whitehall Park London, University College London, Gower Street London, N19 3TN, UK London, WC1E 6BT Mobile : +44 (0)75 172 306 23 Tel.: +44(0)20 3549 5349 Personal Information: Date of birth: 6 March 1984 Sex: Female Citizenship: German Undergraduate Studies: Diplom (MSc equivalent), Economics and Business Administration, Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Germany, with distinction, 2007 Graduate Studies: MPhil in Economics, University College London, 2008 Ph.D. in Economics, University College London, expected completion date July 2014 Thesis Title: “Essays on the economics of universal child care programs, maternal labor supply and fertility” Thesis advisors and references: Prof. Christian Dustmann Dr. Uta Schönberg Dr. Magne Mogstad (Advisor) (Advisor) (referee) Department of Economics Department of Economics Department of Economics University College London University College London University of Chicago Gower Street Gower Street 1126, East 59th Street, London London Chicago, WC1E 6BT WC1E 6BT Illinois 60637 [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] Tel: +44(0)20 3549 5356 Tel: +44(0)20 3549 5351 Tel: +1 773 702 5079 Fields: Applied Microeconomics: Public Economics , Economics of Education, Labour Economics ANNA CHRISTINA RAUTE Teaching Experience: 2010-2013 The Economics of Migration, MSc, UCL, teaching fellow for Prof. Christian Dustmann 2012 The Economics of the Public Sector, 2nd and 3rd Year Undergraduate, UCL, teaching fellow for Dr. Christian Spielmann 2010-2012 Applied Economics, 1st and 2nd Year Undergraduate, UCL, teaching fellow for Dr. Uta Schönberg, Prof. Steve Machin and Prof. Christian Dustmann 2008-2009 The World Economy, 1st Year Undergraduate, UCL, teaching fellow for Dr. Hugh Goodacre Research Experience and Other Employment: since 2008 Centre for Research and Analysis of Migration, UCL Research Officer 2006-2007 RWI Essen – Germany Researcher, involved in Project: “Evaluation of European Union regional policies” Languages: German (Native); English (Fluent spoken and written); French (Intermediate); Spanish (Beginner) Honours, Scholarships, and Fellowships: Since 2011 Scholarship from the German National Merit Foundation 2011 Outstanding Teaching Assistant Award, UCL 2009 & 2010 Honourable Mention Teaching Assistant Award, UCL 2008-2009 Scholarship from the Anglo German Foundation 2007 David Pearce Scholarship, UCL Presentations: 2014 RES PhD Meetings; NIESR ; Family Economics Workshop – ZEW Mannheim 2013 Royal Holloway; Royal Economic Society Meetings; Migration: Global Development, New Frontiers 2012 3rd internal Norface Migration Conference 2011 European Society for Population Economics; 14th IZA Summer School; Spring Meeting for Young Economists; Migration: Economic Change, Social Challenge; 2010 Norface Migration Programme, World Bank and CReAM, Joint Conference - "Migration, Development, and Global Issues" 2009 PhD Transfer Seminar, UCL Professional Activities: Refereeing: American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, European Economic Review, Journal of Labor Economics, Scandinavian Journal of Economics Conference Organization: Member of the Organization committee for “Migration: Global Development, New Frontiers” conference (2013) and for "Migration: Economic Change, Social Challenge” (2011); EALE/SOLE 3rd Joint Meeting Student Conference Helper (2010) ANNA CHRISTINA RAUTE Research Papers: “Do financial incentives affect fertility - Evidence from a reform in maternity leave benefits” (Job Market Paper) I assess the effects of changes in financial incentives on fertility arising from a reform in parental leave benefits in Germany. The reform increased the financial incentives to have a child for higher educated and higher- earning women considerably. First I find large discontinuous jumps in overall monthly birth rates nine months after the passing of the law and an increasing trend in birth rates after the discontinuity. Second, I exploit the large differential changes in parental leave benefits across education and income groups to estimate the causal effect of parental leave benefits on fertility. I find a positive, statistically significant effect of an increase in benefits on fertility, which is mainly driven by women in the middle and upper-end of the education and income distribution. My findings suggest that earnings dependent parental benefits, which compensate women for their opportunity cost of childbearing accordingly, could be a successful means to increase the fertility rate of high-skilled and higher-earning women and to reduce the disparity in fertility rates with respect to mothers’ education and earnings. “Does universal child care matter? Evidence from a large expansion in pre-primary education” with Christian Dustmann and Uta Schönberg , March 2013 This paper studies the effect of a German universal child care program (aimed at 3- to 6-year-olds) on school readiness indicators. Our identification strategy exploits a federal policy reform which entitles every child to a child care slot from her third birthday to school entry, leading to a staggered expansion in child care facilities across municipalities. We find that longer public child care attendance strongly and robustly reduces language and motor skill problems and improves overall school readiness for children of immigrant ancestry, but has no significant effects for children of native ancestry. We offer three explanations for these findings. First, non- linear returns to the length of attendance may lead to higher overall effects for children of immigrant ancestry, as the reform had a differential impact on the child care starting age for children of native ancestry. Second, the two groups of children differ with respect to the counterfactual care arrangements. Third, due to their lack of proficiency in the host country language, children of immigrant ancestry may benefit more from public child care and exposure to other children. Our findings suggest that universal child care programs help to narrow the achievement gap between children of immigrant and native ancestry, potentially reducing life-time inequalities between these two groups. Work in Progress: “Parental leave benefits and mothers’ post-birth outcomes and children’s wellbeing- Evidence from moving to an earnings-related parental benefit system” with Uta Schönberg “Assessing heterogeneity in the effects of a universal child care intervention using marginal treatment effect estimates” with Thomas Cornelissen, Christian Dustmann and Uta Schönberg “Are family friendly workplace policies a valuable human resource tool?”.