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CURRICULUM VITAE Hilary Williamson Hoynes August 29, 2018 Richard & Rhoda Goldman School of Public Policy Tel: (510) 642-1166 University of California, Berkeley FAX: (510) 643-9657 2607 Hearst Avenue Berkeley, CA 94720-7320 [email protected] https://gspp.berkeley.edu/hhoynes Date of Birth: August 31, 1961 Citizenship: USA DEGREES PhD., Economics, Stanford University, 1992 B.A., Economics/Mathematics, Colby College, 1983 PROFESSIONAL POSITIONS Professor of Economics and Public Policy, Haas Distinguished Chair in Economic Disparities, University of California Berkeley, 2013present Co-Director Berkeley Opportunity Lab, 2016 present Visiting Scholar, Russell Sage Foundation, Fall 2017 Visiting Scholar, Wagner School, New York University, October 2017 Visiting Professor, University College London, August 2006 July 2007 Visiting Scholar, LEAP Center, Department of Economics Harvard University, 2012 Professor, Department of Economics, University of California, Davis, 20052013 Associate Professor, Department of Economics, University of California, Davis, 20002005 Assistant Professor, Department of Economics, University of California, Berkeley, 19922000 Research Fellow, Aging Program, National Bureau of Economic Research, 1995 1996 Policy Analyst, ICF Incorporated, Washington, DC, 1983-1987 PROFESSONAL AND ADVISORY ROLES Member, Scientific Advisory Board, FAIR, Bergen, Norway, 2018 present Member, State of California Task Force on Lifting Children and Families out of Poverty, 2017 present.

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CURRICULUM VITAE

Hilary Williamson Hoynes

August 29, 2018

Richard & Rhoda Goldman School of Public Policy Tel: (510) 642-1166

University of California, Berkeley FAX: (510) 643-9657

2607 Hearst Avenue

Berkeley, CA 94720-7320

[email protected]

https://gspp.berkeley.edu/hhoynes

Date of Birth: August 31, 1961 Citizenship: USA

DEGREES

PhD., Economics, Stanford University, 1992

B.A., Economics/Mathematics, Colby College, 1983

PROFESSIONAL POSITIONS

Professor of Economics and Public Policy, Haas Distinguished Chair in Economic Disparities,

University of California Berkeley, 2013–present

Co-Director Berkeley Opportunity Lab, 2016 – present

Visiting Scholar, Russell Sage Foundation, Fall 2017

Visiting Scholar, Wagner School, New York University, October 2017

Visiting Professor, University College London, August 2006 – July 2007

Visiting Scholar, LEAP Center, Department of Economics Harvard University, 2012

Professor, Department of Economics, University of California, Davis, 2005–2013

Associate Professor, Department of Economics, University of California, Davis, 2000–2005

Assistant Professor, Department of Economics, University of California, Berkeley, 1992–2000

Research Fellow, Aging Program, National Bureau of Economic Research, 1995 – 1996

Policy Analyst, ICF Incorporated, Washington, DC, 1983-1987

PROFESSONAL AND ADVISORY ROLES

Member, Scientific Advisory Board, FAIR, Bergen, Norway, 2018 – present

Member, State of California Task Force on Lifting Children and Families out of Poverty, 2017 –

present.

Curriculum Vitae, Hilary W. Hoynes

Page 2 of 24

Organizer, Trans-Atlantic Public Economics Seminar, National Bureau of Economic Research, 2017 –

present

Member, Search Committee for Data Editor for AEA Journals, American Economic Association, 2017.

Member, National Academy of Sciences, Committee on Building an Agenda to Reduce the Number of

Children in Poverty by Half in 10 Years, April 2017 – April 2019.

Member, Federal Commission for Evidence-Based Policy Making, July 2016 – September 2017.

Member, Search Committee for Washington DC Representative for the American Economic

Association, 2016-2017

Member, Board of Directors, California Budget and Policy Center, 2016 – present

Chair, ESRC Research Centre Scientific Advisory Board, Institute for Fiscal Studies, London, 2015 –

present

Member, Executive Committee, American Economic Association, April 2016 – present

Mentoring Steering Committee, CSWEP, American Economic Association, 2015 – present

Member, Advisory Board, Arnold Foundation, Transformative research on the minimum wage, 2015 –

present

Member, Advisory Board, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, Stanford University, 2014 –

Faculty Affiliate, Institute for Research on Labor and Employment, UC Berkeley, 2014 – present

Member, Nominations Committee, NBER Public Economics Group, 2014 – present

Faculty Affiliate, Health Services and Policy Analysis PhD Program, UC Berkeley School of Public

Health, 2013 – present

Chair, Search Committee for Editor of Journal of Economic Perspectives, American Economic

Association, 2013

Member, Nominating Committee, National Tax Association, Spring 2012

Member, Advisory Committee, National Science Foundation, Directorate for the Social, Behavioral, and

Economic Sciences. 2012 – 2013

Member, National Advisory Committee, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Scholars in Health Policy

Research Program, September 2011 – 2013

Curriculum Vitae, Hilary W. Hoynes

Page 3 of 24

Program Chair, National Tax Association Annual Conference, (Jim Poterba, NTA President). Denver,

November 2009

International Research Fellow, Institute for Fiscal Studies, University College London, 2007 – present

Member, Advisory Board, Welfare Policy Research Project, University of California, Office of the

President, 2004 – 2008

Senior Research Affiliate, National Poverty Center, University of Michigan, 2003 – 2012

Member, Advisory Board, Public Policy Institute of California, 2002 – 2008

Research Associate, National Bureau of Economic Research, Public Economics Program, 2001 –

present

Member, CalWORKS Advisory Committee, RAND Corporation, 1999 – 2002

Research Affiliate, Institute for Research on Poverty, University of Wisconsin, Madison, 1994 –present

Faculty Research Fellow, National Bureau of Economic Research Public Economics Program, 1992-

2001

EDITORIAL POSITIONS

Board of Editors, American Economic Review: Insights, November 2017 –

Co-Editor, American Economic Review, January 2011 – December 2016.

Co-Editor, American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, 2007 – 2010

Associate Editor, Journal of Public Economics, 2006 – 2007

Associate Editor, Journal of Economic Perspectives, 2004 – 2007

Associate Editor, American Economic Review, 2002 – 2007

Editorial Board, The B.E. Journals in Economic Policy and Analysis, 2004– 2007

HONORS AND AWARDS

American Economic Journal: Economic Policy Best Paper Award 2018, for “Income, the Earned

Income Tax Credit, and Infant Health,” with Doug Miller and David Simon.

Member, American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 2018

Fellow, Society of Labor Economists, 2018

Curriculum Vitae, Hilary W. Hoynes

Page 4 of 24

Martin H. Crego Lecture in Economics, Vassar College, April 2018

Downing Lecture, University of Melbourne, November 2017

Frisch – Tinbergen Lecture, 29th EALE Conference, St. Gallen, September 2017

Royal Economic Society, Economic Journal Keynote, Bristol UK, April 2017

Association Lecture, Southern Economic Association, 2015.

Grossman Lecture, Colby College, 2015

Carolyn Shaw Bell Award, Committee on Status of Women in the Economics Profession, American

Economic Association, 2014

Rodolfo Debenedetti Lecture, Bocconi University, 2014

Joe Tiao Lecture, Kansas State University, 2012

Tom Mayer Distinguished Teaching Award, UC Davis, 2007

Graduate Student Advising Award, UC Davis, 2005

Graduate Student Teaching Award, UC Berkeley, 2000

Sloan Foundation Research Fellowship, 1997 – 1999

Graduate Student Advising Award, UC Berkeley, 1998

Sloan Foundation Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship, 1991 – 1992

Bradley Foundation Dissertation Fellowship, 1990 – 1991

Stanford University Fellowship, 1987 – 1988

Teaching Assistant Award, Stanford University, 1989 – 1990

PUBLICATIONS: ARTICLES AND CHAPTERS

“How Do the U.S and Canadian Social Safety Nets Compare for Women And Children?” (joint with

Mark Stabile), Forthcoming, Journal of Labor Economics.

Hoynes, Hilary and Diane Whitmore Schanzenbach 2018. “Safety Net Investments in Children,”

forthcoming Brookings Papers on Economic Activity.

Hoynes, Hilary and Ankur Patel, “Effective Policy for Reducing Inequality? The Earned Income Tax

Credit and the Distribution of Income,” Forthcoming, Journal of Human Resources.

Hoynes, Hilary, Jesse Rothstein, and Krista Ruffini. 2018. "Making Work Pay Better Through an

Expanded Earned Income Tax Credit" in Diane Whitmore Schanzenbach and Ryan Nunn, eds, The 51%

Driving Growth through Women's Economic Participation, The Hamilton Project.

Curriculum Vitae, Hilary W. Hoynes

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Bitler, Marianne, Hilary Hoynes and Elira Kuka (2017). “The Great Recession and Child Poverty,”

Journal of Policy Analysis and Management Vol 36, Issue 2, pp. 358-389.

Bitler, Marianne, Jonah Gelbach, and Hilary Hoynes (2017), “Can Subgroup-Specific Mean Treatment

Effects Explain Heterogeneity in Welfare Reform?” The Review of Economics and Statistics. 99(4): 683-

697.

Bitler, Marianne, Hilary Hoynes and Elira Kuka (2017). “Do In-Work Tax Credits Serve as a Safety

Net?” Journal of Human Resources Vol 36, Issue 2, pp. 358-389.

Hoynes, Hilary and Jesse Rothstein, 2017. “Tax Policy Toward Low-Income Families,” Economics of

Tax Policy, edited by Alan Auerbach and Kent Smetters, Oxford University Press.

Hoynes, Hilary and Diane Whitmore Schanzenbach, 2016. “U.S. Food and Nutrition Programs”, in

Economics of Means-Tested Transfer Programs in the U.S. Volume I, edited by Robert Moffitt,

University of Chicago Press.

Hoynes, Hilary, Diane Whitmore Schanzenbach and Douglas Almond, 2016. “Long-Run Impacts of

Childhood Access to the Safety Net,” American Economic Review, 106(4):903-934.

Hoynes, Hilary, Emilia Simeonova, and Marianne Simonsen, "Health and the labor market - New

Developments in the Literature," Introduction to Special Issue, Labour Economics. Volume 43,

December 2016.

Bitler, Marianne and Hilary Hoynes, 2016. “The More Things Change, the More They Stay the Same?

The Safety Net and Poverty in the Great Recession,” Journal of Labor Economics Vol. 34, No. S1, Part

2.

Anderson, Patricia, Kristin Butcher, Hilary Hoynes and Diane Whitmore Schanzenbach, 2016. “Beyond

Income: What Else Predicts Very Low Food Security Among Children?” Southern Economic Journal

82(4), 1078–1105.

Hoynes, Hilary, Leslie McGranahan and Diane Schanzenbach, 2015. “SNAP and Food Consumption”.

In SNAP Matters: How Food Stamps Affect Health and Well-Being, Edited by Judith Bartfeld, Craig

Gundersen, Timothy Smeeding, and James P. Ziliak, Stanford University Press.

Bitler, Marianne and Hilary Hoynes, 2015. “Heterogeneity in the Impact of Economic Cycles and the

Great Recession: Effects Within and Across the Income Distribution,” American Economic Review

Papers and Proceedings Vol. 105 No. 5 pp 154-160.

Bitler, Marianne and Hilary Hoynes, 2015. “Living Arrangements, Doubling Up, and the Great

Recession: Was This Time Different?” American Economic Review Papers and Proceedings Vol. 105

No. 5 pp. 166-170.

Curriculum Vitae, Hilary W. Hoynes

Page 6 of 24

Bitler, Marianne, Thurston Domina, Hilary Hoynes and Emily Penner, 2015. “Distributional Effects of a

School Voucher Program: Evidence from New York City” Journal of Research on Educational

Effectiveness Volume 8, Issue 3.

Hoynes, Hilary, Doug Miller and David Simon, 2015. “Income, the Earned Income Tax Credit, and

Infant Health,” American Economic Journal: Economic Policy 7(1): 172–211. AEJ Policy Best Paper

Award 2018.

Bitler, Marianne and Hilary Hoynes, 2013. “Immigrants, Welfare Reform, and the U.S. Safety Net,” in

Immigration, Poverty, and Socioeconomic Inequality, edited by in David Card and Steven Raphael,

Russell Sage Foundation, New York, NY.

Hoynes, Hilary, Doug Miller and Jessamyn Schaller, 2012. “Who Suffers During Recessions?” Journal

of Economic Perspectives, Volume 26, Number 3, pages 27–48.

Hoynes, Hilary and Diane Whitmore Schanzenbach, 2012. “Work Incentives and the Food Stamp

Program,” Journal of Public Economics 96(1-2): 151-162.

Hoynes, Hilary and Erzo Luttmer, 2011. “The Insurance Value of State Tax-and-transfer Programs,”

Journal of Public Economics, 95(11-12): 1466-1484.

Almond, Douglas, Hilary Hoynes and Diane Whitmore Schanzenbach, 2011. “Inside the War on

Poverty: The Impact of the Food Stamp Program on Birth Outcomes.” Review of Economics and

Statistics 93(2): 387-403.

Hoynes, Hilary, Marianne Page and Ann Stevens, 2011. “Can Targeted Transfers Improve Birth

Outcomes? Evidence from the Introduction of the WIC Program,” Journal of Public Economics, 95:

813–827.

Eissa, Nada and Hilary Hoynes, 2011. “Redistribution and Tax Expenditures: The Earned Income Tax

Credit.” National Tax Journal, 64 (2, Part 2), 689–730.

Bitler, Marianne and Hilary Hoynes, 2010. “The State of the Safety Net in the Post-Welfare Reform

Era,” Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, Fall 2010, pp. 71-127.

Hoynes, Hilary and Diane Whitmore Schanzenbach, 2009. “Consumption Reponses to In-Kind

Transfers: Evidence from the Introduction of the Food Stamp Program,” American Economic Journal:

Applied Economics Vol. 1, No. 4, pp. 109-139.

Hoynes, Hilary, 2009. “The Earned Income Tax Credit, Welfare Reform, and the Employment of Low

Skill Single Mothers” in Strategies for Improving Economic Mobility of Workers: Bridging Research

and Practice, Maude Toussaint-Comeau and Bruce D. Meyer, eds. Upjohn Press. 2009.

Bitler, Marianne, Jonah Gelbach and Hilary Hoynes, 2008. “Distributional Impacts of the Self

Sufficiency Project,” Journal of Public Economics, Volume 92, Issues 3-4, pages 748-765.

Curriculum Vitae, Hilary W. Hoynes

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Bitler, Marianne and Hilary Hoynes, 2008. “Welfare Reform and Indirect Impacts on Health,” in

Making Americans Healthier: Social and Economic Policy as Health Policy, R. Schoeni, J. House, G.

Kaplan, and H. Pollack, editors, Russell Sage Press, New York, NY.

Eissa, Nada and Hilary Hoynes, 2006. “The Hours of Work Response of Married Couples: Taxes and

the Earned Income Tax Credit,” in Tax Policy and Labor Market Performance, Jonas Agell and Peter

Birch Sørensen, eds. MIT Press, Cambridge MA.

Eissa, Nada and Hilary Hoynes, 2006. “Behavioral Responses to Taxes: Lessons from the EITC and

Labor Supply,” Tax Policy and the Economy Volume 20, pp. 74-110.

Bitler, Marianne, Jonah Gelbach and Hilary Hoynes, 2006. “What Mean Impacts Miss: Distributional

Effects of Welfare Reform Experiments,” American Economic Review, Volume 96, Number 4, pp. 988-

1012.

Hoynes, Hilary, Marianne Page, Ann Huff Stevens, 2006. “Poverty in America: Trends and

Explanations,” Journal of Economic Perspectives Volume 20, Number 1, pp. 47-68.

Bitler, Marianne, Jonah Gelbach and Hilary Hoynes, 2006. “The Impact of Welfare Reform on

Children's Living Arrangements,” Journal of Human Resources Volume 41, Number 1, pp. 1-27.

Bitler, Marianne, Jonah Gelbach and Hilary Hoynes, 2005. “Welfare Reform and Health,” Journal of

Human Resources Volume 40, Number 2, pp. 306-334.

Bitler, Marianne, Jonah Gelbach, Hilary Hoynes and Madeline Zavodny, 2004. “The Impact of Welfare

Reform on Marriage and Divorce,” Demography, Volume 41, Number 2, pp. 213-236.

Eissa, Nada and Hilary Hoynes, 2004. “Taxes and the Labor Market Participation of Married Couples:

The Earned Income Tax Credit,” Journal of Public Economics, Volume 88, Number 9-10, pp. 1931-

1958.

Blundell, Richard and Hilary Hoynes, 2004. “Has In-Work Benefit Reform Helped the Labour Market?"

in Seeking a Premier Economy: The Economic Effects of British Economic Reforms, 1980-2000, edited

by David Card, Richard Blundell and Richard Freeman. University of Chicago Press: Chicago.

Bitler, Marianne, Jonah Gelbach and Hilary Hoynes, 2003. “Some Evidence on Race, Welfare Reform

and Household Income,” American Economic Review Papers and Proceedings, Volume 93, Number 2,

pp. 293-298.

Hines, James, Hilary Hoynes and Alan Krueger, 2001. “Another Look at Whether a Rising Tide Lifts

All Boats,” in The Roaring Nineties: Can Full Employment Be Sustained?, edited by Alan Krueger and

Robert Solow. Russell Sage Foundation: New York.

Eissa, Nada and Hilary Hoynes, 2000. “Explaining the Fall and Rise in the Tax Cost of Marriage: The

Effect of Tax Laws and Demographic Trends, 1984-1997,” National Tax Journal, Volume 53, Number

3, Part 2, pp. 683-711.

Curriculum Vitae, Hilary W. Hoynes

Page 8 of 24

Chay, Kenneth, Hilary Hoynes and Dean Hyslop, 1999. “A Non-Experimental Analysis of ‘True’ State

Dependence in Monthly Welfare Participation Sequences,” American Statistical Association,

Proceedings of the Business and Economic Statistics Section, pp. 9-17.

Hoynes, Hilary, 2000. “Local Labor Markets and Welfare Spells: Do Demand Conditions Matter?”

Review of Economics and Statistics, Volume 82, Number 3, pages 351-368.

Hoynes, Hilary, 2000. “The Employment and Earnings of Less Skilled Workers Over the Business

Cycle,” in Finding Jobs: Work and Welfare Reform, edited by Rebecca Blank and David Card. Russell

Sage Foundation: New York.

Attanasio, Orazio and Hilary Hoynes, 2000. “Differential Mortality and Wealth Accumulation,” Journal

of Human Resources, Volume 35, Number 1, pp. 1-29.

Hoynes, Hilary and Robert Moffitt, 1999. “Tax Rates and Work Incentives in the Social Security

Disability Income Program: Current Law and Proposed Reforms,” National Tax Journal, Volume 52,

Number 4, pp. 623-654.

Chand, Harish, Hilary Hoynes and Michael Hurd, 1998. “Household Wealth of the Elderly Under

Alternative Imputation Procedures,” in Inquiries In The Economics of Aging, edited by David Wise.

University of Chicago Press: Chicago.

Hoynes, Hilary, 1997. “Work, Welfare, and Family Structure: What Have We Learned?” in Fiscal

Policy: Lessons from Economic Research, edited by Alan Auerbach. MIT Press: Cambridge, Mass.

Hoynes, Hilary, 1997. “Does Welfare Play Any Role in Female Headship Decisions?” Journal of Public

Economics, Volume 65, Number 2, pages 89-117.

Hoynes, Hilary, Michael Hurd and Daniel McFadden, “The Impact of Demographics on Housing and

Non-Housing Wealth in the United States,” in The Economic Effects of Aging in the United States and

Japan, edited by Michael D. Hurd and Naohiro Yashiro. University of Chicago Press: Chicago.

Hoynes, Hilary and Robert Moffitt, 1996. “The Effectiveness of Financial Work Incentives in DI and

SSI: Lessons from Other Transfer Programs,” in Disability, Work and Cash Benefits, edited by Jerry

Mashaw, Virginia Reno, Richard Burkhauser, and Monroe Berkowitz. Upjohn: Kalamazoo, Michigan.

Hoynes, Hilary, 1996. “Welfare Transfers in Two-Parent Families: Labor Supply and Welfare

Participation Under the AFDC-UP Program,” Econometrica, Volume 64, Number 2, pages 295-332.

Hoynes, Hilary and Thomas MaCurdy, 1994. “Has the Decline in Benefits Shortened Welfare Spells?”

American Economic Review Papers and Proceedings, Volume 84, Number 2, pages 43-48.

Curriculum Vitae, Hilary W. Hoynes

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WORKING PAPERS AND PAPERS UNDER REVIEW

“Local Food Prices, SNAP Purchasing Power, and Child Health,” (joint with Erin Bronchetti and Garret

Christensen), NBER wp 24762.

“Estimating the Health Impacts of WIC: A Regression Discontinuity Approach,” (with Marianne Bitler,

Janet Currie, Lisa Schulkind and Barton Willage).

Bitler, Marianne, Hilary Hoynes and Thurston Domina, “Experimental Evidence on Distributional

Impacts of Head Start,” Revise and Resubmit, Journal of Political Economy.

WORK IN PROGRESS

“Geographic Variation in SSDI Receipt: The Role of Claimants’ Representatives,” (joint with Nicole

Maestas and Alexander Strand)

“The EITC and Child Well Being” (joint with David Figlio, Krzysiek Karbownik and David Simon)

“The Long Run Effects of Great Society Programs” (with Martha Bailey, Maya Rossin-Slater and Reed

Walker)

“The Safety Net and Child Hunger,” (joint with Patricia Anderson, Kristin Butcher and Diane

Schanzenbach)

PUBLICATIONS: REVIEWS AND COMMENTARIES

Commentary on “Winning the War: Poverty from the Great Society to the Great Recession” by Bruce

Meyer and James Sullivan, Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, Fall 2012.

Review of Welfare Reform and its Long-Term Consequences for America’s Poor, edited by James P.

Ziliak. Industrial and Labor Relations Review, Vol. 64, No. 4, 2011. Available at:

http://digitalcommons.ilr.cornell.edu/ilrreview/vol64/iss4/13

Review of Repairing the U.S. Safety Net by Martha R. Burt and Demetra Smith Nightingale, Industrial

and Labor Relations Review, Vol. 64, No. 2 (January 2011), pp. 407-07.

“Taxing the Family,” Commentary on “Means testing and tax rates on earnings,” by Mike Brewer,

Emmanuel Saez, and Andrew Shephard. In Reforming the Tax System for the 21st Century: The

Mirrlees Review, Stuart Adam, Timothy Besley, Richard Blundell, Stephen Bond, Robert Chote,

Malcolm Gammie, Paul Johnson, Gareth Myles, and James Poterba, editors. Oxford University Press,

2010.

Review of The Geographic of American Poverty: Is There a Need for Place-Based Policies? by Mark

Partridge and Dan Rickman, Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 60(4):592-593. 2007

Curriculum Vitae, Hilary W. Hoynes

Page 10 of 24

Review of Public Policy and the Income Distribution, Edited by Alan Auerbach, David Card and John

Quigley, Journal of Economic Literature, Volume 45, Volume 1. March 2007.

Review of Means Tested Transfer Programs in the United States, Edited by Robert Moffitt, Journal of

Economic Literature, March 2005, Volume 43, Number 1, p. 164.

Commentary on “What Did Welfare Reform Accomplish?” by Rebecca Blank.” Conference in honor of

Eugene Smolensky, Berkeley, December 12-13, 2003.

Review of Prosperity for All? The Economic Boom and African Americans, Edited by Robert Cherry

and William M. Rodgers III, Journal of Economic Literature, December 2002, Volume 40, Number 4,

pp. 1268-1269.

Commentary on “How Are Families Who Left Welfare Doing Over Time? A Comparison of Two

Cohorts of Welfare Leavers” by Pamela Loprest. In Economic Policy Review, Volume 7, Number 2,

September 2001.

Commentary on “How Does a Community’s Demographic Composition Alter Its Fiscal Burden?” by

Thomas MaCurdy and Thomas Nechyba. In Demographic Change and Fiscal Policy, edited by Alan

Auerbach and Ronald Lee. Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, 2001, 149-154.

Review of What Employers Want: Job Prospects for Less-Educated Workers, by Harry J. Holzer.

Political Science Quarterly Volume 112, Number 2, p. 357, 1997.

Commentary on “Fundamental Tax Reform and Labor Supply” by Robert K. Triest.” In Economic

Effects of Tax Reform, edited by Henry Aaron and William Gale. Brookings Institution Press:

Washington DC, 1996, 271-275.

OTHER PUBLICATIONS: REPORTS, BRIEFS AND SUMMARIES OF RESEARCH

“Increasing SNAP Purchasing Power Reduces Food Insecurity and Improves Child Outcomes,” UP

Front Blog, Brookings Institution (joint with James Ziliak), July 24, 2018.

“The Next Round of Welfare Reform,” Pathways Magazine, Winter 2018, Articles from conference

organized by Marianne Bitler, Hilary Hoynes and James Ziliak.

“Head Start Programs Have Significant Benefits for Children at the Bottom of the Skill Distribution,”

UC Davis Center for Poverty Research, Policy Brief, Volume 6, Number 1. 2018.

“SNAP: Nutrition Aid Can Provide Long-Term Benefits,” Econofact.org. November 12, 2017.

“How do the U.S and Canadian social safety nets compare for women and children?” Martin Prosperity

Institute, Rotman School, University of Toronto. June 28, 2017.

“The Success of the Earned Income Tax Credit,” Econofact.org. May 8, 2017.

Curriculum Vitae, Hilary W. Hoynes

Page 11 of 24

“The EITC: A Key Policy to Support Families Facing Wage Stagnation” IRLE Policy Brief, Institute for

Research on Labor and Employment, UC Berkeley, January 2017.

“Revisiting the effects of Head Start,” IRLE Policy Brief, Institute for Research on Labor and

Employment, UC Berkeley, September 2016. (summary of research)

“Strengthening Temporary Assistance for Needy Families,” The Hamilton Project, Policy Proposal

2016-04 (with Marianne Bitler), May 2016.

“The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program: A central component of the social safety net,” IRLE

Policy Brief, Institute for Research on Labor and Employment, UC Berkeley, May 2016.

“Why SNAP Matters,” prepared for White House Conversation on Child Hunger, January 2016.

“The Safety Net as an Investment”, prepared for White House Conversation on Child Hunger, (with

Diane Whitmore Schanzenbach), January 2016.

“Fueling the Future: Long-term Economic and Health Benefits of SNAP,” Research Highlight,

University of California Office of the President, Global Food Initiative's Research to Policy, 2016.

“The Future of SNAP? Improving Nutrition Policy to Ensure Health and Food Equity,” Berkeley Food

Institute and Haas Institute Brief, September 2015 (with Sasha Feldstein).

“A Revolution in Poverty Policy: The Earned Income Tax Credit and the Well-Being of American

Families”, Pathways, Magazine of the Center on Poverty and Inequality, Stanford University, Summer

2014.

“Child Poverty and the Great Recession in the United States,” Unicef Framing Paper, Innocenti Working

Paper No.2014-11, UNICEF Office of Research, Florence, (with Marianne Bitler and Elira Kuka).

“In-Work Tax Credits and the Safety Net,” The NBER Digest, June 2014 (summarizing work joint with

Marianne Bitler and Elira Kuka).

“Building on the Success of the Earned Income Tax Credit,” Policies to Address Poverty in America,

The Hamilton Project, Washington DC, June 2014.

“The EITC Does Not Automatically Stabilize Income for All in a Recession,” Policy Brief, Center for

Poverty Research, UC Davis, August 2014 (summarizing work joint with Marianne Bitler and Elira

Kuka).

“Understanding Food Insecurity during the Great Recession,” Final Report for the Russell Sage

Foundation, Joint with Patricia M. Anderson, Kristin F. Butcher, and Diane Whitmore Schanzenbach,

May 2014.

“New Evidence on Why Children’s Food Security Varies Across Households with Similar Incomes,”

Final Report to University of Kentucky Center for Poverty Research, Research Program on Childhood

Curriculum Vitae, Hilary W. Hoynes

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Hunger, Joint with Patricia M. Anderson, Kristin F. Butcher, and Diane Whitmore Schanzenbach, May

2014.

“Linking EITC to Real Health Outcomes,” Policy Brief, Center for Poverty Research, Volume 2,

Number 1. UC Davis, 2013 (summarizing work joint with Douglas Miller and David Simon).

“Which Groups Suffer Most in the Labor Market During Recessions?” The NBER Digest, July 2012

(summarizing work joint with Douglas Miller and Jessamyn Schaller).

“The Great Society, Food and Nutrition Programs, and Family Well Being,” The NBER Reporter, 2010,

Volume 2.

“The Effect of WIC on Infant Health,” The NBER Digest, April 2010, (summarizing joint work with

Marianne Page and Ann Huff Stevens).

“The Earned Income Tax Credit Raises Employment,” The NBER Digest, August 2006, (summarizing

joint work with Nada Eissa).

“Poverty in America: Trends and Explanations,” The NBER Digest, June 2006, (summarizing joint

work with Marianne Page and Ann Huff Stevens).

“Has Welfare Reform Affected Children’s Living Arrangements?” Focus, the Newsletter of the Institute

for Research on Poverty, University of Wisconsin, Volume 23(2), Summer 2004, (summarizing joint

work with Marianne Bitler and Jonah Gelbach).

“The Impact of Welfare Reform on Living Arrangements,” in Poverty Research News, the Newsletter of

the Northwestern University/University of Chicago Joint Center for Poverty Research, Volume 6,

Number 3, pp. 14-15, May-June 2002 (summarizing joint work with Marianne Bitler and Jonah

Gelbach).

“The Employment, Earnings, and Income of Less-Skilled Workers Over the Business Cycle”, in Focus,

the Newsletter of the Institute for Research on Poverty, University of Wisconsin, Volume 20, Number 3,

Fall 1999 (summarizing Hoynes 1999).

“Married Women Work Less Because of the EITC,” The NBER Digest, April 1999, (summarizing joint

work with Nada Eissa).

“Married Couples, Work and the EITC”, in Poverty Research News, the Newsletter of the Northwestern

University/University of Chicago Joint Center for Poverty Research, Volume 2, Number 3, pp. 6-8,

Summer 1998 (summarizing joint work with Nada Eissa).

“Welfare and Demographic Outcomes: Is There a Connection?” in Welfare Reform: Facts, Myths, and

Consequences. Proceedings of a conference sponsored by UC Davis. Sacramento, California, 1996.

“Welfare Benefits Determine Hours of Work,” The NBER Digest, February 1994, (summarizing

Hoynes 1996).

Curriculum Vitae, Hilary W. Hoynes

Page 13 of 24

KEYNOTES AND INVITED LECTURES

Martin H. Crego Lecture, Vassar College, April 2018.

Invited Public Lecture, “Safety Net Investments in Children: The Evidence on SNAP/CalFresh,”

University of California Center Sacramento, April 2018.

Downing Lecture, University of Melbourne, November 29, 2017.

Frisch – Tinbergen Lecture, 29th EALE Conference, St. Gallen, September 21, 2017

Keynote Speaker, Canadian Women Economists Network, “Income support for families with children:

A comparison of neighbors,” Antigonish NS June 2, 2017.

Keynote Speaker, Canadian Labour Economics Forum, “Long Run Effects of the Social Safety Net,”

Antigonish NS, June 1, 2017.

Keynote Speaker, Royal Economic Society, “The Social Safety Net as an Investment,” Bristol UK, April

2017.

Keynote Speaker, “Why SNAP Matters,” Agricultural & Applied Economics Association, Boston, July

2016.

Invited Lecture, “Strengthening Temporary Assistance for Needy Families,” Forum on Strengthening

the Safety Net to Mitigate the Effect of Future Recessions, The Hamilton Project, May 2016.

Invited Speaker, “Why SNAP Matters,” Conversation on Child Hunger, The White House, January

2016.

Invited Public Lecture, “The In-Work Safety Net: Implications for Income Inequality in Light of

California EITC,” University of California Center Sacramento, February 2016.

Invited Public Lecture, “Why SNAP Matters: Effects on poverty, food insecurity and health,” Stanford

Center on Food Security and the Environment, January 2016.

Keynote Speaker, “The Rise of the In-Work Safety Net: Implications for Families in Strong and Weak

Labor Markets,” Association lecture, Southern Economic Association, November 2015.

Invited Speaker, Conference on The Welfare State and the Fight Against Inequality. Columbia

University, November 2015.

Keynote Speaker, “Poverty and Inequality: How U.S. Food and Nutrition Programs can Help,” UC

Berkeley Food Access and Food Security Summit. October 2015.

Keynote Lecture, “The Rise of the In-Work Safety Net: Implications for Income Inequality and Family

Health and Well-being,” Workshop on Health and the Labour Market, Aarhus University, June 2015.

Curriculum Vitae, Hilary W. Hoynes

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Workshop Organizer and Presenter. “SNAP: Overview and relationship to the labor market and the U.S.

safety net,” The Future of SNAP, UC Berkeley, May 2015.

Invited Speaker, “Poverty, Inequality and Trends in the Labor Market,” Step Up Silicon Valley, Santa

Clara University, May 2015.

Invited Public Lecture, “Poverty, the Social Safety Net and the Great Recession,” Grossman Lecture,

Colby College, February 2015.

Invited Speaker, “Who Suffers During Recessions? An Analysis of the United States in the Great

Recession,” European and American Labor Markets in the Crisis, DARES/CEPREMAP Conference,

Paris, November 2014.

Invited Public Lecture, “Poverty, the Social Safety Net and the Great Recession,” Rodolfo Debenedetti

Lecture, Bocconi University, Milan, October 2014.

Keynote Speaker, “The Rise of the In-Work Safety Net: Implications for Families in Strong and Weak

Labor Markets,” IZA/ IFAU Conference on Empirical Policy Evaluation, Uppsala Sweden, October

2014.

Invited Speaker, “The Past, Present and Future of the Food Stamp Program,” Discover CAL, San

Francisco, October 2014.

Invited Panelist, “The Path to a Fair and Inclusive Society: Policies that Address Rising Inequality,”

Economic Policy Institute, September 2014.

Invited Speaker, “Building on the Success of the Earned Income Tax Credit,” The Hamilton Project,

Policies to Address Poverty in America, Washington DC, June 2014.

Invited Speaker, “The Impacts of 50 Years of the Food Stamp Program,” Conference on the War on

Poverty at 50 Years, UC Davis Center for Poverty Research, January 2014.

Invited Speaker, “The More Things Change, the More They Stay the Same,” National Press Club,

Invited NBER Session on The Labor Market in the Aftermath of the Great Recession, June 2013.

Keynote Speaker, “Health Benefits of the Non-Health Safety Net,” Southern California Conference in

Applied Microeconomics, Claremont McKenna College, May 2013.

Invited Speaker, “Makers and Takers, An Economic Perspective,” CAL Day, April 2013.

Invited Speaker, “The Earned Income Tax Credit and Health,” UC in Sacramento, April 2013.

Invited Public Lecture, “Poverty and the Safety Net After the Great Recession,” Deep Issues of the 2012

Elections: Equality, Liberty and Democracy, Cornell University, November 2012.

Curriculum Vitae, Hilary W. Hoynes

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Invited Public Lecture, “Poverty: Facts, Causes and Consequences,” Joe Tiao Lecture, Kansas State

University, April 2012

“Why Poverty Research Matters,” Inaugural Event, Center for Poverty Research, UC Davis, November

2011.

Keynote Speaker, “Poverty in California,” Linkages Fall Convening, Sacramento California, September

2010.

Keynote Speaker, “Poverty in California: Facts, Causes and Consequences,” California Symposium on

Poverty, California Welfare Directors Association, Sacramento California, October 2009.

Invited Speaker, “Tax Policy for Low-Income Families: The Earned Income Tax Credit,” Tax Policy in

the Obama Era, UCLA Law School, January 2009.

Invited Panelist, “Effective Anti-poverty Programs in the U.S.,” SIEPR Policy Forum on Reducing

Global Poverty, Stanford University, May 2008.

Invited Speaker, “The Earned Income Tax Credit, Welfare Reform, and the Employment of Low Skill

Single Mothers.” Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago Conference on Strategies for Improving Economic

Mobility of Workers, November 2007.

Invited Speaker, “Income Support Policies and Disparities in Health,” Conference on Understanding and

Reducing Disparities in Health, National Institutes of Health, October 2006.

Invited Speaker, “Welfare Reform and Family Structure,” CHPPP Conference on Welfare Reform,

University of Chicago, April 2006.

Invited Speaker, “The Earned Income Tax Credit,” Presentation to President's Advisory Panel on

Federal Tax Reform, New Orleans, March 2005.

GRANTS AND CONTRACTS

Principal Investigator, “The Effects of Employment Incentives and Cash Transfers on Parent and Child

Outcomes: Long-Term Evidence from the Welfare Reform Experiments,” Russell Sage Foundation,

Social Inequality, $150,000, 2017-2019 (joint with Jordan Matsudaira, Zhuan Pei)

“The Impact of Childhood Nutrition Assistance on Child Health and Well-Being: Lessons from WIC,”

Robert Wood Johnson, Evidence for Action: Investigator-Initiated Research to Build a Culture of Health

(Marianne Bitler PI, Janet Currie, Lisa Schulkind, Barton Willage).

Principal Investigator, “The Real Value of SNAP Benefits and Health Outcomes,” University of

Kentucky Center for Poverty Research and U.S. Department of Agriculture, July 2015 - December 2016,

(with Erin Bronchetti and Garret Christensen).

Co-Principal Investigator, “Geographic Variation in SSDI Receipt,” NB16-XX/Social Security

Curriculum Vitae, Hilary W. Hoynes

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Administration/NBER Disability Research Center, 2015-2016 (with Nicole Maestas), $120,000.

Principal Investigator, “Child Poverty and the Safety Net in the Great Recession,” UNICEF, $26,220,

2014-2015.

Co-Investigator, “New Evidence on Why Children’s Food Security Varies across Households with

Similar Incomes,” University of Kentucky Center for Poverty Research, Research Program on

Childhood Hunger (funded by the Food and Nutritional Service of the U.S. Department of Agriculture).

(with Diane Whitmore Schanzenbach PI, Kristen Butcher and Patricia Anderson). 6/16/12 – 5/9/14,

$244,254.

Co-Investigator, U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services, Centers for Poverty Research, (Ann Huff

Stevens, PI), 10/1/11-9/30/16, $4 million.

Co-Investigator, Russell Sage Foundation, “Understanding Food Insecurity during the Great Recession,”

(with Diane Whitmore Schanzenbach PI, Kristen Butcher and Patricia Anderson). 2/1/12-7/1/13,

$154,663.

Subcontract Investigator, National Institutes of Health, 1P01HD065704-01A1 “Human Capital

Interventions Across Childhood and Adolescence” (Greg Duncan, UC Irvine, Principal Investigator).

Multi-campus, multi-project grant. 6/1/2011-6/30/2015.

Principal Investigator, Panel Study of Income Dynamics, Small Grant Program. “Childhood Exposure to

the Food Stamp Program, Long Run Health and Economic Outcomes.” $13,000, 2009-2010.

Principal Investigator, UC Davis, Committee on Research, New Initiative Grant, $20,000, 2009-2010.

Principal Investigator, USDA, Economic Research Service, FANRP, “Impact of Food Stamps and WIC

on Health and Long-run Economic Outcomes,” $100,000, Grant # 59-500D-7-0112, 10/1/07-9/30/09,

(Joint with Marianne Page and Ann Stevens).

Principal Investigator, The Social Research and Demonstration Corporation, Canada, Award program

for SSP Research, “Distributional Impacts of the Self-Sufficiency Project,” $30,000 2004-2006 (joint

with Marianne Bitler and Jonah Gelbach).

Co-Principal Investigator, Joint Center for Poverty Research, USDA Research Development Grants,

“The Introduction of the Food Stamp Program: Impacts on Food Consumption and Family Well-being,”

$25,000, 2005-2006 (joint with Diane Schanzenbach).

Principal Investigator, California Department of Social Services and UCD Center for Public Policy

Research, “Welfare Reform, Family Structure, and Children’s Living Arrangements,” $25,000, 2005-

2006.

Principal Investigator, Northwestern/University of Chicago Joint Center for Poverty Research, Small

Grant Program, “Is There a Welfare Trap? The Importance of Heterogeneity, State Dependence and

Initial Conditions,” $20,000, 1998 – 1999 (joint with Kenneth Chay and Dean Hyslop).

Curriculum Vitae, Hilary W. Hoynes

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Principal Investigator, Department of Health and Human Services, Assistant Secretary of Planning and

Evaluation, and Institute for Research on Poverty, “The Effect of the Earned Income Tax Credit on the

Labor Supply of Married Couples,” $22,584, 1996 – 1997 (joint with Nada Eissa).

Senior Investigator, National Institute for Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of

Health, “Income Support Policies and Welfare Dependency,” $1.1 million, 1994 – 1999. (With Thomas

MaCurdy PI).

Senior Investigator, National Institute on Aging, National Institutes of Health, “Wealth, Health and

Differential Mortality,” 1994 – 1997. (With Daniel McFadden PI).

Curriculum Vitae, Hilary W. Hoynes

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OTHER PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES

Co-Organizer, Trans Atlantic Public Economics Seminar, London School of Economics, June 2018.

Conference Co-Organizer, “The 20th anniversary of welfare reform: Lessons and takeaways,”

Brookings Institution, September 22, 2016. (Joint with Marianne Bitler, Ron Haskins and James Ziliak.)

See conference summaries in Fast Focus, a publication of the Institute for Research on Poverty and

Pathways, a publication of the Stanford Center on Poverty and Inequality.

Award Selection Committee, Committee on the Status of Women in the Economics Profession, 2016 –

External Review Committee, Harvard University, Department of Economics, 2016

Program Committee, American Economic Association, Annual Meeting, Chicago, 2017

External Review Committee, UC Santa Cruz, Department of Economics, 2015

Program Committee, 2015 Econometric Society World Congress, Montreal

Conference Organizer, “The Future of SNAP? Improving Nutrition Policy to Ensure Health and Food

Equity May 29, 2015, UC Berkeley.

Departmental Liaison, Committee on the Status of Women in the Economics Profession, American

Economic Association, 2015 –

Co-Organizer, All California Labor Economics Conference, Berkeley CA, October 2014

Advisory member, MDRC Corporation, Evaluation of Pilot Program for Expanding Childless EITC,

2014 –

Advisory Board Member, New War on Poverty in Alameda County, under Supervisor Wilma Chan,

2014 –

Visiting Committee, UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs, April 2014

Mentor, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Scholars in Health Policy Research Program, University of

California Berkeley, 2013 – 2016.

Technical Evaluation Support Group for the Social Security Administration Ticket to Work program

evaluation. Mathematica Policy Research (David Stapleton PI), 2010, 2012.

Technical Advisory Group Member, “SSDI Induced Entry,” RAND Corporation (Nicole Maestas,

Principal Investigator). Funded by Social Security Administration, 2009-2010

Co-organizer, Conference on “Families and Child Development,” University of Stavanger, Stavanger

Norway June 2010

Curriculum Vitae, Hilary W. Hoynes

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Member, Program Committee, EALE-SOLE Annual Meeting, London, June 2010

Co-Organizer, CSWEP-sponsored sessions on public economics, 2009 ASSA meetings, San Francisco,

CA January 2009

National Institutes of Health, National Institute on Aging, Review Committee Member, Aging Center

Grants, March 2009.

Member, External Visiting Committee, Wellesley College, Department of Economics, May 2009.

Member, 2003 Program Committee, American Economic Association Annual Meetings, Washington,

DC.

Participant, Congressional Research Briefing on The Earned Income Tax Credit: Help for Poor Working

Families, Washington DC, June 23, 1999

Co-organizer for NBER Universities Research Conference on the Impact of Recent Federal and State

Reforms in Public Assistance and Social Insurance Programs, Cambridge MA, May 14-15, 1999

Co-Organizer for Institute for Research on Poverty Conference on Problems of the Low Income

Population, Madison WI, January 4, 1996

Curriculum Vitae, Hilary W. Hoynes

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CONFERENCES AND INVITED SEMINARS (RECENT YEARS)

2018: Maryland ARE, Cornell PAM, SOLE, UC Santa Barbara, Nutrition Policy Institute.,

2017: Royal Economic Society, The Hamilton Project Women’s Economic Policy Summit, New York

University, University of Lausanne, UC Davis, University of Melbourne, World Bank, NBER India

Neemrana

2016: Stanford University, Sciences Po, Toronto University, Naval Postgraduate School, UC Center

Sacramento, CUNY Graduate School, NYU Wagner, Columbia, NBER Public Policies in Canada and

the US, Tel Aviv University, Russell Sage Foundation.

2015: University of Colorado Denver, Montana State, Institute for Research on Poverty University of

Wisconsin, Wesleyan University, Columbia University, University of Illinois Urbana Champaign, Santa

Clara University, Burch Center / Tax Policy Center Conference on Economics of Taxation

2014: UC Davis Center for Poverty Research “Conference on 50 Years of the Great Society”, Yale, UC

Berkeley Center for Health and Weight, UC Berkeley School of Public Health, Warwick University UK,

LSE/UCL Seminar UK, IZA/IFAU Uppsala Sweden, USC, University of Maryland

2013: UC in Sacramento Center, NBER Children, NBER Universities Research Conference, NBER

Conference on The Labor Market in the Aftermath of the Great Recession, UCLA, USDA conference on

50 years of SNAP, Loyola School of Law, University of Texas Austin, University of Houston / Rice

University, Tulane University.

2012: AEA Annual Meeting, University of Michigan Ford School, Wharton Public Policy, Princeton,

Kansas State University, UC Davis Center for Poverty Research, Society of Labor Economists,

Northwestern, UC Santa Barbara, UC Berkeley Departmental Seminar, Stanford University, Harvard

University, Dartmouth College.

2011: AEA Annual Meeting, Portland State University, University of Washington West Coast Poverty

Center, Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, NBER Summer Institute, All-CA Labor Economics

Conference, Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, Duke Sanford School, New York Federal Reserve

Bank, Chicago Harris School, Handbook of Public Economics Conference.

2010: UCLA Mini conference on Public Finance, NBER Conference on Fiscal Federalism, Williams

College, University of Stavanger Norway Conference on “Families and Child Development,” Brookings

Papers on Economic Activity Conference, University of Michigan PSID Small Grant Conference,

NBER Labor Studies Meeting, UC Berkeley Goldman School of Public Policy, UC Berkeley

Department of Economics.

2009: UCLA Law School and Tax Policy Center, Syracuse University, University of Michigan

Conference on Long Run Impacts of Early Life Events, UC San Diego, University of Stavanger,

Norway Conference on “Families and Child Development,” University of Copenhagen, NBER Summer

Institute, Preconference on Fiscal Federalism, Center for Poverty Research University of Kentucky

Curriculum Vitae, Hilary W. Hoynes

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Conference on “Appalachia and the Legacy of the War on Poverty: A Research Agenda,” USDA

Research Conference.

Curriculum Vitae, Hilary W. Hoynes

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GRADUATE AND UNDERGRADUATE TEACHING

Poverty, Inequality and the Social Safety Net (UC Berkeley, MPP)

Graduate Public Economics, 2nd Year PhDs (UC Berkeley, UC Davis)

Introduction to Public Policy (UC Berkeley, undergraduate)

Principles of Microeconomics (UC Davis)

Undergraduate Labor Economics (UC Davis)

Undergraduate Public Economics (UC Davis)

Undergraduate Data Analysis for Economists (UC Berkeley)

GRADUATE STUDENTS

Chloe East, 2016, CU Denver

Kevin Williams, 2016, Utah

Carloni, Dorian, 2016, CBO

Elira Kuka, 2015, SMU

Kevin Shih, 2015, RPI

Massimo Anelli, 2015, Bocconi University

Joseph Cummins, 2014, UC Riverside

David Simon, 2013, University of Connecticut

Jessamyn Schaller, 2012, University of Arizona

Ankur Patel, 2012, US Department of Treasury

Nick Sanders, 2012, Cornell PAM, (previously William and Mary)

Danielle Sandler, 2012, U.S. Census (previously Giant Oak, LLC)

Ryan Sandler, 2012, FTC

Teny Maghakian, 2012, Santa Clara University (previously UC Merced)

Lisa Schulkind, 2012, UNC Charlotte (previously Trinity College)

Matt Larsen, 2012, Tulane University Post Doc

Brock Smith, Oxford Post Doc

Yoonie Chung, 2012, Korea Energy Institute

TJ McCarthy, 2012, USC Policy School

Jed Richardson, 2011, University of Wisconsin, Center for Education Research

Jeremy Moulton, 2011, UNC Chapel Hill, Public Policy

Charles Stoecker, 2010, Tulane University School of Public Health (previously CDC postdoc)

Peter Huckfeldt, 2009, University of Minnesota (previously RAND)

Alan Barreca, 2008, Tulane University

Michelle Amaral, 2007, University of the Pacific

Melanie Guldi, 2006, University of Central Florida (previously Mt Holyoke College)

Marcella Hemmeter, 2006, U.S. Naval Academy

Chad Sparber, 2004, Colgate University

Rhiannon Patterson, GAO

Suzanne O’Keefe, 2001, Sacramento State University

Darren Lubotsky, 2000 University of Illinois, Chicago (previously UI Urbana-Champaign)

Krishna Pendakur, Simon Fraser

Gary Painter, USC Public Policy

Curriculum Vitae, Hilary W. Hoynes

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OTHER TEACHING ACTIVITIES

“Poverty and the Safety Net in the United States”, Presentation to Undergraduate Economics

Association, UC Berkeley, April 2014.

Short Course in Taxes and Household Labor Supply, Uppsala University, June 2012

External Reviewer, PhD Thesis, University of Oslo, November 2009.

OTHER EDITORIAL ACTIVITIES

Ad Hoc Reviewer for Journals:

American Economic Review, Berkeley Electronic Press, Canadian Journal of Economics,

Demography, Econometrica, Economic Inquiry, Economic Journal, Industrial and Labor Relations

Review, Industrial Relations, Journal of Business and Economic Statistics, Journal of Econometrics,

Journal of Human Resources, Journal of Labor Economics, Journal of Policy Analysis and

Management, Journal of Political Economy, Journal of Public Economics, Labour Economics,

National Tax Journal, Quarterly Journal of Economics, Regional Science and Urban Economics,

Review of Economics and Statistics, The Review of Economic Studies, Social Science Quarterly,

Southern Economic Journal, Sphere Institute.

Ad Hoc Reviewer for Research Proposals:

National Science Foundation, Census Regional Data Centers, Public Policy Institute of California,

California Policy Research Center, Russell Sage Foundation, Smith Richardson Foundation.

Ad Hoc Reviewer for Publishers:

Addison-Wesley, Harvard University Press, McGraw-Hill, University of Chicago Press, Cambridge

University Press, Russell Sage Foundation.

Invited to provide “blurb” for publishers:

Russell Sage Foundation (2009), Cambridge University Press (2009)

Curriculum Vitae, Hilary W. Hoynes

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UNIVERSITY AND DEPARTMENT SERVICE

Grand Challenges Committee, University of California, Berkeley, 2018.

Board Member, Berkeley Initiative for Transparency in the Social Sciences, University of California

Berkeley, 2017 –

Co-Director, Berkeley Opportunity Lab, University of California Berkeley, 2016 –

Search Committee, Interim Dean of Data Sciences, 2017

Member, Faculty Mentoring Team, Journal Publishing, UC Berkeley Division of Equity & Inclusion and

the Office for Faculty Equity & Welfare, 2014 –

Executive Committee, Center for Poverty Research, UC Davis, 2011– 2013

Member, Social Science Advisory Council, Division of Social Sciences, 2012 – 2013

Chair, Department Recruiting, Economics Department, UC Davis, 2010-2011.

Member, Letters and Sciences Faculty Personnel Committee, UC Davis, 2008-2009, 2009-2010.

Member, Recruitment Advisory Committee for Dean of the Division of Social Sciences, 2007-2008,

2008-2009.

External Member, Faculty Search Committee, Agriculture and Resource Economics, UC Davis, 2008-

2009.

Ad Hoc Personnel Committee Member, UC Davis, 2005-2006.

Recruiting Chair, Department of Economics, UC Davis, 2005-2006

Undergraduate Studies Chair, Department of Economics, UC Davis, 2003-2006

Chair, Committee to Reform Undergraduate Economics Program, Department of Economics, UC Davis

2002-2003

External Committee Member, Recruiting, Department of Political Science, UC Davis, 2002-2003

Social Sciences Program Committee, UC Davis, 2001-2003

Economy, Justice, and Society Program Committee, UC Davis, 2001-2010

Program Director, Program on Welfare, Education, and Inequality, Institute for Governmental Affairs,

UC Davis, 2001-2003

Divisional Advisory Committee, College of Letters and Sciences, 2001-2002.