Civil Rights, the War on Poverty, and Black-White Convergence in Infant Mortality in the Rural South and Mississippi

D. Almond, K. Chay, M. Greenstone
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引用次数: 175

Abstract

For the last sixty years, African-Americans have been 75% more likely to die during infancy as whites. From the mid-1960s to the early 1970s, however, this racial gap narrowed substantially. We argue that the elimination of widespread racial segregation in Southern hospitals during this period played a causal role in this improvement. Our analysis indicates that Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, which mandated desegregation in institutions receiving federal funds, enabled 5,000 to 7,000 additional black infants to survive infancy from 1965-1975 and at least 25,000 infants from 1965-2002. We estimate that by themselves these infant mortality benefits generated a welfare gain of more than $7 billion (2005$) for 1965-1975 and more than $27 billion for 1965-2002. These findings indicate that the benefits of the 1960s Civil Rights legislation extended beyond the labor marker and were substantially larger than recognized previously.
民权,向贫困宣战,黑人和白人在南部和密西西比农村婴儿死亡率上的趋同
在过去的60年里,非洲裔美国人在婴儿期死亡的可能性比白人高75%。然而,从20世纪60年代中期到70年代初,这种种族差距大大缩小了。我们认为,在这一时期,消除南方医院普遍存在的种族隔离在这一改善中发挥了因果作用。我们的分析表明,1964年《民权法案》第六章要求在接受联邦资金的机构中废除种族隔离,这使得1965年至1975年期间有5,000至7,000名黑人婴儿存活下来,1965年至2002年期间至少有25,000名婴儿存活下来。我们估计,这些婴儿死亡率津贴本身在1965-1975年产生了70多亿美元(2005年美元)的福利收益,在1965-2002年产生了270多亿美元的福利收益。这些发现表明,20世纪60年代民权立法的好处超出了劳动力市场,并且比以前认识到的要多得多。
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