PhD Candidate, Department of Economics

Contact Information

Department of Economics
Northwestern University
2211 Campus Drive
Evanston, IL 60208

Phone: 203-435-7771

Email: ashleywong2021@u.northwestern.edu
Personal Website: www.ashley-wong.net

 

Education

Ph.D., Economics, Northwestern University, 2022 (expected)
M.A., Economics, Northwestern University, 2017
B.A., Economics with Honors, Mathematics Minor, Dartmouth College, 2014

Primary Fields of Specialization

Labor Economics, Gender Economics

Secondary Fields of Specialization

Development Economics

Curriculum Vitae

Download Vita (PDF)

Job Market Paper 1

“Undergraduate Gender Diversity and Scientific Research” [PDF] (with Francesca Truffa)

Can diversity lead to greater research focus on populations underrepresented in science? Diverse researchers can bring new questions and perspectives, but exposure to diversity may also inspire scientists, regardless of demographic identity, to pursue new topics. This paper studies a new determinant of research ideas: the diversity of the academic environment. Between 1960 and 1990, 76 all-male US universities, including many elite and prominent research institutions, transitioned to coeducation. Using a generalized difference-in-differences design, we document a 42% increase in the number of gender-related research publications authored by scholars at newly coed universities. This increase is explained by a combination of a more diverse researcher pool in terms of gender and prior research interests, as well as a shift in the research focus of individual scientists towards more gender-related topics. A bounding exercise suggests that the direct effects of the policy on scientists’ research focus can account for more than half of these gains. These findings suggest that a diverse academic environment can influence the direction of scientific research.

Job Market Paper 2

“Peer Effects and the Gender Gap in Corporate Leadership: Evidence from MBA Students” [PDF] (with Menaka Hampole and Francesca Truffa)

Women continue to be underrepresented in corporate leadership positions. This paper studies the role of social connections in women’s career advancement. We investigate whether access to a larger share of female peers in business school affects the gender gap in senior managerial positions. Merging administrative data from a top-10 US business school with public LinkedIn profiles, we first document that female MBAs are 24 percent less likely than male MBAs to enter senior management within 15 years of graduation. Next, we use the exogenous assignment of students into sections to show that a larger proportion of female MBA section peers increases the likelihood of entering senior management for women but not for men. This effect is driven by female-friendly firms, such as those with more generous maternity leave policies and greater work schedule flexibility. A larger proportion of female MBA peers induces women to transition to these firms where they attain senior management roles. We find suggestive evidence that some of the mechanisms behind these results include job referrals and gender-specific information transmission. These findings highlight the role of social connections in reducing the gender gap in senior management positions.

Working Papers

“The Spillover Effects of Maternity Leave Extensions on Unemployment Insurance” [PDF] (with Francesca Truffa)

This paper examines the fiscal externality of maternity leave extensions on unemployment insurance using German administrative data. We exploit a reform in Germany to show that extensions of maternity leave reduce mothers’ UI takeup by 20% and total unemployment benefits by 22% in the first five years after childbirth. The timing of the reduction suggests the use of UI as a substitute for income replacement in the absence of paid leave. Importantly for welfare calculations, the reduction in UI benefits is substantial and represents almost half of the increase in maternity leave benefits. However, while this reduces the cost of extending maternity leave, it also reduces the mothers’ willingness to pay for the policy as the additional maternity leave benefits are offset by the reduction in UI payments. Incorporating effects on UI substantively reduces the implied marginal value of public funds (MVPF) of the policy. We also document considerable heterogeneity of these estimates by pre-birth earnings.

Works in Progress

“Business Collaborations and Female Entrepreneurship” [Pre-Analysis Plan] (with Edward Asiedu, Monica Lambon-Quayefio, and Francesca Truffa)

Search and contracting frictions can hinder the creation of business partnerships and the effectiveness of business collaborations. In developing countries, these relationships are often informal and conducted with family members and friends, suggesting that search costs and contracting frictions can be important barriers to firm growth. We conduct an RCT in Ghana on a sample of 1,772 female entrepreneurs to investigate the effect of an online matching service combined with access to legal information and advisory services on collaborations and firm performance. Specifically, we hypothesized that access to the matching service can alleviate search frictions. In addition, access to legal advisory may help mitigate contracting frictions by formalizing interfirm relationships and lowering risks of collaboration. The results of this study will shed light on the potential collaboration barriers faced by female entrepreneurs.

This study is registered in the AEA RCT Registry and the unique identifying number is: AEARCTR-0006439. Data collection in progress.

“Pension Caregiver Credits and the Gender Gap in Old-Age Income” (with Fabio Blasutto and Francesca Truffa)

We study a 2001 pension insurance reform in Germany that introduced additional caregiver credits for working mothers with children between the ages of 3 and 10. Using administrative social security data from Germany combined with a difference-in-differences design, we find that the reform leads to a 66.5% increase in yearly retirement contributions during the eligibility period. 66% of the total effect can be explained by a change in the labor market outcomes of eligible mothers, while the remaining 34% is the mechanical effect of the reform. We find a significant increase in employment earnings, driven by both an increase in employment and a switch from marginal to employment subject to social security contributions. This translates into a 9.1 percentage point (18.3%) reduction in the gender gap in lifetime non-marginal earning points. Finally, a simple life-cycle model predicts that the pension reform leads to a 9.8% increase in retirement income and a 12% reduction in the gender gap in old-age income.

Publications

Intergenerational mobility in self-reported health status in the US. (with Timothy Halliday and Bhashkar Mazumder). January 2021. Journal of Public Economics, Volume 193.

The ACA Medicaid Expansion in Michigan and Financial Health. (with Luojia Hu, Robert Kaestner, Bhashkar Mazumder and Sarah Miller). December 2020. Journal of Policy Analysis and Management

The Intergenerational Transmission of Health in the United States: A Latent Variables Analysis. (with Timothy Halliday and Bhashkar Mazumder). January 2020. Health Economics, Volume 29, Issue 3, Pages 1-15

The Effect of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act Medicaid Expansions on Financial Wellbeing. (with Luojia Hu, Robert Kaestner, Bhashkar Mazumder and Sarah Miller). July 2018. Journal of Public Economics, Volume 163, Pages 99-112

Teaching 

Econ 359: Economics of Nonprofit Organizations, TA, Winter 2021
Econ 339: Labor Economics, TA, Fall 2020
Econ 309: Public Finance, TA, Spring 2020
Econ 327: Economic Development in Africa, TA, Winter 2019, Winter 2020
Econ 201: Introduction to Macroeconomics, TA, Fall 2019
Econ 326: Economics of Developing Countries, TA, Fall 2018
Econ 340: Economics of the Family, TA, Spring 2018

Teaching evaluations are available here.

References

Prof. Matthew Notowidigdo (Committee Chair)
Prof. Seema Jayachandran
Prof. Jonathan Guryan
Prof. Lori Beaman