Congratulations to Barbara Petrongolo for being appointed as AER coeditor, handling papers in labor and related fields. Her term will start on September 1. I’m delighted to have her on our team. @aeajournals.bsky.social #EconSky
Posts by Mathias Fjællegaard Jensen
Breaking new grounds in demographic science:
Fresh research from
@mortenkthomsen.bsky.social, @andreatilstra.bsky.social and Jane Greve investigates mortality patterns in the intersex population, a group long absent from population health research.
www.demography.ox.ac.uk/news/new-wor...
Shameless self-publicity. My new book "Why Immigration Policy Is Hard And How To Make It Better" is out.
www.politybooks.com/bookdetail?b...
Substantial earnings penalties exist for racial minorities in France. Compared to the US, lower overall inequality benefits French racial minorities, but rank gaps are comparable, from Yajna Govind, Paolo Santini, and Ellora Derenoncourt https://www.nber.org/papers/w34013
📅 8–12 Sept 2025 | Oxford & Online
Advance your economics expertise with Oxford’s September Summer School.
🔸 Micro, macro, econometrics
🔸 Taught by Oxford faculty
🔸 Global cohort, small class sizes
🎥 Watch & apply: bit.ly/3ywbFkv
#OxfordEconomics #EconomicsSummerSchool
Recently accepted by #QJE, “Revealed Beliefs and the Marriage Market Return to Education,” by Andrew (@alisonandrew.bsky.social) and Adams (@abicadams.bsky.social): doi.org/10.1093/qje/...
Big day yesterday, marking the end of my DPhil (Oxford lingo for PhD) 👨🏻🎓! Huge thanks to @melindacmills.bsky.social and @drcompton.bsky.social for making my viva a wonderful experience. Very excited that I get to continue studying queer populations as a postdoc here in Oxford in the years to come!
Morten in formal Oxford examination academic dress, looking pensive, contemplating his next career move now that he has his Phd, surrounded by majestic columns in Oxford
🎉Congratulations to
@mortenkthomsen.bsky.social who successfully defended his Phd 📖 & thanks to @drcompton.bsky.social
Important #demography work using register, survey & medical records to study the lives of sexual & gender minorities. @oxforddemsci.bsky.social @sociologyoxford.bsky.social
NEW PAPER w. Christian Gillitzer, Peer Skov, @jakobsogaard.bsky.social!
We develop a new method to estimate the marginal propensity to consume (MPC). In contrast to most earlier studies, we don't rely on (rare) quasi-experiments.
The idea is simple...
1/3
#econsky
www.iza.org/publications...
Daughters of immigrants are more upwardly mobile than daughters of locals in most destinations. Sons of immigrants are only more upwardly mobile outside of continental Europe, from Boustan, Fjællegaard Jensen, Abramitzky, Jácome, et al https://www.nber.org/papers/w33558
50 years of International Women’s Day and feeling tremendous sadness over recent anti-DEI developments. Light is seen in the organizations that boldly maintain that success hinges on providing employees equal opportunity for reaching their potential.
https://www.anr-malynes.com/
📢📢Hi #Econsky! You are a PhD or postdoc student interested in the #Economics of #Labor #Family and #Migration. Please submit your work to our thematic workshop. Check the fantastic line up of speakers of the 4th edition.
www.anr-malynes.com
please retweet 👇👇👇👇
*Impressive* piece of work showing differences in intergenerational mobility of immigrants across countries. Finding that resonated the most w/me is importance of access to citizenship - which is still unreasonably hard in many countries, esp. my home country of Italy.
Thanks so much for sharing, @barbarabiasi.com!
Thanks so much, @annagoeddeke.bsky.social! And sorry I missed you, @mhalla.bsky.social 😅
❤️
@seperez84.bsky.social should have been tagged as well!
10/ Comments are very welcome!
9/ And yes… It’s a pretty long paper! But primarily because we include sets of country-specific results – if interested in a particular country, go to Appendix C. bsky.app/profile/peng...
8/ Michael Siegenthaler, Louis Sirugue, Javier Soria Espín, Jan Stuhler, Giovanni L. Violante, Dinand Webbink, Andrea Weber, @jzhangecon.bsky.social, Angela Zheng, and Tom Zohar...
7/ Yvonne Giesing, @yajnagovind.bsky.social, Martin Halla, Dominik Hangartner, Yuyan Jiang, Cecilia Karmel, Fanny Landaud, @lindseymacmillan.bsky.social, @izmartinez86.bsky.social, @poloalberto.com, Panu Poutvaara, Hillel Rapoport, Sara Roman, Kjell G. Salvanes, @mulysan.bsky.social,
6/ Team includes: Leah Boustan, @fjaellegaard.bsky.social, Ran Abramitzky, Elisa Jácome, @alanmanning4.bsky.social, Santiago Pérez, Analysia Watley, @adrianadermon.bsky.social, @jarellanobover.com, @olofaslund.bsky.social, Marie Connolly, Nathan Deutscher, Anne C. Gielen,
5/ This paper is a massive collaboration – 38 amazing co-authors (!) – bringing together unique datasets from around the world. We hope it sparks further discussion on immigration and economic mobility. Read it here: docs.iza.org/dp17711.pdf
4/ Why do children of immigrants in some countries do better than others? We find that access to citizenship, labor market institutions, and attitudes toward immigrants matter. In places with long immigration histories (US/Canada/Australia/Israel), second-gen immigrants often face higher income.
3/ Yet, not all income gaps close. Sons of immigrants in many European countries often face lower income compared to sons of local-born parents. Our analysis shows that second-gen gaps in absolute income mobility vary substantially by country, more so for sons.
2/ First-generation immigrants tend to have lower incomes than locals, but their children often move up the economic ladder. In most countries, second-gen income gaps shrink – sometimes disappearing altogether. Daughters of immigrants do particularly well in most destinations.
1/ 🚨 New paper! 🚨
How do the economic trajectories of children of immigrants vary across 15 high-income countries? We study intergenerational mobility of immigrants, using individual-level linked parent-child data across Europe, North America, and beyond. 🧵👇 #EconSky
Latest paper on comparing intergenerational mobility of the kids of migrants with kids of locals in 15 countries. It has a very long author list so I feel like a real scientist at last. www.iza.org/publications...
@abicadams.bsky.social, Barbara Petrongolo and I provide new results on the implications of birth timing & spacing on parental leave dynamics and child penalty estimates. More details ⬇️
Thanks a lot, Per! Comments are more than welcome 😁