
Joseph Ferrie
· Professor of EconomicsVerifiedNorthwestern University · History
Active 1985–2025
About
Joseph Ferrie is an economic historian who specializes in the use of micro-level longitudinal data to study economic mobility. His research involves analyzing data from census manuscripts, passenger ship records, tax lists, and city directories to compare mobility patterns in Britain, the United States, and France from the 1850s to the present. He is particularly interested in understanding the link between early-life circumstances and later life outcomes, as well as the migration from rural areas to cities and towns. Ferrie is a research associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research and contributes to the field by examining historical development of American labor markets, economic political economy, and economic demography.
Research topics
- Sociology
- Psychology
- Economic growth
- Demography
- Political Science
- Developmental psychology
- Economics
- Medicine
- Law
- Psychiatry
- Biology
- Environmental health
- Internal medicine
- Geography
- Demographic economics
- Gerontology
- Econometrics
- Social psychology
Selected publications
Innovation in Aging · 2025-12-01
articleOpen accessAbstract Lead (Pb) is a neurotoxin with lasting cognitive, behavioral, and physiological effects, particularly when exposure occurs in early childhood. Nearly half of the U.S. population today experienced Pb exposure during this critical developmental period, yet few studies have examined its long-term health consequences using a life course perspective. We aim to demonstrate the feasibility of aging cohort studies to construct a phenotype of early childhood Pb exposure via administrative data linkages. The Boston Early Adversity and Mortality Study integrated municipal, state, and federal records with data from three Boston-based, socioeconomically diverse longitudinal cohorts (the Normative Aging Study [NAS] and the Grant and Glueck [GG] cohorts of the Harvard Study of Adult Development) and added siblings (NBEAMS=13,151; nNAS=9,972, nGG=3,179). Pb exposure was operationalized using linkage-derived information on water service line materials (non-Pb, Pb, mixed Pb and non-Pb) and municipal water pH (continuous) anchored to participants’ residential home address at birth. We examined Pb exposure patterns by childhood SES status. We identified birth locations for 99% of the 12,559 U.S.-born BEAMS participants, spanning 688 unique city-state combinations. Pb exposure could be estimated for 52% of 688 birth locations, covering 93% (n = 11,654) of U.S.-born BEAMS participants. Pb exposure followed a socioeconomic gradient, χ2(4)=1,035.9, p<.0001, such that 90%, 66%, and 37% of the lowest- (Glueck), middle- (NAS), and highest- (Grant) SES cohorts, respectively, had the highest Pb exposure levels. We discuss the value of administrative data linkages in reconstructing environmental exposures and advancing life course research.
Mobilizing the manpower of mothers: Childcare under the Lanham Act during WWII
Explorations in Economic History · 2025-04-15 · 3 citations
articleSenior authorEconomics in America: An Immigrant Economist Explores the Land of Inequality
Journal of Economic Literature · 2024-03-01 · 13 citations
article1st authorCorrespondingJoseph P. Ferrie of Northwestern University and NBER reviews “Economics in America: An Immigrant Economist Explores the Land of Inequality” by Angus Deaton. The Econlit abstract of this book begins: “Explores the positives and negatives of economics as both a science and a profession, presenting insights from the author's personal experiences as a naturalized US citizen and academic economist.”
Mobilizing the Manpower of Mothers: Childcare Under the Lanham Act During Wwii
SSRN Electronic Journal · 2024-01-01 · 2 citations
preprintOpen accessMobilizing the Manpower of Mothers: Childcare under the Lanham Act during WWII
National Bureau of Economic Research · 2024-07-01
reportOpen access1st authorCorrespondingprovided data on WWII contracts (Brunet-Koustas WWII Contracts Data).Brianna Alderman coded the war contracts.Adithi Attada helped with a host of last minute tasks.Blake Heller
IN THE PALM OF OUR HAND: HUMAN-LED ADMINISTRATIVE DATA LINKAGE TO AUGMENT LONGITUDINAL AGING STUDIES
Innovation in Aging · 2024-12-01
articleOpen accessAbstract A robust literature has documented associations of adverse early experiences with poor lifespan health (Hughes et al., 2017). The evidence with respect to aging-related outcomes has been largely derived from population-based longitudinal studies, which predominantly rely on retrospective assessments of childhood experiences. Given the modest agreement between prospective and retrospective measures of early life exposures (Baldwin et al., 2019), it is unknown whether the well-established associations of early adversity with later-life health may replicate in prospective designs. This presentation uses the Boston Early Adversity and Mortality Study (BEAMS) to illustrate a novel approach leveraging recently-digitalized, full-count U.S. Censuses from 1900 to 1940 to obtain prospective data on the early-life family and neighborhood conditions for participants in three, all-male longitudinal aging studies (Normative Aging Study, 1961+, n=2280; Harvard Study of Adult Development, 1938+: Grant cohort, n=458, Glueck cohort, n=267). The authors will describe key steps of the human-led data linkage (“hand-linkage”) process, and present results on linkage performance and value added to the longitudinal studies. Hand-linkage identified 10,146 female and male siblings of the original cohort members. Among original cohort members born prior to each Census, hand-linkage identified 68.6% (1900), 76.3% (1910), 88.5% (1920), 88.0% (1930), and 87.9% (1940) participants, compared to match rates of 24%-36% via a commonly used algorithm (Abramitzky et al., 2021 with Jaro-Winkler adjustment). Relative to hand-linkage, the sensitivity and specificity of the algorithmic approach was 31.2% and 98.2%, respectively. Findings support human-led linkage as an effective strategy to augment the scientific value of longitudinal aging studies.
Innovation in Aging · 2024-12-01
articleOpen accessAbstract Early and midlife socioeconomic status (SES) are linked to all-cause mortality, but few studies have examined their independent and joint associations using multidimensional, prospective SES measures and track mortality over extended periods. As described in the Dorame et al. presentation in this symposium, the Boston Early Adversity and Mortality Study (BEAMS) acquired prospective data on the early-life circumstances of three well-characterized male cohorts via linkage to the 1900-1940 US Federal Censuses. This study leverages BEAMS data to test the independent and joint associations of early and midlife SES with all-cause mortality in 1,303 men from a BEAMS cohort, the Normative Aging Study. Early SES, assessed at baseline (earliest available Census before age 18), was a composite combining paternal literacy (1=yes, 0=no) and z-standardized paternal occupational income. Midlife SES was a z-score composite of men’s occupational standing, education, and income at study entry (mean age=42). Mortality status was followed through December 2020 (mean follow-up since baseline: 77 years). Early SES was weakly and positively correlated with midlife SES (r=.17, p<.0001). In Cox regression, each 1-SD higher early SES was associated with 8% lower mortality risk (95%CI: 0.84, 1.00). Each 1-SD higher midlife SES was associated with 3% lower mortality risk (95%CI: 0.95,0.99), adjusted for early SES. The main effect of midlife SES weakened the association of early SES with mortality by only 2%. Early SES did not moderate the association of midlife SES with mortality. Our findings support largely independent contributions of early and midlife SES to all-cause mortality risk.
Mobilizing the Manpower of Mothers: Childcare Under the Lanham Act During WWII
SSRN Electronic Journal · 2024-01-01
articleOpen access1st authorCorrespondingWomen and the Econometrics of Family Trees
SSRN Electronic Journal · 2023-01-01
articleOpen accessWomen and the Econometrics of Family Trees
National Bureau of Economic Research · 2023-08-01
reportOpen accessWe present an econometric structure for the analysis of intergenerational mobility that integrates non-linearities, the role of maternal-side effects and the impact of grandparents.We show how previously estimated models are special cases of this general framework and what specific assumptions each embeds.Our analysis of linked U. S. data 1900-40 reveals the extent to which inadequate consideration of assortative mating and the impact of mothers produces misleading conclusions.
Frequent coauthors
- 36 shared
Lee J. Alston
- 18 shared
Werner Troesken
University of Pittsburgh
- 18 shared
Karen Rolf
University of Nebraska at Omaha
- 12 shared
Hoyt Bleakley
- 9 shared
Jason Long
- 8 shared
Jonathan Rothbaum
United States Census Bureau
- 8 shared
Brian Beach
University College London
- 7 shared
Martin Saavedra
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Labs
Education
- 1992
PhD, Economics
University of Chicago
- 1987
MA, Economics
University of Chicago
- 1983
BA, Economics and History
Williams College
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