Ellora Derenoncourt is a labor economist and economic historian whose work focuses on inequality. Her research uses quasi-experimental methods and original data collection to understand the evolution of racial inequality in the US over the 20th century. Her recent studies have examined northern backlash against the Great Migration and ensuing reductions in black upward mobility and the role of federal minimum wage policy in accelerating racial earnings convergence during the Civil Rights Era. She has also written on the historical origins of global inequality and Atlantic slavery’s impact on European and British economic development.
Her work has been featured in the Economist, the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, Fortune Magazine, and NPR. Dr. Derenoncourt received her PhD in Economics from Harvard University in 2019, her MSc in Human Geography from the London School of Economics and her A.B. at Harvard University.
About
Areas of Expertise
- Economic History
- Labor and Employment
- Racial Inequality
- Intergenerational Mobility
Curriculum Vitae
Other Affiliations
- Assistant Professor of Economics, Department of Economics
Research
Selected Publications
Minimum Wages and Racial Inequality
Minimum Wages and Racial Inequality (with Ellora Derenoncourt), August 2020, forthcoming, Quarterly Journal of Economics.
The earnings difference between black and white workers fell dramatically in the United States in the late 1960s and early 1970s. This paper shows that the extension of the minimum wage played a critical role in this decline. The 1966 Fair Labor Standards Act extended federal minimum wage coverage to agriculture, restaurants, nursing homes, and other services which were previously uncovered and where nearly a third of black workers were employed. We digitize over 1,000 hourly wage distributions from Bureau of Labor Statistics industry wage reports and use CPS micro-data to investigate the effects of this reform on wages, employment, and racial inequality. Using a cross-industry difference- in-differences design, we show that wages rose sharply for workers in the newly covered industries. The impact was nearly twice as large for black workers as for white. Within treated industries, the racial gap adjusted for observables fell from 25 log points pre- reform to zero afterwards. Using a bunching design, we find no effect of the reform on employment. We can rule out significant dis-employment effects for black workers. The 1966 extension of the minimum wage can explain more than 20% of the reduction in the racial earnings and income gap during the Civil Rights Era. Our findings shed new light on the dynamics of labor market inequality in the United States and suggest that minimum wage policy can play a critical role in reducing racial economic disparities.
In the News
Media Citations
Ellora Derenoncourt talks about how the Great Migration affected economic mobility
Probable Causation podcast, Episode 36, September 15, 2020
Sunrise Bay Area: A Just, Green Recovery
Sunrise Bay Area podcast, Episode 2, September 14, 2020
Opportunities and Setbacks for Black Workers in the 20th Century
Trade Talks podcast, July 10, 2020
Police Unions Wield Massive Power in American Politics — For Now
Rolling Stone, July 7, 2020
The Black-White Wage Gap Is as Big as It Was in 1950
The New York Times, June 25, 2020
19 Black economists to celebrate and know, this Juneteenth and beyond
Fortune, June 19, 2020
Cities Grew Safer. Police Budgets Kept Growing.
The New York Times, June 12, 2020
Economic research documents black Americans’ struggle for equality
The Economist, June 11, 2020
What a 1968 Report tells us about the persistence of Racial Inequality
NPR, Planet Money, June 9, 2020
America Uprising: Scholars Reflect on the Death of George Floyd
Journalist’s Resource, June 3, 2020
For African-Americans, a Painful Economic Reversal of Fortune
The Wall Street Journal, June 3, 2020
Racial and Economic Inequality From the Great Migration to Covid-19
Policy Punchline podcast, May 27, 2020
Talking COVID-19, Racial Inequality, and Economic Impacts
Talk Policy to Me podcast, May 11, 2020
When moving to opportunity offers no opportunity at all: A lesson from the Great Migration
The Philadelphia Inquirer, August 17, 2019
Webcasts
Berkeley Conversations - COVID-19: Economic Impact, Human Solutions
Henry E Brady, Ellora Derenoncourt, Hilary Hoynes, Jesse Rothstein, Gabriel Zucman
Date: April 10, 2020 Duration: 60 minutes
Last updated on 02/22/2021