In his first visit since to CASBS since his 1996-97 fellowship, UC Berkeley economist David Card lifts the veil behind the innovative empirical work on the labor market effects of immigration, minimum wages, and education that earned him the Nobel Prize in 2021. In conversation with 2024-25 CASBS fellow Dylan Connor, Card also explores issues and questions involving the relationships among geography, social and labor mobility, and wealth inequalities.
DAVID CARD: UC Berkeley page | Berkeley economics page | Wikipedia page | Nobel Prize page | Google Scholar page | Berkeley Nobel Prize article |
DYLAN CONNOR: ASU page | Google Scholar page |
Work emerging from David Card's CASBS year
- "Immigrant Inflows, Native Outflows, and the Local Labor Market Impacts of Higher Immigration," Journal of Labor Economics (2001)
"Would Financial Incentives for Leaving Welfare Lead Some People to Stay on Welfare Longer?" NBER Working Paper (1997)
"Adapting to Circumstances: The Evolution of Work, School, and Living Arrangements among North American Youth," in Youth Employment and Joblessness in Advanced Countries (Univ. of Chicago Press, 2000)
"School Finance Reform, the Distribution of School Spending, and the Distribution of Student Test Scores," Journal of Public Economics (2002)
"The More Things Change: Immigrants and the Children of Immigrants in the 1940s, the 1970s, and the 1990s," in Issues in the Economics of Immigration (Univ. of Chicago Press, 2000)
Other CASBS fellows mentioned in this episode
- Orley Ashenfelter (1989-90)
Alan B. Krueger (1999-2000)
Roberto M. Fernandez (1996-97)
Robert D. Putnam (1974-75, 1988-89)
Min Zhou (2005-06)
Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (CASBS) at Stanford University
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Human Centered
Producer: Mike Gaetani | Audio engineer & co-producer: Joe Monzel |


