Dan Herbst
@danherbst.bsky.social
Econ Prof at University of Arizona. Interested in labor, public, & household finance. Also a fan of dogs & motorcycles. www.danjherbst.com
Pinned
Dan Herbst
@danherbst.bsky.social
· Jul 17
1/ New working paper with Trevor Bakker, @stefanie-deluca.bsky.social, Eric English, Jamie Fogel, and Nathan Hendren: We use newly linked Census, IRS, and credit bureau data to explore differences in credit access by race, class, and hometown.
djh1202.github.io/website/cre...
🧵...
djh1202.github.io/website/cre...
🧵...
Reposted by Dan Herbst
New from Daniel Herbst (Assistant Professor of Economics at the University of Arizona) and Nathaniel Hendren (Harvard University):
'A better way to pay for college?'
There is a better way to fund undergraduate study, according to new research on the US.
'A better way to pay for college?'
There is a better way to fund undergraduate study, according to new research on the US.
September 3, 2025 at 10:49 AM
New from Daniel Herbst (Assistant Professor of Economics at the University of Arizona) and Nathaniel Hendren (Harvard University):
'A better way to pay for college?'
There is a better way to fund undergraduate study, according to new research on the US.
'A better way to pay for college?'
There is a better way to fund undergraduate study, according to new research on the US.
Reposted by Dan Herbst
Constructing new population-level linked administrative data to study households' access to credit in the US, from Trevor J. Bakker, Stefanie DeLuca, Eric A. English, James S. Fogel, Nathaniel Hendren, and Daniel Herbst https://www.nber.org/papers/w34053
July 25, 2025 at 5:00 PM
Constructing new population-level linked administrative data to study households' access to credit in the US, from Trevor J. Bakker, Stefanie DeLuca, Eric A. English, James S. Fogel, Nathaniel Hendren, and Daniel Herbst https://www.nber.org/papers/w34053
In case you missed it, @wsj.com dropped a bombshell this week.
I’m speaking, of course, about the recent feature on our working paper about credit access:
www.wsj.com/economy/cred...
I’m speaking, of course, about the recent feature on our working paper about credit access:
www.wsj.com/economy/cred...
July 18, 2025 at 2:42 PM
In case you missed it, @wsj.com dropped a bombshell this week.
I’m speaking, of course, about the recent feature on our working paper about credit access:
www.wsj.com/economy/cred...
I’m speaking, of course, about the recent feature on our working paper about credit access:
www.wsj.com/economy/cred...
1/ New working paper with Trevor Bakker, @stefanie-deluca.bsky.social, Eric English, Jamie Fogel, and Nathan Hendren: We use newly linked Census, IRS, and credit bureau data to explore differences in credit access by race, class, and hometown.
djh1202.github.io/website/cre...
🧵...
djh1202.github.io/website/cre...
🧵...
July 17, 2025 at 1:17 PM
1/ New working paper with Trevor Bakker, @stefanie-deluca.bsky.social, Eric English, Jamie Fogel, and Nathan Hendren: We use newly linked Census, IRS, and credit bureau data to explore differences in credit access by race, class, and hometown.
djh1202.github.io/website/cre...
🧵...
djh1202.github.io/website/cre...
🧵...
For my inaugural BlueSky post, I'm dropping a new working paper! djh1202.github.io/website/gig....
Read on to see how wage contracts are shaped by moral hazard and adverse selection. #EconSky
1/n
Read on to see how wage contracts are shaped by moral hazard and adverse selection. #EconSky
1/n
December 11, 2024 at 3:36 PM
For my inaugural BlueSky post, I'm dropping a new working paper! djh1202.github.io/website/gig....
Read on to see how wage contracts are shaped by moral hazard and adverse selection. #EconSky
1/n
Read on to see how wage contracts are shaped by moral hazard and adverse selection. #EconSky
1/n