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University of Toronto Mechoulan Research Paper Re the External Effects of Black Male Incarceration on Black Females 2007

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The External Effects of Black-Male Incarceration on Black Females
Stéphane Mechoulan*
University of Toronto
June 2007
Abstract
This paper examines how the increase in the incarceration of Black men and the sex ratio
imbalance it induces shape young Black women’s behaviors. Combining data from the BJS and
the CPS to match incarceration rates with individual observations, I show that Black-male
incarceration lowers the odds of non-marital teenage fertility while increasing young Black
women’s school attainment and early employment. The evidence in support of a negative impact
of Black-male incarceration on marriage is less persuasive.

Results using prison capacity

expansions as an instrument, drawing on the incarceration of presumably minor offenders,
provide germane estimates of the impact of male incarceration on women’s decisions.
JEL Classification: I21, J12, J13, J15, J22, J24, K42
*

I am indebted to seminar participants at the University of Toronto, the 16th meeting of the American Law and

Economics Association, as well as Abhijit Banerjee, Gadi Barlevy, David Bjerk, Josh Fischman, Shoshana
Grossbard, Marc Mauer, Abigail Payne, William Sabol for helpful conversation and comments; Paige Harrison and
Janice Munsterman from the U.S. federal Department of Justice and numerous State Department of Corrections
officials for their help in accessing and making sense of the data; Kevin Reitz, Fred Cheesman, Michael Tonry,
Mark Cohen, Rachel Barkow, Patricia Cluney, Richard Posner, Eric Sterling, Judi Greene, Peggy Rogers, Shawn
Bushway, for guidance in better understanding the U.S. criminal justice system and for their encouragement
throughout this arduous task; and Hanming Fang for sharing his multidimensional state/year coding of welfare
generosity. Special thanks to Emefa Sewordor and all the undergraduate students enrolled under the University of
Toronto Research Opportunity Program who worked on this project for their input. I thank the Social Sciences
Human Research Council of Canada for financial support.

All errors are my own.

s.mechoulan@utoronto.ca

Electronic copy available at: http://ssrn.com/abstract=997479

Contact:

I. Introduction

Over the last three decades the United States has experienced a dramatic surge in imprisonment
that has specifically affected the Black community. Blacks are now incarcerated at nine times
the rate of non-Hispanic Whites and comprise more than 40% of inmates. One in eight Black
males age 25-29 was behind bars in 2004.1 Given current trends, one Black male child out of
three will go to prison or jail at some point in his lifetime.
High male-incarceration rates wreak havoc on the social structure of the Black community.
In particular, as the prevalence of imprisonment is more than fifteen times higher for Black men
than for Black women, Black women face a momentously unfavorable sex ratio.2 The analysis
of Black women’s choices when facing a shortage in the supply of men provides a distinctive test
of the standard model of market behavior in family economics. Yet, the collateral, unintended
effects of Black-male incarceration on single Black females’ socio-economic outcomes are
largely unexplored. Once quantified, the effects of incarceration may be fruitfully contrasted
with the effects of explicit policies designed to improve those same outcomes.

1

Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics Prison and Jail Inmates at Midyear report, 2004. This is not counting those

under bail, probation, parole, or hiding from the Justice system etc. In contrast, 1 in 28 Hispanic males and 1 in 59
White males were incarcerated in the same age group.
2

This imbalance is made even worse by the greater tendency of Black males to marry non Black females than the

reverse, the greater enlistment in the military, the higher mortality rate among adult Black males, the higher rate of
mental institutionalization, etc. (Tucker and Mitchel-Kernan, 1995). See for example the vivid excerpts from Black
female interviewees in Lane et al. (2004).

1

Electronic copy available at: http://ssrn.com/abstract=997479

It is conceivable that a growing fraction of young Black women would decide to forego early
motherhood, continue their studies or become financially independent through employment
because of the mass confinement, hence shortage, of Black men. Indeed, the Black non-marital
teen pregnancy rate, although higher in absolute terms, has decreased faster than its White
counterpart in the last fifteen years (National Center for Health Statistics [NCHS], 2005).
Further, Black women catch up in education (Allen et al., 2005) and in the labor market (Offner
and Holzer, 2002; Western and Pettit, 2005) better than Black men relative to Whites.
To examine how the rising levels of incarceration of Black men lead young Black women to
change important lifetime decisions I compiled data on the number of male prisoners by race,
gender, state and year from the Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS). From there, I constructed
male prison rates per adult male population using the U.S. Census. I then merged Census
adjusted-BJS prison statistics with individual-level information on fertility, schooling,
employment and marriage from the June and March supplements of the Current Population
Survey (CPS) so that they match on a race, year and state basis. The benchmark Ordinary Least
Squares (OLS) model allows for disentangling the impact of incarceration from year effects,
state effects, secular trends in socio-economic changes within states, as well as from other
identifiable variables that are expected to affect the outcomes of interest within states over time.
I also implement an original Instrumental Variables (IV) strategy, predicting incarceration
through the “suction effect” of prison capacity expansions uncovered in certain states.
To summarize, I find that higher rates of Black-male incarceration have significantly lowered
the odds of non-marital teenage fertility among young Black females, with the caveat that the
average effect is driven by a small number of repressive states. I also find evidence of a positive
effect of Black-male incarceration on Black women’s school attainment and early employment.

2

The evidence in support of a negative effect of Black male incarceration on marriage is weaker.
The IV estimations suggest that the average effects encompass heterogeneity in the types of
offenders that are being incarcerated and accordingly in their impact on women’s decisions.
This work relates to several branches of a literature spanning different disciplines. Social
scientists have long been intrigued by the consequences of sex ratio imbalances. In an influential
book, Wilson (1987) expressed concern over the decline in acceptable marriage partners, or
“quality men” in the Black community, usually defined as men with a stable job. Wilson’s ideas
sparked a body of research on the impact of “quality men’s” scarcity (Horton and Burgess, 1992;
Lichter et al., 1992; Kiecolt and Fossett, 1997; Neal, 2004). However, male (un)availability
originates from multiple factors that were often left aggregated. Each of those factors, in turn,
may have a different effect that needs to be separately estimated.
As economic conditions improved in the 1990s, incarceration pursued an exponential
trajectory.3

Legal scholars, psychologists and sociologists devoted more attention to the

consequences massive incarceration may have on inner cities communities (Vera Institute of
Justice, 1996; Hagan and Dinovitzer, 1999; Lynch and Sabol, 2003a and 2003b), yet little work
has been done on the effects of imprisonment on family structure.4
Looking into the contribution of economics to crime and policy issues, most of the research
has focused on the criminals themselves, whether on the determinants of criminal activity, the
deterrence effectiveness of various policies, or the labor market consequences of incarceration
3

+360% in prisoners per inhabitant alone between 1978 and 2004 – see Mincy (2006).

4

Some research has investigated the impact of incarceration within the inmates’ families (Western and McLanahan,

2000; Thomas, 2006; Oliver et al., 2006), yet not on single women who are among the secondary victims of massscale male incarceration (Garland, 2001; Mauer and Chesney-Lind, 2002; Meares, 2004).

3

after release from prison. The role of aggregate male incarceration on single women’s fertility,
human capital accumulation, employment decisions, etc. has been neglected.
The present study is closest to that of Charles and Luoh (2006) which estimates the impact of
male incarceration on selected female outcomes. They observe that women overwhelmingly
marry slightly older men from the same race and state. Since the U.S. decennial Census tells us
who is institutionalized, which is approximately the same as incarcerated (see Harcourt, 2006),
they use the last three waves of that data set to match outcomes of women of different age
groups, race, and state to the corresponding incarceration rates among slightly older men.
Charles and Luoh (2006) find that rising levels of male incarceration have lowered the likelihood
that women marry and have caused a shift in the gains from marriage away from women. In
response to these changes, they also find that women have increased their schooling and labor
supply. Building on the present findings, Kumdar (2007), also using the Census, argues that teen
fertility is significantly negatively related to the incarceration rates of males likely to father the
babies of teen mothers, and unrelated to the incarceration rates of males unlikely to father those
babies.
This study differs from Charles and Luoh (2006) and Kamdar (2007) on several counts,
mainly: (1) I dispose of annual – as opposed to decennial – waves, therefore I can better pinpoint
which period is driving the results – in particular, I can use male incarceration rates preceding
the outcomes under investigation;5 (2) I tap into a more comprehensive set of controls; (3) more
specifically, with respect to Charles and Luoh (2006), I apply an alternative set of IVs, which
incidentally confirms that variables affecting incarceration are not color-blind; and (4) as a
matter of exposition, I differentiate my results by racial groups – focusing on Black women – as
opposed to leaving them averaged, which reveals additional insights.
5

More generally, I am not constrained to use those rates concomitant to the observations.

4

II. Data

This work uniquely combines different data sets to assess the impact of Black-male incarceration
rates on Black female outcomes. My statistics for incarceration come from the “Correctional
Population in the United States” series (1985-2003) and “Prisoners in State and Federal
Institutions on December 31st” series (1978-1984), both from the BJS. Prison statistics by race
were first released in 1978. Coincidentally 1978 roughly corresponds to the beginning of the
giant wave of incarcerations that has been sweeping the United States since.
With a few exceptions, these data give the numbers of prisoners by gender and race for every
year in every state.6 I focus on prison statistics because of the misleading and inconsistent nature
of jail statistics.7 I cannot subtract the number of federal prisoners from total prisoners in each
state and year, so the numbers collected represent both types; however, the overwhelming
majority of prisoners are state prisoners (89% in 2000).8 Note that the proportion of state
6

For prisoners at the state level there was no specific category for Hispanics before 2000. States could include

Hispanics under Whites, or could categorize them as Unknown Race but it appears that in some cases Hispanics
were not counted altogether. Also, some states changed their labeling over time, making comparisons across years
difficult. In such cases, with great caution, I retained as much information I could so that within each state, the
White male prisoners’ series displays consistency (notably, this led to the deletion of the White prisoners series for
California after 1994 and for Texas before 1986). These considerations only play a role for the estimations requiring
data on the number of White male prisoners since the fraction of Black Hispanics is negligible (~ 2%).
7

It is difficult to separate jail and prison populations and to prevent double counting as more jails began to hold state

and federal prisoners through the years. In a few small states, the prison figures used include both jail and prison
inmates because jails and prisons are combined into one system in those jurisdictions.
8

Federal prisoners may be held in another state because of the relatively small number of federal prisons.

5

prisoners incarcerated in a state different from the one they lived in at the time of committing
their offense is negligible and does not affect the assignment of prisoners by state.9 This is of
great importance because it gives us confidence that the evolution of male incarceration in one
particular state would directly affect females in that state.10
To transform the raw figures of inmates into percentages of the adult population in each year
and state, I use the U.S. Census Estimates 1970-2000 provided by the Center for Disease Control
(CDC) Wonder website which gives in each state and year the number of inhabitants by gender,
race and 5-year age group. Unfortunately, the BJS, which releases data by gender, race, state,
and year does not break them by age. Since roughly 95% of prisoners are between the age of 20
and 54 for each race, I use the number of males age 20-54 as the deflator. As incarceration is
rising over time and feeds mainly from men in their 20s and 30s, such an approximation would
tend to underestimate the most relevant incarceration rates to young women e.g., that of males
slightly older than them. Thus, the effects found in this study may be viewed as a lower bound
of the true effects I try to measure.
The main explanatory variable of interest is therefore the incarceration rate of Black males
per 20-54 Black male population. Table 1 presents descriptive statistics for all fifty states: note
that min. and max. values correspond in all but a few cases to the two end points of the period,
1978 and 1999. I also looked at the same statistics with states grouped in regions by Circuit
9

Some states use other states’ facilities to hold some of their populations. Yet, even if state prisoners are held

outside a state prison, they are in their jurisdiction counts, even if another State has actual custody.

10

It is of course possible that a criminal committed an offense in a state in which he does not live. Charles and Luoh

(2006) present evidence that this is negligible.

6

Court. Apart from Circuit Court 1, average incarceration by Circuit Court is fairly uniform over
the country. The main differences are not so much by region but by state: indeed, a few states
play a disproportionate role in the empirical estimations. Graph 1 shows the dramatic evolution
of the average male incarceration rate per 20-54 male population by race over time in the U.S.
I use CPS data for the dependent variables and individual covariates, including indirectly
CPS data for Black male unemployment rates, which have been compiled and released through
the Bureau of Labor Statistics. I also use different measures of state level welfare generosity
collected by Fang and Keane (2004) over the same period.
For the estimation of teenage fertility, the information comes from the June CPS. I use the
variable “number of babies” to construct an indicator for whether a woman has had a child.11 In
Graph 2 I plot the total teenage pregnancy rate by race for women age 18-19 from 1964 to 2001
from the NCHS. Graph 2 shows a relative stability among White females over the entire period:
more precisely, an increase in the mid 1980s to early 1990s, followed by a decrease later on. For
Black females, the same movement occurs in the mid 1980s and early 1990s but the decline is
more pronounced. The general decline over the 1990s led a columnist to write:

“In the past decade, possibly no social program has been as dramatically
effective as the effort to reduce teen pregnancy, and no results so
uniformly celebrated. Between 1990 and 2000 the U.S. teen pregnancy
rate plummeted by 28 percent (…) Births to teenagers are also down, as
11

Prior to 1990, fertility questions were only asked to married women only or women 18 and above. Years 1986-

1988 are excluded because the question on fertility was asked to married women only. Also, fertility was not part of
the questionnaire in 1991, and the June CPS is not available for years 1993, 1996-1997 and 1999, which leaves us
with 1979-85, 1990, 1992, 1994-1995, 1998, and 2000.

7

are teen abortion rates. It’s an achievement so profound and so heartening
that left and right are eager to take credit for it, and both can probably do
so.” (Mundy, 2006)

Many hypotheses can be advanced to account for this phenomenon: liberal sex education,
abstinence initiatives, welfare reforms, etc. Be that as it may, it is unclear from the graph alone
whether male incarceration rates contributed to the decline in teenage motherhood.
I also looked at education, labor-force participation and marriage. For those variables, I use
the March CPS data since the collection contains fewer gaps. To summarize the patterns that
characterize educational attainment of women by race, one may observe a convergence in
attainment between Black and White females regarding high school completion, but the trend
started well before the mass incarceration movement. The gap for college enrollment and
completion slightly widened because the proportion of White females who go to college
increases faster than its counterpart among Blacks. In particular, the 1980s are a lost decade for
Black women regarding education. The proportion of Black women with a four-year degree or
enrolled in college picks up again in the early 1990s, not long after an increase in the growth rate
of male incarceration in the late 1980s. However, the evidence of a link between the two
patterns is unclear.
Overall, female employment increased at a declining rate from the late 1970s to the early
1990, after which it leveled off before picking up again in the mid 1990s (Fullerton, 1999).
Regarding the evolution of full time employment for young women by race and different age
brackets the most striking feature is the catch-up between Black and White women over the
period, in particular a general decrease for Whites as well as a slight increase for Blacks,

8

especially in the 1990s.

While it is not apparent that incarceration rates can explain the

convergence, the absence of decline in young Black-women employment rates is puzzling.
As for the proportion of unmarried women by race and age brackets, the essential feature is a
slow and continuous evolution capturing the decline in the institution of marriage, for both
Blacks and Whites, and for all ages. There is no graphical evidence to support the hypothesis
that marriage and male incarceration are causally related since the growth in male incarceration
is much faster than the growth in the proportion of never-married women (especially for Blacks).

III. Methods and Estimation Strategies

Let us consider a linear model estimating the impact of male incarceration on any single female
outcome:

Outcome = α + β Incarceration + ∑ λ j Characteristics j + ε .

(1)12

j

At the aggregate level, large male-incarceration rates should have some impact over a female
individual’s lifetime, yet the main difficulty in assessing this relationship lies in the assignment
of incarceration rates to individual observations.

12

A matching based on race and state is

To keep things simple at this stage I do not consider the incarceration rate from a different racial group on the

outcome of an individual of a given race.

9

intuitive.13 But at what age are these rates most relevant? Further, should one consider some
average local male-incarceration rate over a certain number of years before the time when the
individual is observed?

The absence of definite, undisputable answers to such modeling

questions must have played a role in the relative absence of quantitative studies on this issue.
This is why the present work focuses on women in their late teens and early twenties. First,
this narrow age range corresponds to a particularly critical point in a woman’s life-cycle; that is,
when she is at risk of not completing high school, of becoming a single teenage mother and not
joining the labor market. Second, if local incarceration plays a role in such decisions, it is likely
that the most influential incarceration rate is that which immediately precedes those decisions.
At the very least in this way one conservatively limits the chances of mismatch between relevant
incarceration rates and outcomes of interest. In this paper, I present the results obtained with a
one-year lag between incarceration rates and observed outcomes to capture the response of
women to the latest incarceration rate they have experienced.

In other words, for all the

estimations, the male incarceration rate at the end of year t-1 is matched with observations in
year t:

Outcomeist = α + β Incarcerationst −1 + ∑ λ j Characteristicsistj + ε ist

(2)

j

where i, s, t index the individual, state and year respectively. Note that the approach is flexible
enough to accommodate alternative lag structures if one believes different outcomes respond to
incarceration with different delays.

13

The fraction of Black women marrying non-Black men has been less than 5% on average in the last thirty years

(U.S. Decennial Census 1980, 1990 and 2000) – see also Brien (1997). Similarly, the percentage of marriages
where the bride and the groom are residents of different states is negligible.

10

I assume throughout that decisions made by young women do not cause the behaviors that
result in men being incarcerated, such as drug possession or violent crimes, nor that they cause
the policies that influence incarceration, such as legal changes, changes in law enforcement
personnel per capita or prison constructions. A related concern is that women’s decisions are
driven by males’ conduct. In that case, young women would change their behavior over time
because men are becoming less suitable as husbands, not because they are locked up. However,
there is evidence that changes in male-incarceration rates over time are not caused by changes in
male behavior but rather by changes in policy.14
BJS statistics show that violent crime exhibited no clear direction from the early 1970s up to
the early 1990s and has been rapidly going down since. For drug charges, according to the U.S.
National Household Survey on Drug Abuse, an estimated 14.8 million Americans, about 6.7% of
the household population age 12 and older, used illegal drugs on a current basis in 1999. Note
that the proportion of Blacks is close to that of Whites (7.7% vs. 6.6%) even though Blacks are
arrested on drug charges at several times the rate of Whites (the racial disparity in arrests on drug
charges increases significantly over the period). This number of past-month drug users declined
by more than 50% from the 1979 high of 25 million (14.1% of the population). This is precisely
the beginning of the period covered here.15 The discrepancy between increase in incarceration
and decline in criminal behavior is mainly the result of the so-called War on Drugs. Similar drug

14

This argument enables us to counter the hypothesis that Black-male incarceration is partly a consequence of Black

female empowerment (precisely, through increased schooling, employment etc.). The possibility of reverse
causality would have made the problem infinitely more complex to analyze.

15

Charles and Luoh (2006) concur based on juvenile statistics (a good predictor of future adult behavior).

11

offenses, notably possession – for which, again, prevalence does not increase – are prosecuted
more aggressively, resulting in a higher likelihood of being brought to courts.16
This being said, the interpretation of male incarceration effects on women is in principle
twofold: the removal of some men from the population (direct effect) and the tougher approach
to crime inducing better behavior among those who are not arrested (indirect effect). Given that
incarceration increases by many times more than the decrease in criminal behavior during the
period, it is legitimate to consider that the direct effect dominates the indirect effect. Note
however, that the indirect effect should bias the measurement of the direct effect towards zero.
In the following discussion, I interpret the effect of incarceration as mostly the direct effect.
Still, the identification of the causal impact of incarceration is not straightforward because of
the numerous potential confounding factors associated with incarceration. It is well known that
using a single cross section to tackle such a problem is inadequate. When pooling cross sections,
year effects control for the evolving unobserved national attributes that affect the different
outcomes of interest.

Similarly, state fixed effects control for time invariant unobserved

influences that vary across states. Yet, the factors that affect incarceration may also vary within
a state over time: simply controlling for year and state effects could still bias the estimation of
the incarceration coefficients.17 To cope with this problem, the specifications can be made more

16

According to Charles and Luoh (2006), the fraction of drug offenders increases because a higher fraction of cases

brought to state courts are drug related. In contrast, for all drug charges, they do not detect a change in the
probability of conviction, or a change in the probability of imprisonment conditional on conviction, or a change in
the average sentence conditional on imprisonment.
17

This would happen if those changing factors within states are correlated with variations in incarceration and if

such factors do not change at a national level uniformly and do not get picked up by the year effects.

12

flexible by adding interaction terms between state effects and a time trend and between state
effects and the square of a time trend (see for example Friedberg, 1998). These terms, therefore,
capture slow drifts in state-level characteristics that influence the outcomes of interest with the
slopes of those trends allowed to vary smoothly within states. Such local changes can be of
political, socio-economic or demographic nature.18 The benchmark model can be rewritten, with
standard notations:

Outcomeist = α + β Incarcerationst −1 + γ 1t + δ 1s + μ (Trendt × 1s ) +ν (Trendt2 × 1s )
+ ∑ λ j Characteristicsistj + ε ist

(3)

j

In theory, variations across time and within states translating into discrete jumps in
incarceration rates would provide a good source of identification that enables disentangling
incarceration paths from state effects, year effects and secular trends in socio-economic changes
within states. In practice, however, it can be observed that in almost every state, incarceration
increases every year over the period – although not always at the same rate, which is of course
crucial. In other words, the causal effects of incarceration need to be identified against the
monotonic trends that characterize incarceration paths: at the state level, there is just enough
variability around a linear-quadratic trend for adequate identification.19
18

Note that they also include the possible social impacts of mass incarceration on disadvantaged minority

communities through the increasing concentration of released prisoners over time. These agglomeration effects may
affect social norms and formative institutions of social control and organizations, which in turn can exert an
independent impact on female outcomes. For simplicity, I do not consider these possible effects in the present
analysis.

19

I am thus “pushing the limits” of the identification strategy. To give an idea, an OLS regression of adult Black-

male incarceration rates on a linear and a quadratic trend alone would yield an adjusted R2 over 0.9 in most states.

13

Notwithstanding the difficulty, I use linear probability models which successively control for
year effects, state effects and state linear and quadratic time trends. Because of the “black box”
nature of this approach, I further try to characterize which are the main variables potentially
correlated with incarceration and the outcomes of interest that those state-level trends absorb. I
also test the sensitivity of the results to adding some relevant variables that change within state
over time, notably state-level Black male unemployment rates and a large list of variables
measuring local, time-varying welfare generosity. Robust standard errors clustered by state
account for the heteroskedasticity of the error terms and for serial correlation, as recommended
by Bertrand, Duflo, and Mullainathan (2004).
The use of individual observations on Black women largely self-weights the sample to
emphasize the states with a large Black population.

The interpretation of the coefficients

becomes the impact of male incarceration on the average young Black woman in the U.S., as
opposed to the average effect of Black male incarceration across states. Conceptually, the
former is more important for policy analysis, and may also reveal more insights for at least two
reasons. First, we may think that the effects should be better captured in the more heavily
populated states because criminal activity (hence arrests) exhibits increasing returns with respect
to population density, which is correlated with population size. Second, in states with a (relative)
large Black population, interracial marriage is more atypical.20 Since the underlying assumption
is that the incarceration of Black males affects the local relationships market within Blacks, the

20

This can be inferred from the Vital Statistics section of NCHS: between 1980 and 1988, a majority of states

reported the number of marriages by race of bride and race of groom. It is readily seen that for Black women, intraracial marriage is positively correlated with the local proportion of Black males (relative to total males).

14

effects are expected to more accurately reflect the relevant sex ratio in states with a large Black
population.21
To provide additional robustness to the results, I use two different strategies. First, I suspect
a stronger impact of incarceration for Blacks than for Whites. This is because the Black teenage
fertility rate is higher, while the female educational achievement, labor-force participation are
lower than those of Whites – thus leaving more room for a detectable marginal response.
Alternatively, even if there is no racial difference but the effect of male incarceration on females
is nonlinear (e.g., threshold effects), given that Blacks are on average eight to nine times more
likely to be incarcerated than Whites, an interaction term Black × Incarceration would
specifically reflect this nonlinear impact. To that effect I assign the White-male incarceration
rate to White females and the Black-male incarceration rate to Black females and run regressions
over both groups. However, Whites are not a perfect control group for Blacks; rather I am
evaluating treatment intensities in two groups that otherwise differ systematically. To account
for such differences, I control for the race-specific incarceration rate and add all the other
controls (year effects, state effects, etc.) interacted with the White/Black dummy.

The

interpretation of the interaction term coefficient is then the pure differential effect of
incarceration between Blacks and Whites, and the race-specific coefficient becomes
mechanically the incarceration coefficient for the White group only. With standard notations:

21

Note that results using non-weighted aggregated state-level data support most of the conclusions advanced in the

paper and are available upon request.

15

Outcomeirst = α + β Incarcerationrst −1 + φ ((1 − 1r ) × Incarcerationrst −1 )
+γ 1t + δ 1s + μ (Trendt × 1s ) + ν (Trendt2 × 1s )
+ ∑ λ j Characteristicsirstj

(4)

j

+1r × {γ 1t + δ 1s + μ (Trendt × 1s ) + ν (Trend t2 × 1s )
+ ∑ λ j Characteristicsirstj } + ε rist
j

I also take advantage of the White male prisoners series to run false experiments by regressing
Black female outcomes on White male incarceration.
Second, because incarceration rates might still pick-up effects not captured by the controls
and that would simultaneously determine female outcomes, I instrument incarceration.
Sentencing change are natural IV candidates: changes in sentencing policies occurred at the state
level throughout the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s in most states. Given the political nature of the
determinants of these laws (Dharmapala et al., 2006) it is unlikely that they are related to young
women’s decisions regarding fertility, education, marriage or employment. Note that changes in
state criminal codes do not appear to occur in response to an increase in crime either. I thus
considered (1) determinate sentencing (i.e., the abolition of discretionary parole release), (2)
alternative indicators of parole restriction (3) structured sentencing (recommended prison terms
for offenses), either with presumptive sentencing (systems of single recommended sentences for
each offense or offense class), or with presumptive or voluntary guidelines (systems of multiple
sentence recommendations for each offense or offense class), (4) provisions enhancing sentences
for second- and third- time offenders, violent offenders or drug offenders, (5) enactment by the
states of the Federal Truth In Sentencing (TIS) program and (6) “three-strikes” laws.
Another determinant of incarceration is prison capacity.

Capacity is appealing as an

instrument because decisions to build take years, sometimes more than a decade, before
translating into operational facilities. Recall Levitt (1996) documents the lengthy course of

16

prison overcrowding litigation. In particular, he shows that states where overcrowding lawsuits
are filed have higher than average incarceration growth rates before the filing and shorter ones
afterwards. A common outcome for a state that has been sanctioned by courts for its prison
overcrowding practice is to build new facilities – even though overcrowding litigation is not the
only reason for the building of new prisons.22 If prison capacity expansion was simply the
consequence of overcrowding in preexisting facilities so as to accommodate the excess number
of prisoners already housed, it would have no predictive power on actual incarceration counts,
and this seems to be the case for several states (e.g., South Carolina). However, the consequence
of capacity expansion for incarceration can still be important: as long as prison overcrowding
prevails, judges who are aware of the situation may be reluctant to send minor criminals to
prison and may prefer to sentence them to probation. Similarly, at the margin, parole boards
should be more generous in granting release and probation officers more hesitant to revoke
paroles. Once new facilities are built, the capacity constraint is no longer binding. Empirically,
this conjecture is validated in several states, especially for parole:23 there, I find that following a
major stepping up of prison capacity the trend in the number of parolees decelerates or even gets

22

In general, prison capacity would be expanded for one of the following reasons: (1) a federal court concludes that

the state’s current prison allocation of prisoners to cells is in violation of the 8th Amendment and orders fewer
prisoners per cell, which requires expansion; (2) a jurisdiction changes its parole policies (typically meaning fewer
offenders will be released); (3) the jurisdiction alters its policies on when someone is sent to jail versus a state prison
facility (some states try to keep people in jails instead of prisons to save money and put the costs on localities; if the
locality resists because the jails are full or for other reasons, prisons might need to be expanded).

23

Numbers of individuals on probation and parole come from a similar BJS series as for prisoners.

17

reversed.

Most importantly for our purpose, the proportion of offenders sent behind bars

increases accordingly. I provide the revealing examples of Texas and West Virginia in Graphs 3
and 4.

They show the concomitant sudden increase in prison capacity and Black-male

incarceration starting in the mid-1990s, as well as the abrupt decrease in the number of adult
offenders on parole during that same period.
Although I could not find a systematic study on this phenomenon,24 there is evidence in the
data to support this causation mechanism, and it appears to be part of the culture of numerous
state department of corrections officials I talked to.25 The opening of new facilities and the
change in incarceration they induce should be, from the perspective of the young women I
observe, largely exogenous.
For sentencing changes, I used the compilation prepared by the Vera Institute of Legal
Research (Stemen et al., 2005), the report on the influence of TIS reforms prepared by the Urban
Institute (Sabol et al., 2002), and the BJS report on TIS in State Prisons (Ditton and Wilson,
1999). For measures of prison capacity, I used the yearly publication “Prisoners in Year X”
published by the BJS. The BJS releases three distinct prison capacity statistics: rated capacity
(defined as “the number of beds or inmates assigned by a rating official to institutions within the
jurisdiction”), operational capacity (“the number of inmates that can be accommodated based on
a facility’s staff, existing programs, and services”) and design capacity (“the number of inmates

24

25

This suction effect is reminiscent of the popular movie line “If you build it, they will come” (Field of Dreams).

To give a recent example, a new prison was opened in Maine in early 2002, and the state prison population

spiked by more than 11% – by far the highest growth rate in the U.S. that year (average: 2.6%). Previously the
annual growth rate in Maine had been running below 2%.

18

that planners or architects intended for the facility”). Those last two statistics seem the most
useful. However, the collection is imperfect, and data are missing for a large number of possible
observations.26 Therefore, I created a dummy variable to capture the most dramatic increases in
prison capacity (relative to a smooth trend) that occurred in those states where such a pattern can
be found, and where the mechanism of capacity constraint described earlier appears to have been
binding.

In other words, in those states, the dummy variable takes value one if capacity

increases sharply after a period of relative stability, or experiences a significant acceleration
within a period of steady increase, and the number of offenders on parole initially decreases at
the same time. This approach is conservative because some states do experience shifts in prison
capacity trend that seem to parallel incarceration patterns but absent simultaneous changes for
probation or parole, the causal mechanism is less compelling.
When choosing those variables that will eventually be used in the Two-Stage Least Squares
(2SLS) estimation, I run first-stage regressions from the different samples, including the source
file (one observation per state/year), and select those variables, from the list of possible IV
candidates, which are significant in most samples. To summarize, the sentencing change that
appears to influence Black incarceration the most is presumptive sentencing , even though it is
not significant when using the set of controls for state-level welfare generosity in the sample
used to measure teen fertility decisions – other changes, including the much publicized “three-

26

Imputing the design capacity values with those for operational capacity (or the reverse) only makes sense when

there is evidence that the series are equivalent or close enough when a state reports those two statistics at the same
time. Unfortunately, this helps but in a few cases.

19

strike laws” have less impact on Black male incarceration.27 Table 2 provides dates following
the year of enactment for each state: note that because presumptive sentencing started on or
before 1979 in some of the highly populated states where it has been in use, the identification off
state fixed effects is slim. The prison capacity change variable applied to those states that
reverse their parole trend reveals itself as the most solid IV candidate. Since I have two different
potential IVs, I run Sargan tests of overidentifying restrictions.28 None of the instruments is
rejected according to those tests. For both the June and March CPS samples, the resulting F-test
from the first stage, i.e., testing that both instrument coefficients are jointly equal to zero, is high
(as expected this is driven by the second one): it strongly rejects the hypothesis that the
instruments have no effect on incarceration. Table 3 shows the first stage for the teen fertility
sample I focus on.
However, the results from the IV strategy are not directly comparable to those which derive
from the non-instrumented incarceration rates.

This is because the IVs would affect the

incarceration of some men more than others, and therefore affect women in different ways. This
argument applies further when comparing the IVs against each other. In the present case,
capacity expansion, being less perceptible to the offender population than changes in sentencing
practices, should have more of a purely incapacitative, rather than deterrent, effect. It is also
27

The significance of either TIS or a synthetic indicator of parole restriction do not resist state-level standard errors

clustering; this finding may be useful when evaluating other results on this theme by Greenberg and West (2001)
and Jacobs and Carmichael (2001).
28

The test is partially informative regarding the IVs’ hypothesized exogeneity, not their power. For a detail of the

procedure, see Wooldridge (2006). The presence of two instruments of different nature reinforces the strength of the
test.

20

plausible that prison capacity expansion would bring into prisons a wider range of offenders,
including less violent offenders who would otherwise be on probation, or parole violators, and it
can be used to keep people who would otherwise be paroled. On the other hand, presumptive
sentencing rules would typically affect sentence lengths for people who are already going to
prison, and therefore, at the margin, they are more likely to target more serious criminals. To
that extent, the IVs capture more detailed features of the problem at stake. Yet, for that same
reason, the instrumental strategy should not be interpreted as a simple sensitivity analysis.
Finally, a noticeable by-product of this analysis lies in the differences of impact of these
instruments between White and Black male incarceration. There is already a large literature on
whether sentencing policies apply differently between Blacks and Whites (see Spohn, 2000).
Here, results for presumptive sentencing point toward a significant effect for Blacks and an
insignificant effect for Whites, although they are sensitive to the specifications chosen.
However, for prison capacity expansion, while it is significant for the White sample, the
magnitude of the effect is considerably lower than for Black male incarceration and statistically
different at very high levels of confidence across specifications.

This result is new.

A

comprehensive investigation of this puzzle would take us too far, but different hypotheses will
need to be tested to understand why the adjustment margin of capacity expansion would target
Black offenders in priority.

21

IV. Results

IV. 1. Fertility
The results in Table 5 support the hypothesis that Black-teenage fertility declined as a
consequence of increased Black-male incarceration. I present different estimations of the model
that provide insight into the identification of the parameter of interest. Columns (1)-(2) showing
the results of specifications that do not include state fixed effects, are presented for
completeness. In model (3), which includes year and state fixed effects, the coefficient on
incarceration is negative but insignificant. Yet, we have seen earlier that because incarceration
increases almost every year in each state, the concern is that it may be still be confounded with
other variables that exhibit somewhat parallel growth patterns over the period within states.
When adding state-level linear and linear-quadratic time trends, in columns (4) and (5), the
coefficient on incarceration remains negative but now becomes more precisely estimated and
significant. An F-test on all state linear trends rejects the null hypothesis in model (4), and so
does an F-test on all state linear and quadratic trends in model (5). The interpretation of the
coefficient is now easier since incarceration is purged of the local effects previously picked up
which, to the extent that they change slowly over time, are now well captured by the trend
terms.29
A sensitivity analysis yields the following results. When dropping one Circuit Court at a
time from model (5), all results hold except when removing Circuit Court 5. Digging further, the
29

The increase in adjusted R2, although small, is noticeable given the large number of variables added. Yet, in

model (5), the quasi stability in adjusted R2 compared to model (4) suggests that there is nothing to be gained by
adding even higher-order terms.

22

5% significance level breaks down if Texas alone (5% of the sample) is removed – although
removing Texas during the 1980s only would leave the results unaffected. This indirectly
confirms the role of the dramatic and much publicized increase of incarceration in Texas: it
suggests a steep marginal effect of incarceration beyond a certain threshold.30 To strengthen this
intuition, I partitioned the sample to single out those states which, at the end of the 1990s,
reached Texas-like rates of adult Black male incarceration (in particular, Connecticut, Delaware,
Iowa, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, Wisconsin): keeping those states only, plus Texas and
Washington D.C., yields a 1% level coefficient with only 15% of the sample. Moving to
checking the sensitivity of the results to the period considered, keeping only 1992-2000 is
enough to retain a 5% level (with only 31% of the sample left). On the other hand, eliminating
the 1990s leaves the results insignificant.
Adding variables for state-level Black male unemployment or corresponding to different
measures of state welfare generosity (model 6) does not alter the results qualitatively. These
variables, however, are jointly significant.31 The role of welfare reforms, especially in the
second half of the 1990s could explain why including time varying effects within states is
important hence the abrupt change in the coefficient and significance from model (3) to models
(4) and (5): in particular, one may think of states’ discretion in their use of TANF funds. 32 At

30

I also tested the hypothesis that the changes driven by the inclusion of state trends reflect the rapid increase in

Hispanic population in some states. However, when removing states other than Texas with a large Hispanic
population (California, New York, Florida, Illinois, Arizona and New Jersey), the results are virtually unchanged.
31

This result accords with the findings of Offner (2003) and Kaestner, Korenman, and O'Neill (2003).

32

The stated purposes of TANF are to: (a) Provide assistance to needy families so children may be cared for (b) End

the dependence of needy parents on government benefits by promoting job preparation, work, and marriage (c)

23

the same time, it is plausible that changes in state-level welfare generosity, while not necessarily
causal in nature, would be correlated with state-level incarceration policy, both of which being
bent by the same “tougher” ideology towards social issues and by an evolution of local norms
regarding tolerance and work ethics.
Looking at the preferred estimation (model 6), the magnitude of the effect is sizable: at the
means of the data, a 1% increase in the adult Black-male incarceration rate (per adult Black-male
population 20-54 y/o) decreases the probability of having a child by 0.05. Recall that the
average proportion of mothers in this sample is about 30%. Given an average adult Black-male
incarceration rate of close to 4% this corresponds to an elasticity of -0.7.
The presentation of this result becomes perhaps more compelling if we compare the effect of
incarceration with that of age: in absolute terms, the decline in teenage fertility associated with a
1% increase in adult Black male incarceration rate is equivalent to the expected average increase
in teenage fertility associated with seven extra months of age at age 19. I suspect that the effect
would be even greater if I could more specifically capture the incarceration rate of younger
adults.
I apply different methods to affirm the robustness of these results, all of which make use of
the controls included in model (5). Looking into the Black/White comparison, the interaction
coefficient Black × incarceration rate in model (7) shows that in response to male incarceration
in their group, Black females reduce their fertility relative to White females, but not
significantly. In the White population in the same age range, the effect measured here by the

Prevent and reduce the incidence of out-of-wedlock pregnancies and (d) Encourage the formation and maintenance
of two-parent families.

24

racial-specific incarceration coefficient, is positive, but insignificant.33 I also regressed Black
teenage fertility on White male incarceration, which was found to be insignificant.
Finally, I run a 2SLS estimation using sentencing and prison capacity changes as
instruments. The IV analysis confirms the previous analysis and the coefficient is significant at
the 5% or 1% level depending on the specifications.34 The result is also robust to the exclusion
of the state trend terms. Although the point estimate is higher, the Davidson and McKinnon
(1993) test cannot reject the hypothesis that the IV coefficient is equal to the OLS coefficient at
the 5% level. Note that the average incarceration rate is higher in the states that contribute to the
identification than in the others. This could explain part of the discrepancy in point estimates.
Further, I already suggested that the coefficients are not comparable: the IVs influence the
incarceration of certain men more than others. To the extent that the IVs more particularly affect
marginal offenders, hence potential matches, it is logical that the magnitude of the IV coefficient
would be actually higher. To be more specific, the driving IV here is prison capacity expansion:
in other words, the results hold when keeping that IV alone, the reverse it not true for
presumptive sentencing.35
33

I could not find plausible exogenous background characteristics leading to differential treatment within either

group. Kamdar (2007) reports a small negative coefficient among low-income families White females. Selecting
White women with below average grade for age yielded inconclusive results. However, the significant effects found
for the overall Black sample is indeed more pronounced among below average grade for age young women.

34

The result is confirmed when using actual operational capacity data over the fraction of the sample where the

information is available.

35

In this case, the result is consistent with a comparison of the separate F-tests, i.e., could come from the fact that the

prison capacity IV is a stronger instrument than presumptive sentencing. Alternatively, or concurrently, I offered a

25

Overall, the results on fertility converge to the conclusion that the sheer magnitude of adult
Black-male incarceration is enough to significantly reduce Black teenagers’ non-marital fertility,
a result further supported by Kamdar (2007). This conclusion goes against the qualitative
argument that the smaller number of men leads to more bargaining power on the male side and in
turn, more extra marital relations and pregnancies (Courtwright, 1996). Quantitatively, my
results run opposite to those of South and Lloyd (1992) who found that in 1980, male scarcity
broadly defined had no significant effect on the non-marital fertility rate for any age range
among Blacks.36 However, the study was conducted at a time when Black-male incarceration
rates were much lower than the average in my sample. Further, the effect of the sex ratio needs
not be linear. This would be consistent with finding a positive (non significant) effect among the
White sample and a consistently negative effect in the Black sample.

Presumably, small

deviations from a unitary sex ratio could produce the kind of consequences Courtwright is
describing. On the other hand, at some point, large shortages of men would inevitably lead to a
decrease in fertility.37
According to Donohue and Levitt (2001), abortion availability, which should contribute to a
reduction in teen births, led to a decline in crime with an 18 year lag. In simplistic terms, the
argument presented here appears as the reverse, but this time with more immediate effects: in the
hypothesis for why the marginal incarceration resulting from prison capacity expansion would affect those men
responsible for impregnating teenage girls more than that resulting from presumptive sentencing.

36

Darity and Myers (1990) suggest that reducing the supply of marriageable mates would increase the proportion of

Black families headed by females. Yet this is not inconsistent with the results presented here.

37

An analysis on completed fertility seems worthy of interest but falls beyond the scope of the present study.

26

Black community, the marginal impact of more men behind bars is now a decrease in early
fertility. More research is necessary to identify whether this comes from an increase in the use of
abortion, birth control methods or fewer sexual relations altogether. In particular it would be
challenging to determine if those women forego early motherhood because of a simple shortage
of partners or because they anticipate that the father of a potential child may not stay around in
case he becomes incarcerated, or leaves all the more easily since there is an excess supply of
women on the market. It goes without saying that finding a new man to support a single mother
should be increasingly difficult in an environment where (free) men benefit from a rent.

IV. 2. Other Outcomes
IV. 2. 1. Education
I followed the same methodology to study the impact of male incarceration rates on education
for single Black women. Yet, a methodological challenge arises: the coding of education
changes between the pre-1992 and post-1991 periods in the CPS. Unfortunately, there is no
satisfactory recode that would make the series perfectly consistent over the two periods without
too much loss in information (that proposed by Jaeger (1997) still has problems). I therefore
investigated the two periods 1979-1991 and 1992-2000 separately.
I focused on educational attainment for the age bracket 19-21, because it is likely that the
relevant margin would be whether to complete high school or pursue some education beyond
high school. Heuristically, the results point toward an effect of male incarceration concentrated
at age 20; recall this measures incarceration when these women were 19, which for most of them,
corresponds to the end of high school.

27

To summarize the results for 1979-1991, when adding year and state fixed effects, the
coefficient on male incarceration becomes positive and significant, and the inclusion of statespecific time trends strengthens this finding. Adding the extra controls (state unemployment
rates, welfare measures) leaves the conclusion unchanged.38 While the White female educational
response to White male incarceration is negative and insignificant, the Black/White difference is
significant at the 10% level. Note that for 1979-1991, the capacity expansion-based IV relies on
a small number of observations from Rhode Island thus the IV results, although supportive of a
significant effect, should be taken with caution given the unexpected magnitude of the
coefficient in column (9). On the other hand, the corresponding results from the 1992-2000
period are not as persuasive, but this appears to stem from the smaller number of observations
(about a thousand). When enlarging the age bracket considered, the regressions for 1992-2000
exhibit coefficients similar to those for 1979-1991 and, in particular, the results from the IV
estimations become highly significant across specifications. The evidence is thus in favor of an
effect of Black male incarceration on Black women’s education.
Finally, education is not the only way through which young women can gain financial
independence and self-reliance in response to aggregate male incarceration. Male incarceration
could spur women to join the labor-force, become full-time employed or augment their hours
worked. In the following section, I explore those hypotheses.

IV. 2. 3. Employment
Studying the impact of Black-male incarceration on Black-female employment presents more
difficulties of interpretation. White and Black females compete for the same jobs more than they
compete for the same men. Also, the local level of aggregate Black male incarceration could be
38

The false experiment of regressing Black education on White incarceration rates produces insignificant results.

28

likely to be correlated with employers’ attitudes (and perhaps bias) towards Blacks in general.
Another problem is that employment is a flow. The previous two outcomes were the product of
irreversible or quasi-irreversible decisions: a woman is a mother by age twenty or she is not, she
either graduates from high school or she does not; cases of going back to school in adult life are
rare. In contrast, work status is adjustable: one can move in and out of the labor force, partly in
response to current labor conditions. Incarceration rates could therefore influence employment
at any age. In the following, I concentrate on early employment.
Several margins may be considered. Empirically, the results yield significant and sizeable
coefficients for women in their early 20s, especially with regard to full-time employment. Those
are presented in Table 7. The IV estimation produces the same kind of confirmation as earlier,
with the driving IV still being prison capacity expansion. The conclusion is that Black male
incarceration leads more young Black women to work full time.39 The Black/White differential
analysis points to a reverse movement for young White women, which coincides with the
previously documented convergence between Black female and White female early
employment.40
That some Black women increase their employment in response to Black-male incarceration
is intuitive given the above. Absent exogenous background characteristics, one may still refine
these results. I find that they are driven by those women who are in the bottom half of the
education distribution, and by married women. The first observation, i.e., women with lower
39

On the other hand, I did not find an effect on full time employment conditional on labor force participation.

40

More generally, the participation rate for women 16 to 24 years old has been a major source in the deceleration of

female employment in general (Hayghe, 1997). Given that Whites outnumber Blacks roughly 8:1, one may
therefore view rising male incarceration as a significant factor underlying this trend.

29

education should be most affected at the margin, makes sense. The second observation is less
intuitive. However, married women in that age bracket are on average less educated than single
women, so one reason why married women contribute to the increase in employment is because
of the overlap with lower education. However, when selecting married women in the top half of
the education distribution, the results still hold. I believe an interpretation for this phenomenon
is the increasing uncertainty of the returns to marriage for these young women. First, there is a
higher chance that their husbands, who are typically slightly older, thus in the most dangerous
age range for incarceration, will become incapacitated. Second, the increased bargaining power
of men should spur women to seek counter measures, and the most obvious way to achieve that
goal is to become financially independent (or less dependent): according to Seitz (2007), a
decrease in the ratio of men to women translates into decreased intra-household transfers to
wives, which implies that black women are predicted to work more because they receive lower
intra-household transfers. Third, an explanation could be the consequence of the effect of
incarceration on education: those women who decided to increase their education as an insurance
against an unfavorable marriage market – but still managed to get married – are in a better
position to get a job. Given that the effect on education is concentrated at the high-school
completion stage more so than at the college level, it is therefore logical to see an effect as early
as at age 20-22.
Finally, the June CPS confirms that married Black women respond to incarceration more
than single ones, but also reveals that young Black married mothers significantly contribute to
the increase in full-time employment among young Black women in general. This result is
consistent with the observation that much of the recent increase in women’s labor force

30

participation can be attributed to the rising participation rates of women with young children
(Cohen and Bianchi, 1999).

IV. 2. 4. Marriage
It sounds like a legitimate conjecture that by sending men to prison and thereby removing them
from the marriage market, the marriage rate should mechanically fall. For Seitz (2007), the
options of Black women outside marriage, combined with the poor labor market opportunities of
Black males, provide an explanation for the low marriage rates in the Black population: the
increased prospect of incarceration for a spouse would thus only contribute to the lower expected
returns to marriage. Incarceration could have even larger effects by inflicting the stigma of
prison on those who come back to the marriage market after their release. Yet, such a hypothesis
would only hold if, absent incarceration, those men were indeed to get married.
Incarcerated Black men are only about half as likely to be married as non-institutionalized
men of the same age (Western, 2004) but one may not infer causality from that fact: prisoners
may simply be barred from the marriage market through incapacitation; alternatively, many of
them may not be “marriage material” in the first place. Further, some young women may prefer
to marry earlier and secure a mate rather than face a stiff competition in the future. The removal
of some men from the marriage market pool can generate another offsetting, indirect effect: in a
perverted way, the judicial system is performing some of the screening process by filtering the
good matches from the bad ones, hence eliminating search frictions. This compounds the
already mentioned effect of incarceration on non-incarcerated men in terms of deterrence and
improved behavior. Overall, the resulting outcome is ambiguous.

31

Using the same methodology as in the previous sections, I was not able to find a clear,
consistent and significant effect of Black-male incarceration on the probability of having been
married for young Black women.

Even if some of the OLS-based evidence supports the

hypothesis that Black male incarceration decreases the probability of marriage, it was not
confirmed using IV.41 There is no apparent reason to think that neither of the IVs would affect
the incarceration of men who would otherwise have gotten married.
In fact, Wood (1990) already argued that the lack of “quality men” is only marginally
responsible for the decline in marriage rates in the Black community. Similarly, Myers (2000)
found “little support for the theoretically plausible hypothesis that there are strong unintended
impacts of imprisonment policies on family structure.” My conclusion would therefore concur.
On the other hand, it contrasts with the findings presented by Charles and Luoh (2006). One
hypothesis to account for the discrepancy is the result I obtained from a regression using years
1980, 1990 and 2000 only, that is mimicking Charles and Luoh’s sample: in that case, I did find
a highly significant negative impact on the likelihood to ever be married using both OLS and IV
estimations. This suggests a conclusion to be tested more generally that the benefit of IVs may
not overcome the loss of information that results from exploiting sample waves too far apart.

41

More specifically, the IV specification produces significant negative effects for the period 1979-1994 when the

identification from the capacity expansion IV comes from a small number of observations in Rhode Island. After
1994, the identification comes from a larger number of observations from different states and the effect disappears.

32

V. Conclusion

This work shows that the massive incarceration of Black males in the U.S. has perceptible effects
on Black women in their teen years and early to mid twenties. In particular, Black-male
incarceration decreases early Black non-marital fertility and increases Black-female education
and early employment. The evidence linking male incarceration and marriage is less persuasive.
The conclusion of this work might be construed as running against the traditional wisdom
that an unfavorable gender ratio results in adverse consequences for females. Yet, the deduction
that Black women’s welfare has increased because of Black male incarceration would certainly
misrepresents the message conveyed here. In a basic marriage-market model assuming rational
agents, a shock in the supply of men such as that produced by massive incarceration should make
women worse off at the margin.42
The study of the effects of massive male incarceration on women’s outcomes, a case of
“tectonic economics” (Krueger, 2006), is in its infancy. For example, Johnson and Raphael
(2005) advance that the higher prevalence of HIV among Black women is connected to Black
male incarceration rates.

Additionally, Cunningham (2007) finds that skewed sex ratios

measured by the relative incarceration of men vs. women cause men to have more female

42

Certainly, this simple argument could be qualified. For instance, the large-scale confinement of working men

could become a positive externality on labor market-oriented women. Alternatively, if women’s choices were
previously constrained by men, for example if we believe that some women were bullied into demeaning roles, a
decrease in early fertility, and an increase in education and job-market attachment could be viewed as beneficial.
Still, these indirect effects would have to be extremely large to compensate for the direct decrease in welfare from
choices made in the context of a crisis of gigantic proportions in the Black community.

33

partners in the Black community. Further exploration will give us a more comprehensive view
of the different channels through which aggregate male incarceration affects women.

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38

Graph 1: Male Incarceration rate per 20-54 y/o Male Population, by race
7.00
6.00

Unweighted BMPRate 20-54

5.00

Weighted BMPRate 20-54

4.00
3.00

Unweighted WMPRate 20-54

2.00

Weighted WMPRate 20-54

1.00

99

97

19

95

19

93

19

91

19

89

19

87

19

85

19

83

19

81

19

19

19

79

0.00

Graph 2: Birth Rates for Teenagers age 18-19 by race, 1964-2001
Source: NCHS Reports 1979-2002
300.0

250.0

200.0
White
Black

150.0

100.0

50.0

39

00

98

20

96

19

94

19

92

19

90

19

88

19

86

19

84

19

82

19

19

80

19

78

19

76

19

74

19

72

19

70

19

68

19

66

19

19

64

0.0

Graph 3: Texas Prison Capacity, Black Male incarceration and
Total Adults on Parole
180000
160000
140000
120000

Prison Capacity

100000

Number of Black Men
Incarcerated

80000

Adults on Parole

60000
40000
20000

98

96

19

94

19

92

19

19

90

88

19

86

19

19

84

19

82

80

19

19

19

78

0

Graph 4: West Virginia Prison Capacity, Black Male
Incarceration, and Total Adults on Parole
3000
2500
Prison Capacity

2000

Number of Black Male
Incarcerated

1500

Adults on Parole

1000
500

40

98
19

96
19

94
19

92
19

90
19

88
19

86
19

84
19

82
19

80
19

19

78

0

Table 1: Black-Male Incarceration Rate per Black Male Population Age 20-54, by State,
1978-1999 (%)
State
Average
Std Dev
Min
Max
1.346
5.92
1.656
Alabama
3.932
Alaska
4.067
1.84
1.653
7.595
Arizona
6.257
1.477
3.852
8.158
Arkansas
4.369
1.534
2.091
6.389
California
4.411
1.904
1.651
7.094
Colorado
3.829
1.884
1.865
7.006
Connecticut
6.413
2.493
3.093
11.016
Delaware
7.204
2.015
3.788
11.119
Florida
5.274
1.387
3.4
7.339
Georgia
3.368
0.933
2.247
4.893
Hawaii
1.014
0.432
0.191
1.624
Idaho
2.402
0.424
1.624
3.095
Illinois
3.999
1.606
1.942
6.58
Indiana
4.407
1.594
1.721
6.841
Iowa
7.003
2.503
3.809
11.431
Kansas
5.057
1.595
2.631
7.455
Kentucky
4.264
2.166
1.794
8.048
Louisiana
4.652
1.719
2.325
7.674
Maine*
1.373
0.663
0.69
2.829
Maryland
3.902
0.737
2.6199
4.762
Massachusetts
2.865
0.603
2.009
3.752
Michigan
5.384
1.862
2.997
7.674
Minnesota
3.576
1.115
2.45
5.317
Mississippi
3.091
1.276
1.181
5.764
Missouri
4.848
1.971
2.541
8.098
Montana
2.895
1.066
1.403
5.269
Nebraska
5.062
0.742
3.728
6.12
Nevada
6.276
1.388
3.483
7.75
New Hampshire
2.146
1.608
0.35
4.815
New Jersey
4.171
1.695
1.832
6.689
New Mexico
3.386
0.580
2.424
4.297
New York
3.417
0.999
2.09
4.826
North Carolina
3.480
0.882
2.697
5.068
North Dakota
2.735
1.119
1.105
4.903
Ohio
2.851
0.984
1.809
5.452
Oklahoma
6.453
2.894
2.85
10.69
Oregon
5.188
1.231
2.745
7.164
Pennsylvania
4.502
1.944
2.003
7.463
Rhode Island
5.750
2.28
2.333
9.352
South Carolina
3.852
1.206
2.284
5.409
South Dakota
2.735
1.119
1.105
4.903
Tennessee
2.851
0.984
1.809
5.452
Texas
5.338
2.719
2.99
10.45
Utah
4.617
1.121
2.892
6.536
Vermont**
2.552
1.788
0.303
6
Virginia
3.587
1.251
2.182
5.454
Washington
3.738
0.817
2.711
5.158
Washington D.C.
7.698
3.449
2.591
12.190
West Virginia
2.208
0.756
1.528
3.888
Wisconsin***
6.256
3.014
3.520
13.689
Wyoming
4.136
1.608
1.563
6.678
*

Year 1996 missing
Years 1982-1993 missing
***
Year1978 missing
**

41

Table 2: Selected Sentencing* and Capacity Expansion Changes,** 1978-1999
Presumptive
State
Major Capacity
Sentencing
Expansion Change
Alabama
Alaska
1982-1999
Arizona
1979-1999
Arkansas
California
1978-1999
Colorado
1980-1999
Connecticut
Delaware
Florida
Georgia
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
1978-1999
Iowa
1995-1999
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
1978-1999
New Mexico
1978-1999
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
1997-1999
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
1982-1999
1988-1999
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
1994-1999
Utah
Vermont
Virginia
Washington
Washington D.C.
West Virginia
1995-1999
Wisconsin
1996-1999
Wyoming
*

Source: Stemen et al. (2005).
Relative to a linear-quadratic state-level time trend concurrent with a shift in trend of parolees– see text for details.
Source: BJS “Prisoners in Year X” series and “Adults on parole, Federal and State-by-State, 1975-2004”.

**

42

Table 3: First Stage
Linear Regressions with robust standard errors clustered by state
Dependent Variable: “State/Year Black Male Prisoners per 20-54 Black Men (%)”
(1)
(2)
Presumptive Sentencing
(Dummy variable)

-0.542
(0.288)*

-0.683
(0.682)

Major Capacity Expansion
(Dummy variable)

1.925
(0.125)***

1.849
(0.093)***

Adjusted R2

0.977

0.985

F-test (both IV =0)

158***

199***
1,779***

F-test (all extra variables =0)
# Observations

5,369

5,133

Sample used in Table 5;
Models (1)-(2) contain year, state, state×trend and state×trend2 effects;
Model (2) contains the following extra variables:
State-level Black men unemployment rate and different measures of state-level welfare generosity as coded in Fang
and Keane (2004), namely: child support (existence and amount of pass-through program, existence, amount and
rate for disregard from pass through), flat income disregard, AFDC/TANF payment standards for one person with
two and with three children, child support enforcement expenditures, existence of work requirement and the degree
in which the work requirement is binding for the year, the length of time in months allowed on welfare before work
requirement hits, the age in months of the youngest child that the states allow the women to be exempt from work
requirement, exemption if the woman is disabled or ill; exemption if a family member of the woman is disabled,
exemption if the child care is not available for a kid less than 6, if the state has full (vs. partial) sanction, age of the
child for exemption, and state EITC rules.
*

10% significance; ** 5% significance; *** 1% significance

Table 4: Summary Statistics of Dependent Variables in Tables 5, 6 and 7
# Observations Average
Std Dev Min

Max

“Whether a Mother,” (Black)

5,369

0.3

-

0

1

“Whether a Mother,” (White)
“Educational attainment”
(Black)
“Educational attainment”
(White)
“Full Time Employed”
(Black)
“Full Time Employed”
(White)

8,987

0.063

-

0

1

1,793

12.55

1.72

0

18

9,850

13.13

1.727

0

18

8,324

0.29

-

0

1

56,567

0.392

-

0

1

43

Black Prison rate
20-54 y/o

(1)

Table 5
Linear Regressions with robust standard errors clustered by state
Sample: June CPS unmarried Black women age 18-20
(1979-85, 1990, 1992, 1994-1995, 1998, 2000)
Dependent Variable: “whether a mother”
(8) (IV)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)†

0.001

0.001

-0.002

-0.039

-0.043

-0.056

-0.1

-0.1

-0.129

-0.148

(0.004)

(0.009)

(0.011)

(0.016)**

(0.021)**

(0.024)**

(0.044)**

(0.05)**

(0.019)***

(0.022)***

Prison rate

(9) (IV) (10) (IV2)‡ (11) (IV2)‡

0.052
(0.052)

Prison rate×Black

-0.095
(0.058)

Year

Yes

State

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

State×Trend
2

State×Trend

Extra Controls•

Yes

Yes

Yes

Adjusted R2

0.017

0.019

0.032

0.036

0.036

0.034

0.108

0.034

0.033

0.032

0.031

# Observations

5,369

5,369

5,369

5,369

5,369

5,133

34,356

5,369

5,133

5,369

5,133

All models control for age, age2
†
In model (7) using both Blacks and Whites, the prison rate is race-specific and all the controls interacted with the white dummy are added – see Equation (4).
‡
IV2 refers to IV estimation with prison capacity expansion as sole IV.
•
State-level Black Men Unemployment rate and different measures of state-level welfare generosity– see text for details.
*
10% significance; ** 5% significance; *** 1% significance

45

Black Prison rate
20-54 y/o

(1)

Table 6
Linear Regressions with robust standard errors clustered by state
Sample: March CPS unmarried Black women age 20
(1979-1991)
Dependent Variable: “Last attended grade”○
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)†
(8) (IV)

(9) (IV)

-0.028

-0.018

2.22

(0.048)

(0.06)

0.119
(0.064)

0.368

0.614

0.6

0.678

(0.163)** (0.242)** (0.271)**

Prison rate

(0.147)***

(0.915)**

-0.833
(0.754)

Prison rate×Black

1.447
(0.772)*

Year

Yes

State

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes
Yes

State×Trend
State×Trend2
•

Yes

Extra Controls
Adjusted R2

≈0

0.001

0.013

0.02

0.018

0.022

0.319

0.018

0.001

# Observations

1,793

1,793

1,793

1,793

1,793

1,711

11,643

1,793

1,711

†

In model (7) using both Blacks and Whites, the prison rate is race-specific and all the controls interacted with the white dummy are added – see Equation (4).
State-level Black Men Unemployment rate and different measures of state-level welfare generosity–
– see text for details.
*
10% significance; ** 5% significance; *** 1% significance
•

47

Black Prison rate
20-54 y/o

(1)

Table 7
Linear Regressions with robust standard errors clustered by state
Sample: March CPS Black women age 20-22
(1979-93 and 1996-2000)
Dependent Variable: “employed full-time”
(8) (IV)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)†

(9) (IV)

0.01

0.008

0.16

0.081

0.166

(0.043)***

(0.013)***

(0.047)***

-0.007

0.035

(0.04)** (0.008) (0.008) (0.01)***

0.046

0.06

0.082

(0.019)** (0.022)**

Prison rate

(0.012)***

(10) (IV2) (11) (IV2)‡

-0.113
(0.06)*

Prison rate×Black

0.159
(0.06)**

Year

Yes

State

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

State×Trend
2

State×Trend

Extra Controls•

Yes

Yes

Yes

Adjusted R2

0.016

0.022

0.038

0.044

0.045

0.044

0.03

0.044

0.043

0.044

0.04

# Observations

8,324

8,324

8,324

8,324

8,324

8,324

64,891

8,324

7,919

8,324

7,919

Years 1994-95 missing. All models control for age, age2
†
In model (7) using both Blacks and Whites, the prison rate is race-specific and all the controls interacted with the white dummy are added – see Equation (4).
‡
IV2 refers to IV estimation with prison capacity expansion as sole IV.
•
State-level Black Men Unemployment rate and different measures of state-level welfare generosity– see text for details.
*
10% significance; ** 5% significance; *** 1% significance

49

 

 

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