TY - JOUR AU - Fishback,Price V. AU - Haines,Michael R. AU - Kantor,Shawn TI - Births, Deaths, and New Deal Relief during the Great Depression JF - National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper Series VL - No. 11246 PY - 2005 Y2 - April 2005 UR - http://www.nber.org/papers/w11246 L1 - http://www.nber.org/papers/w11246.pdf N1 - Author contact info: Price V. Fishback Department of Economics University of Arizona Tucson, AZ 85721 Tel: 520/621-4421 Fax: 520/621-8450 E-Mail: pfishback@eller.arizona.edu Michael R. Haines Department of Economics, 217 Persson Hall Colgate University 13 Oak Drive Hamilton, NY 13346 Tel: 315/228-7536 Fax: 315/228-7033 E-Mail: MHAINES@MAIL.COLGATE.EDU Shawn E. Kantor School of Social Sciences, Humanities and Arts University of California, Merced 5200 N. Lake Road Merced, CA 95343 Tel: 209-228-2956 Fax: 209-228-4007 E-Mail: skantor@ucmerced.edu AB - This paper examines the impact of New Deal relief programs on infant mortality, noninfant mortality and general fertility rates in major U.S. cities between 1929 and 1940. We estimate the effects using a variety of specifications and techniques for a panel of 114 cities for which data on relief spending during the 1930s were available. The significant rise in relief spending during the New Deal contributed to reductions in infant mortality, suicide rates, and some other causes of death, while contributing to increases in the general fertility rate. Estimates of the relationship between economic activity and death rates suggest that many types of death rates were pro-cyclical, similar to Ruhm's (2000) findings for the modern U.S.. Estimates of the relief costs associated with saving a life (adjusted for inflation) are similar to estimates found in studies of modern social insurance programs. ER -