Senior Economist
T: 617-973-3413
F: 617-973-3409
Alicia.Sasser@bos.frb.org |
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| Education
| Work experience | Publications | Public
service |
Primary fields of research
Labor economics, health economics, public economics, inequality and social policy |
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| Biography
Alicia Sasser is a Senior Economist in the New England
Public Policy Center at the Federal Reserve Bank of
Boston. Prior to joining the Bank, Ms. Sasser worked
as an economist in the private sector and taught economics
at Mount Holyoke College.
Her current research focuses on housing affordability, migration, expansions in health insurance coverage, and interactions between health and labor markets. Alicia's work has appeared in journals such as Health Affairs and the Journal of Human Resources and has been presented at annual meetings of the American Economic Association, the Academy of Managed Care Pharmacy, and the International Society of Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes Research.
Ms. Sasser earned both a master’s degree and a Ph.D. in economics from Harvard University where she also served as a doctoral fellow in the Inequality and Social Policy Program at the Kennedy School of Government.
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| Education
Ph.D., economics, Harvard University, 2001
A.M., economics, Harvard University, 2000
B.A., mathematics and economics, Boston University,
magna cum laude, 1993
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| Work
experience
- Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
- Senior Economist, 2007-
- Economist, 2005-2007
Research Assistant, 1993-1997
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- Mount Holyoke College
- Assistant Professor, 2004-2005
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- Analysis Group, Inc.
- Academic Affiliate, 2005
Associate, 2002-2004
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- Mathematica Policy Research
- Economist, 2001-2002
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- National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)
- Research Assistant, 1997-2001
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- Harvard University
- Teaching Fellow, 1999-2001
Economics Tutor, 1997-2001
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| Publications |
| Books
Sasser, Alicia Catherine. 2001. The Role of Gender and Family in the Labor Market. Ph.D. Thesis, Harvard University, UMI No. 3011475.
Journals
Regional Review
“Perspective:
On State Tax Policy,” with
Robert Tannenwald. vol. 7, no. 1, (Winter 1997).
Other journal articles
“The Value Of Antihypertensive Drugs: A Perspective On Medical Innovation,” with David M. Cutler, Genia Long, Ernst R. Berndt, Jimmy Royer, Andrée-Anne Fournier, and Pierre Cremieux. Health Affairs. vol. 26, no. 1 (2007): 97-110.
“Assessing the Economic Impact of Chronic Conditions in Post-Menopausal Women,” with Maida Taylor, Howard Birnbaum, Michael Schoenfeld, Emily Oster, and Matthew Rousculp. Expert Opinion on Pharmacotherapy. vol. 6, no. 11 (September 2005): 1803-1814.
“Gender Differences in Physician Pay: Tradeoffs
Between Career and Family.” Journal of
Human Resources. vol. 40, no. 2 (Spring 2005).
“Economic Burden of Osteoporosis, Breast Cancer,
and Cardiovascular Disease Among Postmenopausal Women
in an Employed Population,” with Matthew Rousculp,
Howard Birnbaum, Emily Oster, Edward Lufkin, and
David Mallet. Women’s Health Issues. vol.
15, no. 3 (May/June 2005): 97-108.
Research reports
“The Potential Economic Impact of Increasing the Minimum Wage in Massachusetts.” New England Public Policy Center Research Report N06-1 (2006).
Policy briefs
“The New England Rental Market.” New England Public Policy Center Policy Brief No. 07-1 (2007).
Working papers
“The Lack of Affordable Housing in New England: How Big a Problem? Why Is It Growing? What Are We Doing About It?” with Bo Zhao and Darcy Rollins (with an overview by Robert Tannenwald), New England Public Policy Center Series, paper no. 06-1 (2006).
“The Impact of Managed Care on the Gender
Earnings Gap Among Physicians.” Revise and
Resubmit, Industrial Labor & Relations Review.
“Assessing the Economic Impact of Chronic
Conditions in Post-Menopausal Women,” with
Howard Birnbaum, David Mallet, Emily Oster, and Matthew
Rousculp. Revise and Resubmit, Expert Opinion
on Pharmacotherapy.
“The Impact of Antihypertensive Drugs on the
Number and Risk of Death, Stroke, and Myocardial
Infarction,” with Ernst Berndt, Pierre Cremieux,
David Cutler, Andree-Anne Fournier, Genia Long, and
Jimmy Royer. Submitted to New England Journal
of Medicine.
“The Impact of the Vaccines for Children Program
on Rates of Childhood Immunization.” with Howard
Birnbaum, Andree-Anne Fournier, Genia Long, Louis
Rossiter, and Jimmy Royer. Submitted to Health
Affairs.
“Examining the Accuracy of a Budget Impact
Model: Predicting the First-Year Use of a New Osteoporosis
Therapy,” with Howard Birnbaum, David Mallet,
Erick Moyneur, and Matthew Rousculp. Submitted to
Journal of Managed Care Pharmacy.
Other material
“Trends in Median Income in Massachusetts, Greater Boston, and the City of Boston,” with Brad Hershbein (May 2006).
“Health Care Employment across New England and the Nation,” with Matthew Nagowski (March 2006).
“The Impact of Welfare Reform on Children’s Health and Nutritional
Status,” with Phil Gleason, Mathematica Policy Research, (May 2002).
“A Snapshot of the Implementation of California’s
Mental Health Parity Law,” with Timothy Lake,
Cheryl Young, and Brian Quinn. Mathematica
Policy Research, (February 2002).
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Public
service
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| Referee:
Labour Economics, American Journal of Public Health |
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