Assistant Professor of Economics,
Graduate School of Business
of the University of Chicago.
My official GSB home page is here.
| Electronic mail: bleakley[at]chicagogsb[dot]edu |
| On campus: 360 Hyde Park Center, GSB. |
| Web page: home.uchicago.edu/~bleakley (but you knew that already) |
| Office hours: By appointment. |
| Postal address: Graduate School of Business; 5807 S. Woodlawn Ave; Chicago, IL 60637. |
| Telephone: 773-834-2192; Fax: 773-702-0458. |
| How to pronounce my last name |
| The view out my window (6MB) |
Chicago Tribune Editorial on Hookworm

Spillover and Aggregate Effects of Health: Evidence from the Decline of Parasitic Disease in the Americas. (in preparation)
Disease Interactions. (in preparation)
Malaria Eradication in the Americas: A Retrospective Analysis of Childhood Exposure. Working paper, CEDE/Los Andes, September 2006. Latest version: August 2007.
Comments on Acemoglu and Johnson "Disease and Development". Presented at the NBER EFG meetings, July 18, 2006. (Several people requested copies of these, so this is what I could crank out on the trip home. Enjoy.)
Chronic Disease Burden and the Interaction of Education, Fertility and Growth. Forthcoming, Review of Economics and Statistics. (With Fabian Lange.) (Blurb in U of C Magazine.)
Disease and Development: Evidence from Hookworm Eradication in the American South, Quarterly Journal of Economics, February 2007, (available via the MIT Press). Most recent working-paper version: Stigler Center working paper no. 205, April 2006. Summarized in the Wall Street Journal, 1/16/03, p2. This paper in graphs.
Disease and Development: Evidence from the American South. Journal of the European Economic Association, April-May 2003 1(2-3):376-386. (available via the MIT Press) (This is an early summary piece for some of the other work above. Please refer to those other papers for the most definitive results.)

Mishmash on Mismatch? Balance-Sheet Effects and Emerging-Markets Crises (in progress)
Maturity Mismatch and Financial Crises: Evidence from Emerging Market Corporations. UCSD Discussion Paper 2004-16. December 2004. (With Kevin Cowan.) (A previous version of this study appears as "Maturity Mismatch on the Pacific Rim: Crises and Corporations in East Asia and Latin America." LAEBA working paper #38, October 2003.)
Corporate Dollar Debt and Devaluations: Much Ado About Nothing? (With Kevin Cowan.) Forthcoming, Review of Economics and Statistics. (Pre-print version available as IADB WP-532. First version, May 2001.)
Descalce de plazos y crisis financiera: evidencias en las empresas de América Latina Perspectivas: Análisis de temas críticos para el desarrollo sostenible, December 2003, 1(2):9-28.

English Proficiency and Social Assimilation Among Immigrants: An Instrumental Variables Approach. CCIS Working Paper No. 147, March 2007. (with Aimee Chin)
What Holds Back the Second Generation? The Intergenerational Transmission of Language Human Capital Among Immigrants. Forthcoming, Journal of Human Resources. Latest pre-publication version: July 2006. CCIS Working Paper No. 104, October 2004. (with Aimee Chin.) (Media mentions: New York Times, Voice of America, and U of C Magazine. Also summarized here.)
Language Skills and Earnings: Evidence from Childhood Immigrants.(with Aimee Chin.) Review of Economics and Statistics, May 2004, 86(2):481-496. (Available on EBSCO Host or MIT Press (subscription services).) (Earlier version: CCIS Working Paper No. 87, November 2003.)
On the Market Discipline of Informationally-Opaque Firms: Evidence from Bank Borrowers in the Federal Funds Market. August 2006. (with Adam Ashcraft).
Thick-Market Effects and Churning in the Labor Market: Evidence from U.S. Cities. December 2006 (with Jeff Lin).
New Data on Worker Flows During Business Cycles, New England Economic Review, with Ann Ferris and Jeffrey Fuhrer, July/August 1999. (summarized in the Regional Review and the Monthly Labor Review.) (Unpublished data on flows among EUN.)
Shifts in the Beveridge Curve, Job Matching, and Labor Market Dynamics. New England Economic Review, with Jeffrey Fuhrer, September/October 1997. (summarized in the Monthly Labor Review.)
Something to ignore.