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Efficient Counterfactual Learning from Bandit Feedback

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Abstract

1960 to 1980 doubling (21% to 41%) of black children in one-parent families emerged from 1940-to-1970 urbanization converging population toward urbanized blacks' historically stable high rate, not post-1960 welfare liberalization or deindustrialization. Urban and rural child socializations structured different Jim Crow Era black family formations. Agrarian economic enclaves socialized conformity to Jim Crow and two-parent families; urban enclaves rebellion, male joblessness, and destabilized families. Proxying urban/rural residence at age 16 for socialization location, logistic regressions on sixties census data confirm the hypothesis. Racialized urban socialization negatively affected two-parent family formation and poverty status of blacks but not whites.

Suggested Citation

  • Gerald D. Jaynes, 2018. "Efficient Counterfactual Learning from Bandit Feedback," Cowles Foundation Discussion Papers 2156, Cowles Foundation for Research in Economics, Yale University.
  • Handle: RePEc:cwl:cwldpp:2156
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    Keywords

    Behavioral Economics; Logistic Regression;

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