Martha Bailey
Professor of Economics, University of California Los Angeles
Martha Bailey is a Professor in the Department of Economics and Director of the California Center for Population Research at the University of California-Los Angeles. She is also a Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research and is affiliated with CEPR, CESifo, IZA, and HCEO.
Her research focuses on issues in labor economics, demography and health in the United States, within the long-run perspective of economic history. Her work has examined the implications of the diffusion of modern contraception for women’s childbearing, career decisions and the convergence in the gender gap. Recent projects focus on the 1960s, including evaluations of the shorter and longer-term consequences of War on Poverty programs and the labor-market effects of equal pay legislation in the US. Martha Bailey directs the LIFE-M project, which links millions of vital records with census data for the early 20th century U.S., and the M-CARE study, which evaluates how more affordable contraception affects the lives of Americans.
Bailey’s work has appeared in the American Economic Review and Quarterly Journal of Economics and been funded by the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation, the Laura and John Arnold Foundation, the Ford Foundation, and the Russell Sage Foundation. She has also won several awards for outstanding teaching, including the 2017 John Dewey Teaching Award at the University of Michigan and the 2022 Berck and Lisa Cheng Award at UCLA. She was honored to win the 2022 Carolyn Shaw Bell Award for furthering the status of women in the economics profession, through example, achievements, increasing our understanding of how women can advance in the economics profession, or mentoring others.
Bailey currently serves as an editor at the Journal of Labor Economics and on the editorial board at the American Economic Review.