Brent Kreider

Professor
Contact Information
Iowa State University460C Heady Hall
Ames, IA 50011
(515) 294-6237
bkreider@iastate.edu
Personal Website
Education
- PhD, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1994
Research Interests
Public economics, applied econometrics, health economics, labor economics
Curriculum Vitae:
CVSelected Publications
- Kreider, Brent; Pepper, John V.; Gundersen, Craig; Jolliffe, Dean, Identifying the Effects of SNAP (Food Stamps) on Child Health Outcomes When Participation is Endogenous and Misreported, Forthcoming in Journal of the American Statistical Association
- Gundersen, Craig; Kreider, Brent; Pepper, John V., The Impact of the National School Lunch Program on Child Health: A Nonparametric Bounds Analysis, Journal of Econometrics Vol. 166 no. 1 (2012): 79-91.
- Kreider, Brent; Pepper, John V., Identification of Expected Outcomes in a Data Error Mixing Model with Multiplicative Mean Independence, Journal of Business & Economic Statistics Vol. 29 no. 1 (January 2011): 49-60.
- Kreider, Brent, Regression Coefficient Identification Decay in the Presence of Infrequent Classification Errors, Review of Economics and Statistics Vol. 92 no. 4 (November 2010): 1017-1023.
Awards and Honors
- Cassling Family Faculty Award for Outstanding Achievement in Teaching, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Iowa State, 2010
- Economics Department's Outstanding Teacher Award, University of Virginia, 1998 and 2000
- Recipient of the John R. Heinz National Academy of Social Insurance Outstanding Doctoral Dissertation Award, 1995
Other Affiliations
- Associate Editor, Southern Economic Journal, 2006-present
ISU Economics Working Papers Series
- Gundersen, Craig; Kreider, Brent; Pepper, John V., The Impact of the National School Lunch Program on Child Health: A Nonparametric Bounds Analysis, WP #09027, December 2009
- Gundersen, Craig; Kreider, Brent, Food Stamps and Food Insecurity: What Can Be Learned in the Presence of Non-Classical Measurement Error?, Journal of Human Resources Vol. 43 no. 2 (Spring 2008): 352-382. (WP #06034, October 2006)
- Kreider, Brent, Partially Identifying the Prevalence of Health Insurance Given Contaminated Sampling Response Error, WP #06017, April 2006
- Chen, Donna; Kreider, Brent; Merwin, Elizabeth; Stern, Steven, Diagnosis Measurement Error and Corrected Instrumental Variables, WP #03010, March 2003
- Kreider, Brent; Pepper, John V., Inferring Disability Status from Corrupt Data, Journal of Applied Econometrics Vol. 23 no. 3 (April 2008): 329-349. (WP #03007, March 2003)
Journal Articles
- Kreider, Brent; Pepper, John V.; Gundersen, Craig; Jolliffe, Dean, Identifying the Effects of SNAP (Food Stamps) on Child Health Outcomes When Participation is Endogenous and Misreported, Forthcoming in Journal of the American Statistical Association
- Gundersen, Craig; Kreider, Brent; Pepper, John V., The Impact of the National School Lunch Program on Child Health: A Nonparametric Bounds Analysis, Journal of Econometrics Vol. 166 no. 1 (2012): 79-91.
- Gundersen, Craig; Kreider, Brent; Pepper, John V., The Economics of Food Insecurity in the United States, Applied Economic Perspectives and Policy Vol. 33 no. 3 (Fall 2011): 281-303.
- Kreider, Brent; Pepper, John V., Identification of Expected Outcomes in a Data Error Mixing Model with Multiplicative Mean Independence, Journal of Business & Economic Statistics Vol. 29 no. 1 (January 2011): 49-60.
- Kreider, Brent, Regression Coefficient Identification Decay in the Presence of Infrequent Classification Errors, Review of Economics and Statistics Vol. 92 no. 4 (November 2010): 1017-1023.
- Gundersen, Craig; Kreider, Brent, Bounding the Effects of Food Insecurity on Children's Health Outcomes, Journal of Health Economics Vol. 28 no. 5 (September 2009): 971-983.
- Kreider, Brent; Hill, Steven C., Partially Identifying Treatment Effects with an Application to Covering the Uninsured, Journal of Human Resources Vol. 44 no. 2 (April 2009): 409-449.
- Kreider, Brent, Optimal Wage Taxation When Human Capital and Employment Are Endogenous, Economic Inquiry Vol. 46 no. 4 (October 2008): 660-675.
- Kreider, Brent; Pepper, John V., Inferring Disability Status from Corrupt Data, Journal of Applied Econometrics Vol. 23 no. 3 (April 2008): 329-349. (WP #03007, March 2003)
- Gundersen, Craig; Kreider, Brent, Food Stamps and Food Insecurity: What Can Be Learned in the Presence of Non-Classical Measurement Error?, Journal of Human Resources Vol. 43 no. 2 (Spring 2008): 352-382. (WP #06034, October 2006)
- Kreider, Brent; Pepper, John V., Disability and Employment: Reevaluating the Evidence in Light of Reporting Errors, Journal of the American Statistical Association Vol. 102 no. 478 (June 2007): 432-441.
- Kreider, Brent, Income Uncertainty and Optimal Redistribution, Southern Economic Journal Vol. 3 no. 69 (2003)
- Anderson, Simon; de Palma, Andre; Kreider, Brent, Tax Incidence in Differentiated Product Oligopoly, Journal of Public Economics (August 2001): 173-192.
- Anderson, Simon; de Palma, Andre; Kreider, Brent, The Efficiency of Indirect Taxes Under Imperfect Competition, Journal of Public Economics (August 2001): 231-251.
- Kreider, Brent; Riphahn, Regina, Explaining Applications to the U.S. Disability Program: A Semiparametric Approach, Journal of Human Resources (Winter 2000): 82-115.
- Kreider, Brent, Latent Work Disability and Reporting Bias, Journal of Human Resources (Fall 1999): 734-769.
- Kreider, Brent, Social Security Disability Insurance: Applications, Awards, and Lifetime Income Flows, Journal of Labor Economics (October 1999): 784-827.
- Kreider, Brent, Workers' Applications to Social Insurance Programs when Earnings and Eligibility Are Uncertain, Journal of Labor Economics (October 1998): 848-877.
- Kreider, Brent; Nicholson, Sean, National Health Insurance and the Homeless, Health Economics (January/February 1997): 31-41.
- Kreider, Brent, To Punt or Not to Punt, UMAP Journal of Undergraduate Mathematics and Its Applications Vol. 4 no. 17 (Winter 1996)
- Haveman, Robert; Wolfe, Barbara; Kreider, Brent; Stone, Mark, Market Work, Wages, and Men's Health, Journal of Health Economics No. 13 (1994): 163-182.


