Maxwell Rong

I am a postdoctoral scholar at the Stanford Center on Poverty and Inequality. I received a PhD in Economics from Stanford in 2023. 

I work on topics in labor economics and household finance. 

Here is my CV.

Contact Info

Center on Poverty and Inequality

30 Alta Rd

Stanford, CA 94305

Email: mrong@stanford.edu 

Research Papers

An extensive literature documents rent sharing between workers and firms: firms pass through performance shocks to earnings, which can be rationalized by monopsony power arising from imperfect worker mobility. I test this theory by studying coworking couples: married couples who share an employer. Using Norwegian administrative data, I find that coworking wives experience less generous rent sharing, having lower income growth conditional on the firm’s performance shock. This translates to large differences in household income dynamics: coworking couples face lower income growth and higher risk. Firms exploit the lower mobility of coworking couples to engage in less generous rent sharing.

(with Chris Lowenstein and David Rehkopf)

We study how the 2015 implementation of the California Earned Income Tax Credit (CalEITC) was associated with changes in behavioral risk factors for colorectal cancer – the second leading cause of cancer mortality in the United States and a disease characterized by socioeconomic disparities. Due to the unique benefit design of the CalEITC, we employ a synthetic control approach with data from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System to examine whether and how the policy affected a wide range of modifiable risk factors underlying the growing burden of colorectal cancer among low-income populations. Relative to post-2015 trends in our empirically constructed ``synthetic California", we find substantial reductions in the population shares who are obese, those reporting greater than 14 days of poor physical and mental health, and those reporting that cost interfered with care. We find null effects across six additional outcomes for which a suitable pre-treatment fit was uncovered. We find no outcomes for which there was an increase in risk. This study presents preliminary evidence of the role that targeted income supplementation policies may play in reducing colorectal cancer risk over the long-term.

I study the importance of liquid savings for smoothing consumption in the face of income shocks. I take advantage of a unique institutional feature of certain US retirement accounts, including Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs): prior to the age of 59.5, withdrawals from these accounts are subject to an additional 10% tax penalty to discourage early withdrawal. Thus, IRAs undergo a sharp and predictable change in liquidity at age 59.5. Using survey data from the Health and Retirement Study (HRS), I document 3 facts. First, annual withdrawals from IRAs increase sharply by $1,500 on average after age 59.5. Second, households with low liquid wealth in the form of checking and savings deposits have the largest proportional increases in withdrawals. Finally, IRA withdrawals increase in response to falls in income, but only for those with low liquid wealth. Using consumption data from the CAMS supplement to the HRS, I quantify how the increased liquidity of IRAs after age 59.5 helps households insure consumption against income shocks.


Work in Progress

Using historical Current Population Survey data, I document a novel fact: after 1979, male unemployment became significantly more cyclical than female. A one percentage point increase in state unemployment rates increases the probability that a man is unemployed by 0.14 percentage points more after 1979 relative to before. I hypothesize that the reason for this increase is the drastic decline in male unionization rates from the 1980s to the present. I show that due to the drastic decrease in male unionization relative to female, even a small difference in union cyclicality can explain a great deal of the gender unemployment cyclicality gap.