Emily Oster

Professor

Birthday February 14, 1980

Birth Sign Aquarius

Birthplace New Haven, Connecticut, US

Age 44 years old

Nationality United States

#49646 Most Popular

1980

Emily Fair Oster (born February 14, 1980) is an American economist who has served as the Royce Family Professor of Teaching Excellence at Brown University since 2019, where she has been a professor of economics since 2015.

Her research interests span from development economics and health economics to research design and experimental methodology.

Oster was born on February 14, 1980, the daughter of economists Sharon Oster and Ray Fair.

When she was two years old, Oster's parents noticed that she talked to herself in her crib after they left her room.

They placed a tape recorder in her room in order to find out what she was saying and passed the tapes on to a linguist and psychologist with whom they were friends.

Analysis of Oster's speech showed that her language was much more complex when she was alone than when interacting with adults.

1982

Oster noted that the use of hepatitis B vaccine in 1982 led to a sharp decline in the male-to-female birth ratio.

Sen's essay had attributed the "missing women" to societal discrimination against girls and women in the form of the allocation of health, educational, and food resources.

1989

This led to her being the subject of a series of academic papers which were collectively published as a compendium in 1989 titled Narratives from the Crib.

1990

Oster argued that the fact that hepatitis B can cause a woman to conceive male children more often than female, accounted for a bulk of the "missing women" in Amartya Sen's 1990 essay, "More Than 100 Million Women Are Missing."

1998

Oster graduated from Choate Rosemary Hall in 1998, received an AB in economics from Harvard College in 2002, and received a PhD in economics from Harvard in 2006.

2005

In 2005, Oster published a dissertation for her economics Ph.D. from Harvard University, which suggested that the unusually high ratio of men to women in China was partially due to the effects of the hepatitis B virus.

"Hepatitis B and the Case of the Missing Women," pointed to findings that suggested areas with high hepatitis B rates tended to have higher male-to female birth ratios.

2006

The book was reprinted in 2006, with a foreword by Oster.

From 2006 to 2007, Oster was a Becker Fellow at the Becker Center on Chicago Price Theory at the University of Chicago, where she was an assistant professor at the Department of Economics from 2007 to 2009, an assistant professor at the Booth School of Business from 2009 to 2011, and an associate professor from 2011 to 2014.

2007

Her research was brought to the attention of non-economists through the Wall Street Journal, the book SuperFreakonomics, and her 2007 TED Talk.

Oster is the author of three books, Expecting Better, The Family Firm, and Cribsheet, which discuss a data-driven approach to decision-making in pregnancy and parenting.

In a 2007 TED Talk, Oster discussed the spread of HIV in Africa, applying a cost-benefit analysis to the question of why African men have been slow to change their sexual behavior.

Oster's work on television and female empowerment in India was featured in Steve Levitt's second book, SuperFreakonomics.

2008

In April 2008, Oster released a working paper "Hepatitis B Does Not Explain Male-Biased Sex Ratios in China" in which she evaluated new data, which showed that her original research was incorrect.

Freakonomics author Steven Levitt saw this as a sign of integrity.

2013

In her book, Expecting Better, published in 2013, Oster criticizes conventional pregnancy customs, taboos and mores.

She discusses the data behind common pregnancy practices and argues that many of them are misleading.

2015

She became a tenured associate professor of economics at Brown University in 2015, where she has been a full professor of economics since 2016 and the Royce Family Professor of Teaching Excellence since 2019.

Oster has been a research associate at the NBER since 2015, where she was a faculty research fellow from 2006 to 2015, and has been an associate editor of the Quarterly Journal of Economics since 2014.

Oster's research focuses generally on development economics and health.

2019

As of March 2019, the book has sold over 100,000 copies.

A revised and updated version of the book was published in 2021.

In the book, Oster argues against the general rule of thumb to avoid alcohol consumption while pregnant, contends that there is no evidence that (low) levels of alcohol consumption by pregnant women adversely affect their children.

This claim, however, has drawn criticism from the National Organization on Fetal Alcohol Syndrome and others.

Her second book, Cribsheet, was published in April 2019 and was a New York Times best seller.

It evaluates and reviews the research on a variety of parenting topics relating to infants and toddlers, including breastfeeding, safe sleep guidelines, sleep training, and potty training.

The week of April 28, 2019, Cribsheet was also the best selling book in Washington, DC according to the Post.

Her third book, The Family Firm: A Data-Driven Guide to Better Decision Making in the Early School Years, applies to school age children.

A review discusses the relationship of her parenting approach to more permissive parenting ideas dating back to the pre-Reagan era.

Oster was an advocate for opening schools during the coronavirus epidemic, spearheading a project to collect data on the spread of coronavirus in schools, and appearing frequently in media discussing why schools should open.

2020

She is also the CEO of ParentData, which she founded in 2020.

In early October 2020, she wrote an influential and much cited article in The Atlantic entitled "Schools Aren't Super-Spreaders" which inspired numerous articles.

Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos and the CDC cited Oster's work as a reason to open schools during the pandemic.

In August 2020, Oster launched a dashboard compiling information on the spread of COVID-19 in schools.