Timmins, Christopher DConnolly, Michelle PMok, Grace2019-05-022019-05-022019-04https://hdl.handle.net/10161/18532Evictions are an important aspect of the affordable housing crisis facing low-income American renters. However, there has been little research quantifying the causal impact of evictions, which poses challenges for academics interested in understanding inequality and policy-makers interested in reducing it. Merging two datasets both new to the literature, I address this gap in the causal literature by using an instrumental variables strategy to examine the impact of evictions on household income over time in Durham, North Carolina. Exploiting gentrification-related evictions as an instrument, I find a 2.5% decrease in household income after eviction. This is a small, but significant decrease in income given that median household income for households at time of eviction is about $15,000.en-USEvictionDurham, North CarolinaIncomeUrban economicsHousingGentrificationDo Evictions Cause Income Changes? An Instrumental Variables ApproachHonors thesis