Ezra G. Goldstein

Assistant Professor

Member Of:
  • Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter School of Public Policy
Related Links:
Email Address: eggoldstein@gatech.edu

Overview

Ezra Goldstein is an Assistant Professor at the Georgia Institute of Technology’s Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter School of Public Policy, with research spanning public economics, social policy, and applied econometrics. His work focuses on how public institutions—particularly the child welfare system, courts, and social safety net—shape the well-being of vulnerable children and families. He specializes in using linked administrative data and quasi-experimental methods to evaluate the causal effects of programs and policies related to parental incarceration, substance use disorder, child maltreatment, and family support obligations. Professor Goldstein's research has informed debates on racial disparities in foster care, the impacts of judicial discretion, and access to treatment for maternal substance use. At Georgia Tech, he teaches courses in statistics and social policy, with an emphasis on policy applications and hands-on data analysis. Before joining Georgia Tech, Professor Goldstein was an Assistant Research Professor at his Alma Mater, Penn State, working with an interdisciplinary group dedicated to empirically documenting the challenges facing youth interacting with the child welfare system. He holds a Ph.D. in Economics from Florida State University. 

Education:
  • Ph.D. Economics, Department of Economics, Florida State University, Tallahassee, Florida
  • B.S. Economics, Department of Economics, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania
Areas of
Expertise:
  • Applied Economics
  • Causal Inference
  • Child Welfare Policy
  • Labor Economics
  • Public Economics

Interests

Research Fields:
  • Applied Econometrics
  • Applied Microeconomics
  • Education Policy
  • Labor Economics
  • Program Evaluation, Public Management and Administration
  • Public Economics
Geographic
Focuses:
  • United States
Issues:
  • Children's Programs
  • Education Policy
  • Evaluation
  • Human Capital
  • Inequality and Poverty
  • Innovation
  • Intergenerational Issues
  • Policy Analysis
  • Statistics

Courses

  • PUBP-3120: Stat Analysis-Pub Policy