“…Extensive evidence links weather and pollution to health outcomes (Deschênes et al , 2009), and recent studies link pollution (Allen et al , 2017), temperature (Graff Zivin et al , 2018) and precipitation (Maccini and Yang, 2009) to cognition and schooling. The effects of temperature and precipitation on labor market outcomes have been extensively examined (Dell et al , 2014), and there is also evidence that pollution impacts labor market outcomes (Kim et al , 2017). While the long-term human capital effects of weather have been explored (Graff Zivin and Neidell, 2013), few studies have examined the long-term human capital effects of early-life pollution exposure (Currie et al , 2014), with fewer making the link to labor market outcomes (Kim et al , 2017).…”