Paris School of Economics - École d'Économie de Paris

Paris School of Economics - Ecole d'Economie de Paris

Séminaires

Economie du développement

Co-organisé par l’EEP/PSE, l’ENSAE, le CEPREMAP et le DIAL, le séminaire d’économie du développement existe depuis 1992. Depuis 1998, il a lieu sur le site Jourdan. Les intervenants de ce séminaire sont des chercheurs français ou étrangers, souvent de notoriété internationale, qui présentent leurs travaux les plus récents. Les thèmes sont extrêmement variés, ainsi qu’en témoigne le programme des années précédentes. C’est un lieu où les chercheurs en économie du développement des différents centres de recherche parisiens se retrouvent régulièrement, mais aussi où des chercheurs travaillant sur des sujets non spécifiquement liés aux pays en développement peuvent trouver plus ponctuellement des travaux appliqués proches de leurs centres d’intérêt.

Ce séminaire est organisé par Marc Gurgand et Sylvie Lambert.


Prochainement

  • Mercredi 29 mai 2013
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-18h30)
    Robert JENSEN (UCLA) : Market size and the growth of firms : evidence from a natural experiment in India
    Co-author(s) : Nolan Miller (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)
    Abstract
    In most developing countries, firms are on average very small, often do not grow as they age and have low productivity. We argue that one contributing factor to these outcomes is limited "effective" market size: due to information, search and transactions costs, many manufacturers serve only local consumers, making many industries a collection of small, independent and autarkic markets. We explore this hypothesis in the context of the artisanal boat building industry in Kerala, India, using a panel data set of builders and buyers (commercial fishermen). The spread of mobile phones in the late 1990s led some fishermen for the first time to buy boats built outside of their local area. Those firms that were the most productive ex-ante grew rapidly, gaining market share at the expense of less productive firms, with many of the latter exiting the market. On net, the industry shifts from a large number of very small firms, to a smaller number of larger firms. We also show that aggregate productivity of the sector increases, due to both the loss of market share (or exit) by less productive firms and increases in productivity for surviving incumbents.
  • Mercredi 12 juin 2013
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-18h30)
    Christopher UDRY (Yale University) : TBA

Archives

  • Mercredi 15 mai 2013
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-18h30)
    Paul GLEWWE (University of Minnesota) : Heterogeneity in Impacts of School Characteristics on Student Learning in Developing Countries: Evidence from Vietnamese and Peruvian Panel Data
  • Mercredi 24 avril 2013
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-18h30)
    Dave DONALDSON (MIT) : Who’s Getting Globalized? The Size and Nature of Intranational Trade Costs
    Co auteur : David Atkin
    Abstract
    In this paper we develop a new methodology for estimating intranational trade costs, apply our methodology to newly collected CPI micro-data from Ethiopia and Nigeria, and explore how our estimates affect the geographic incidence of globalization within these countries. Our approach confronts three well-known but unresolved challenges that arise when using price gaps to estimate trade costs. First, we work exclusively with a sample of goods that are identi?ed at the barcode-level, to mitigate concerns about unobserved quality differences over space. Second, because price gaps only identify trade costs between pairs of locations that are actually trading the product in question, we collect novel data on the location of production/importation of each product in our sample in order to focus exclusively on trading pairs. Conditioning on this new information raises our estimate of trade costs by a factor of two. Third, we demonstrate how estimates of cost pass-through can be used to correct for potentially varying mark-ups over space. Applying this correction raises our trade cost estimate by a factor of two (again). All said, we estimate that intranational trade costs in our sample are 7-15 times larger than similar estimates for the US. In a ?nal exercise we estimate that intermediaries capture the majority of the surplus created when the world price for an imported product falls, and that intermediaries’ share is even higher in remote locations. This sheds new light on the incidence of globalization
  • Mercredi 17 avril 2013
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-18h30)
    Rocco MACCHIAVELLO (Warwick, BREAD and CEPR) : "The Value of Relationships: Evidence from a Supply Shock to Kenyan Flower Exports"
    Co-auteur : Ameet Morjaria (Harvard University)
    texte intégral [pdf]
    Abstract
    Enforcement problems, insurance considerations and uncertainty over trading parties are salient features of real-life relationships between ?firms. We develop tests to empirically distinguish between different models of relationships and, using data on Kenyan rose exports, show that 1) the value of the relationship for the seller increases with the relationship?'s age; 2) during a negative supply shock sellers prioritize the most valuable relationships; and 3) compliance at the time of the shock positively correlates with future survival, orders, prices and relationship value. The evidence is consistent with sellers valuing a reputation for reliability and rejects models exclusively focussing on enforcement or insurance considerations.
  • Mercredi 13 mars 2013
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-18h30)
    Jishnu DAS (World Bank & Centre for Policy Research) : Quality and Accountability in Health: Audit Evidence From Primary Care Providers
    Co-auteurs : Alaka Holla (World Bank), Michael Kremer (Harvard University) and Karthik Muralidharan (UCSD)
    Abstract
    Private primary care providers routinely account for more than 50 percent of first-contacts in low-income settings, rising to 80 percent in countries like India. The majority of these providers operate in single provider clinics with little regulatory oversight or government subsidies. No patients have health insurance beyond the free care that they can access in the public sector. These key features offer a unique opportunity to evaluate the relative benefits (or lack thereof) of a market model of primary care provision, relative to provision through the public sector. We report results from audit studies, where standardized patients presented to primary care providers in a representative sample of rural public and private providers in the Indian state of Madhya Pradesh. Across all audit studies, public providers spent less time with patients, completed fewer items on a checklist of essential history and examination items, and were either no different or worse in their treatment and diagnostic accuracy. In one dramatic example, public providers in their private practice were 32 percentage points more likely to provide the correct treatment for unstable angina relative to in their public practice. Our results, that customer accountability in an unregulated, unsubsidized and uninsured private market results in better primary care relative to the administrative accountability in the public sector, is further supported by a strong positive correlation between the prices charged to the standardized patients and the quality of care received. These results suggest a trade-off between poor administrative accountability in the public sector and market failures arising from (potentially) misplaced quality judgments on the part of patients in the private sector. However, hedonic pricing in the private market also suggests that financial constraints may prevent the poor from accessing higher quality care
  • Mercredi 20 février 2013
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-18h30)
    Selim GULESCI (University Bocconi) : `For the Love of the Republic' Education, Religion, and Empowerment
    Co-auteur : Erik Meyersson
    texte intégral [pdf]
    Abstract
    We assess the religious and social impacts of female schooling in Turkey using a change in compulsory schooling law. A new law, implemented in 1998, bound individuals born after a specifi c date to 8 years of schooling while those born earlier could drop out after 5 years. This allows the implemen- tation of a Regression Discontinuity (RD) Design and the estimation of meaningful causal estimates of schooling. Using a dataset of ever married Turkish women in 2008, we find large reducing e ffects of a year of schooling on expressions of religiosity, such as the habit of wearing a headscarf, attending Qur'anic courses, and regular prayer. Parallel to these, we also document a partial empowerment eff ect, whereby women are more likely to make marriage and family planning decisions themselves, less likely to marry under the legal age, and to experience better household and husband characteristics. A noteworthy non-result is the lack of clear e ffects on female labor force participation. On one hand, we show that returns to schooling in terms of women's status and living conditions may be substantial even when labor-related returns are not. In particular, our results are consistent with education allowing social mobility out of religiously conservative environments for the poor and pious; with women more independently choosing richer, and more educated husbands outside the family circle. On the other hand, however, we also document the absence of commensurate impacts for the country's large ethnolinguistic minorities. An evaluation of the education reform thus needs to weigh its average empowering eff ects against increased inequality across ethnolinguistic groups.
  • Mercredi 9 janvier 2013
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-18h30)
    Russell TOTH (University of Sydney, School of Economics) : Fractionalization, Political Competition and Local Budgeting in Indonesia
    Co auteurs : Sherry Tao Kong (Peking University), Thomas Pepinsky (Cornell University)
    Abstract
    Since 2001 Indonesia has transformed from a centralised government into a highly decentralised one. Local municipal and regency governments are now responsible for local public investment and service provision, for which they receive sizable annual transfers from the central government. We seek to better understand fiscal policy by regency (kabupaten) governments, focusing on the role of political accountability through political competition at the regency level. Our empirical strategy is based on the idea that if ethnic and religious diversity shapes the competitiveness of local politics (elections), then ethnic and religious diversity could provide a plausible instrument for political accountability (the composition of local parliaments). We particularly focus on 2006, when the total amount of unused local government budgetary resources reached a record-high level of Rp 97 trillion (approximately, AUD 14 billion; equivalent to 3 per cent of the national GDP) due an unexpected national budget surplus from oil price shocks. The paper contributes to the literature by testing a specific mechanism through which diversity can shape economic outcomes, showing that political accountability reduces underutilized fiscal space. Our results suggest that accountability measures, on the one hand, can help to prevent malfeasance by local politicians, but on the other hand may induce inappropriate risk-minimisation behaviour. Our results on the relationship between ethnic and religious diversity and election outcomes are also a novel finding in the Indonesian context.
  • Mercredi 19 décembre 2012
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-18h30)
    Stefan Litschig (Universidad Pompeu Fabra) : Audit Risk and Rent Extraction: Evidence from a Randomized Evaluation in Brazil
    Co auteur : Yves Zamboni
    texte intégral [pdf]
    Abstract
    We report results from a randomized experiment designed and implemented by the Brazilian central government audit agency to test whether increased audit risk deters corruption and waste in local public procurement and improves provision of public services. We measure waste and corruption as irregularities in local public procurement and service delivery uncovered by central government auditors. Our estimates suggest that increasing audit risk by about 20 percentage points reduced the proportion of non-competitive procurement modalities adopted by local managers by about 17 percent. Higher audit risk also reduced the proportion of local procurement processes involving waste or corruption by about 20 percent. In contrast, we find no evidence that increased audit risk affected the quality of publicly provided preventive and primary health care services, measured using client satisfaction surveys. We also find no evidence that higher audit risk had an effect on local compliance with national guidelines of the conditional cash transfer program Bolsa Família, measured in terms of appropriate inclusion of beneficiaries into the program or their compliance with health and education conditionalities.
  • Mercredi 5 décembre 2012
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-18h30)
    Juan Camillo Cardenas (Universidad de Los Andes, Bogota, Colombia) : Vertical Collective Action and the Distributive Challenges of Cooperation: Experiments in the Developing World
  • Mercredi 21 novembre 2012
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-18h30)
    Claudio Ferraz (Pontifica Universidade Catolica) : Does Oil Make Leaders Unaccountable? Evidence from Brazil's o ffshore oil boom
    Co-auteur : Joana Monteiro
    texte intégral [pdf]
    Abstract
    We examine the political economy mechanisms that link resource abundance and economic development by analyzing the recent increase in Brazil's oil production and the distribution of oil royalties to municipalities. We explore a xed geographic rule which determines who receive oil royalties and investigate how incumbents spend oil windfall and the impact of these rents on local elections. We show that oil windfall creates a large incumbency advantage in the election that follows oil windfall boom, but this e ect disappears in the medium-run. Royalty payments are associated with a large increase in the number of municipal employees, but we don't nd any signi cant impact on household infrastructure, education and health supply. The pattern of the increase in public jobs indicates that voters reward increases in public sector and audit data suggest that institutions limit this increase. Taken together, our results indicate that oil does not make leaders unaccountable, and provide suggestive evidence that constraints on the executive branch restrained the the irresponsible use of oil revenues. These results point out that a democratic system is crucial to avoid the negative e ects of resource abundance but also indicate that the institutions in place are not sucient to transform natural resource wealth into economic development.
  • Mercredi 7 novembre 2012
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-18h30)
    Alexander Monge-Naranjo (Pennsylvania State University) : Knowledge Spillovers and the Optimal Taxation of Multinational Firms
  • Mercredi 17 octobre 2012
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-18h30)
    Pamela Jakiela (University of Maryland) : “Does Africa Need a Rotten Kin Theorem? Experimental Evidence from Village Economies.”
    Co-auteur : Owen Ozier
    texte intégral [pdf]
    Abstract
    This paper measures the economic impacts of social pressures to share income with kin and neighbors in rural Kenyan villages. We conduct a lab experiment in which we randomly vary the observability of investment returns to test whether subjects reduce their income in order to keep it hidden. We find that women adopt an investment strategy that conceals the size of their initial endowment in the experiment, though that strategy reduces their expected earnings. This effect is largest among women with relatives attending the experiment. Parameter estimates suggest that women anticipate that observable income will be \taxed" at a rate above four percent; this effective tax rate nearly doubles when kin can observe income directly. Though this paper provides experimental evidence from a single African country | Kenya | observational studies suggest that similar kin pressures may be prevalent in many rural areas throughout Sub-Saharan Africa.
  • Mercredi 3 octobre 2012
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-18h30)
    Guy MICHAELS (London School of Economics, London) : "Do Giant Oilfield Discoveries Fuel Internal Armed Conflicts?"
    Co-author(s): Yu-Hsiang Lei
    texte intégral [pdf]
    Abstract
    We use new data to examine the effects of giant oilfield discoveries around the world since 1946. On average, these discoveries increase per capita oil production and oil exports by up to 50 percent. But these giant oilfield discoveries also have a dark side: they increase the incidence of internal armed conflict by about 5-8 percentage points. This increased incidence of conflict due to giant oilfield discoveries is especially high for countries that had already experienced armed conflicts or coups in the decade prior to discovery.
  • Mercredi 19 septembre 2012
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-18h30)
    Gerard Padro I MIQUEL (London School of Economics) : Voter Heterogeneity and Public Goods : Evidence from Religious Fragmentation and Elections in China (Preliminary
    Co-auteur : Nancy Qianz, Yang Yaox
  • Mercredi 27 juin 2012
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-18h30)
    David McKENZIE (World Bank) : Soft skills or hard cash? The impact of training and wage subsidy programs on female youth employment in Jordan.
  • Mercredi 13 juin 2012
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-18h30)
    Matthieu CHEMIN (Université McGill, Québec) : Do Workers Feel Entitled to High Wages? Evidence from a Long-Term Field Experiment
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 23 mai 2012
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-18h30)
    Eliana LA FERRARA (Bocconi - Milano, Italy) : Customary Norms, Inheritance and Human Capital. Evidence from a Reform of the Matrilineal System in Ghana
    Co-auteur : Annamaria Milazzo
  • Mercredi 9 mai 2012
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-18h30)
    Ekaterina ZHURAVSKAYA (PSE, Paris) : Corruption in Procurement and Shadow Campaign Financing: Evidence from Russia
    Co-author : Maxim Mironov
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 2 mai 2012
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-18h30)
    Fernanda BROLLO (University of Alicante) : *
  • Mercredi 11 avril 2012
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-18h30)
    Silvia PRINA (Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio) : Access to savings accounts and poor households' behavior: Evidence from a eld experiment in Nepal
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 4 avril 2012
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-18h30)
    Greg FISCHER (LSE, London) : Eliciting and Utilizing Willingness to Pay: Evidence from Field Trials in Northern Ghana.
  • Mercredi 21 mars 2012
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-18h30)
    Marguerite DUPONCHEL (World Bank) : Credit constraints, agricultural productivity and income diversification: evidence from rural Rwanda
    Co-autheur(s) : Daniel Ayalew Ali, Klaus Deininger
  • Mercredi 14 mars 2012
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-18h30)
    Martin RAVAILLON (World Bank) & Dominique VAN DE WALLE (World Bank) : Does India’s Employment Guarantee Scheme Guarantee Employment?
    Co-authors: Puja Dutta & Rinku Murgai
  • Mercredi 22 février 2012
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-18h30)
    Tanguy BERNARD (IFPRI, Washinton-USA) : Bandwagon effects in poor communities: experimental evidence from rural electrification program in Ethiopia
    Co-author(s): Maximo Torero.
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 25 janvier 2012
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-18h30)
    François BOURGUIGNON (PSE, Paris) : Aid Effectiveness Revisited: The Trade-Off between Needs and Governance.
    Co-author(s): Jean-Philippe Platteau
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 11 janvier 2012
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-18h30)
    Jeremy MAGRUDER (UC Berkeley) : Can Minimum Wages Cause a Big Push? Evidence from Indonesia
  • Mercredi 14 décembre 2011
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-18h30)
    Katja Maria KAUFMANN (Bocconi) : Learning about the Enforcement of Conditional Welfare Programs and Behavioral Responses : Evidence from Bolsa Familia in Brazil
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 7 décembre 2011
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-18h30)
    Sarah BAIRD (George Washington University) : Designing Experiments to Measure Spillover and Threshold Effects
  • Mercredi 30 novembre 2011
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-18h30)
    Isaac MBITI (MIT, Massachusetts) : Elite Secondary Schools and Student Achievement: Regression Discontinuity Evidence from Kenya
    Adrienne M. Lucas and Isaac M. Mbiti
    texte intégral
  • Mercredi 16 novembre 2011
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-18h30)
    Maitreesh GHATAK (LSE, London) : Microfi nance with a Monopoly Lender
    de Jon de Quidt, Thiemo Fetzer and Maitreesh Ghataky
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Jeudi 20 octobre 2011
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 8 (15h30-17h00)
    Beatriz ARMENDARIZ (UCL) : An Economic Analysis of Street Children
    Co auteur: Mauricio Fernández (Harvard University)
  • Mercredi 19 octobre 2011
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-18h30)
    Beatriz ARMENDARIZ (UCL) : *
    CE SEMINAIRE EST REPORTE AU 20/10/2011 A 15H30
  • Mercredi 5 octobre 2011
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-18h30)
    Brian McCAIG (Australian National University) : Export markets, employment, and formal jobs : Evidence from the U.S.-Vietnam Bilateral Trade Agreement
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 21 septembre 2011
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-18h30)
    Britta AUGSBURG (Institute for Fiscal Studies) : Microfinance at the Margin: Experimental Evidence from Bosnia and Herzegovina
    Papier co-écrit avec Costas Meghir, Ralohde Haas et Heike Harmgart
  • Mercredi 22 juin 2011
    CHANGEMENT : La séance est annulée.
  • Mercredi 8 juin 2011
    CHANGEMENT : La séance est annulée.
  • Mercredi 1er juin 2011
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-19h00)
    Dean YANG (University of Michigan, Ann Arbor MI ) : Commitments to Save: A Field Experiment in Rural Malawi
    Co-auteur(s) : Lasse Brune, Xavier Giné & Jessica Goldberg
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 25 mai 2011
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-19h00)
    Jed FRIEDMAN (The World Bank, Washington DC) : Climate Variability and Infant Mortality in Africa
    Co-auteur(s) : Sarah Baird & Marc Smitz
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 11 mai 2011
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-19h00)
    David YANAGIZAWA-DROTT (Harvard University, Cambridge, MA) : Propaganda and Conflict: The Impact of Hate Radio on Participation in the Rwandan Genocide
  • Mercredi 27 avril 2011
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-19h00)
    Claire NAIDITCH (Université de Lille 1) : Remittances and incentives to migrate: An epidemic approach of migration
    Co-auteur(s) : Christian Ben Lakhdar
  • Mercredi 6 avril 2011
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-19h00)
    Ghazala MANSURI (World Bank, Washington DC) : Crossing Boundaries: Gender, Caste and Schooling in Rural Pakistan
    co-écrit avec Hanan Jacoby.
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 23 mars 2011
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-19h00)
    John MALUCCIO (Middlebury College, Middlebury, Vermont) : Brains versus Brawn: Labor Market Returns to Intellectual and Physical Health Human Capital in a Developing Country
    Co-auteur(s) : Jere R. Behrman, John Hoddinott, & Reynaldo Martorell
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 16 mars 2011
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-19h00)
    Dominique VAN DE WALLE (World Bank, Washington DC) : Welfare Effects of Widowhood in a Poor Country
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 9 mars 2011
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-19h00)
    Martin RAVALLION (World Bank, Washington DC) : Why Don’t We See Poverty Convergence?
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 9 février 2011
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-19h00)
    Elisabeth SADOULET (University of California, Berkeley CA) : Fair Trade and Free Entry: The Dissipation of Producer Benefits in a Disequilibrium Market
    Co-auteur(s) : Alain de Janvry & Craig McIntosh
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 12 janvier 2011
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-19h00)
    Costas MEGHIR (University College London, United Kingdom) : Wages and Informality in Developing Countries
    Co-auteurs : Costas Meghir, Renata Narita and Jean-Marc Robin
  • Mercredi 15 décembre 2010
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-19h00)
    Asim Ijaz KHWAJA (Harvard University, Cambridge MA) : Report Cards: The Impact of Providing School and Child Test-scores on Educational Markets at the seminars.
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 1er décembre 2010
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-19h00)
    Nishith PRAKASH (Cornell University, Ithaca NY) : To be announced
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 17 novembre 2010
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-19h00)
    Lena EDLUND (Columbia University, New York NY) : The Kindness of Strangers: Adopted Girls in China
    Co-auteur(s) : YuYu Chen, Avraham Ebenstein & Hongbin Li
  • Mercredi 20 octobre 2010
    CHANGEMENT : La séance est annulée.
  • Mercredi 6 octobre 2010
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-19h00)
    Christopher BLATTMAN (Yale University, New Haven CT) : The Industrial Organization of Rebellion: The Logic of Forced Labor and Child Soldiering
    texte intégral
  • Mercredi 22 septembre 2010
    Campus Jourdan, bâtiment principal, rez-de-chaussée, salle 10 (17h00-19h00)
    Robert JENSEN (UCLA) : Economic opportunities and gender differences inman capital:Experimental evidence for India
  • Mercredi 16 juin 2010
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    Hillel RAPOPORT (Bar Ilan University) : Tradable Immigration Quotas
  • Mercredi 26 mai 2010
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    Laura SCHECHTER (University of Wisconsin-Madison) : Reciprocated Versus Unreciprocated Sharing in Social Networks.
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 19 mai 2010
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    Gary FIELDS (Cornell University) : Does Income Mobility Equalize Longer-Term Incomes ? New Measures of an Old Concept
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 12 mai 2010
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    (*) : *
  • Mercredi 5 mai 2010
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    Dwayne BENJAMIN (University of Toronto) : Evaluating the impact of a targeted land distribution program: Evidence from Vietnam
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 7 avril 2010
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    Rebecca THORNTORN (University of Michigan, Ann Arbor) : Financial Incentives, Testing, and HIV Prevention
    texte intégral [pdf] texte intégral [pdf]
    CHANGEMENT : La localisation est modifiée.
  • Mercredi 24 mars 2010
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    Pedro CARNEIRO (university College London) : Mandated Benefits, Employment, and Inequality in a Dual Economy
    Co-auteur : Rita Almeida
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 10 mars 2010
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    Kim LEHRER (Oxford University) : Gender Differences in Labour Market Participation: Evidence From Displaced People's Camps in Northern Uganda
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 10 février 2010
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    (*) : *
    LE SEMINAIRE EST ANNULE
  • Mercredi 3 février 2010
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    Marc BELLEMARE (Duke University) : The Welfare Impacts of Price Fluctuations and Stabilization
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 16 décembre 2009
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    David ATKIN (Yale University) : Trade, Tastes and Nutrition in India.
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 2 décembre 2009
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    Michael GRIMM (Institute of Social Studies) : Endogenous Institutional Change and Economic Development: A micro-level Analysis of Transmission Channels
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 18 novembre 2009
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    Ekaterina ZHURAVSKAYA (New Economic School, Moscou) : Elite Capture in the Absence of Democracy: Evidence from Backgrounds of Chinese Provincial Leaders. _
  • Mercredi 4 novembre 2009
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    Karen MACOURS (Johns Hopkins University) : Cash Transfers, Behavioral Changes, and Cognitive Development in Early Childhood: Evidence from a Randomized Experiment
    Norbert Schady, and Renos Vakis
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 23 septembre 2009
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    Sarah BAIRD (Georges Washington University) & Berk OZLER (World Bank) : Re-examining the Role of Conditionality in CCT programs
    texte intégral [pdf] texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 9 septembre 2009
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    Emily OSTER (University of Chicago) : Determinants of Technology Adoption: Private Value and Peer Effects in Menstrual Cup Take-Up
    co-écrit avec Rebecca Thornton
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 24 juin 2009
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    Eric EDMONDS (Dartmouth College, IZA, and NBER) : Poverty Alleviation and Child Labor
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 10 juin 2009
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    Pramila KRISHNAN (Cambridge Univ.) : Raising Self-Esteem and other Psychosocial skills: Evidence from Bombay’s slums
  • Mercredi 27 mai 2009
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    Nancy QIAN (Brown Univ.) : The Power of Propaganda: The Effect of U.S. Government Bias on Cold War News Coverage of Human Rights Abuses
    Co-auteur: David Yanagizawa
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 13 mai 2009
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    Catherine GUIRKINGER (Univ. de Namur) : Transformation of the family under rising land pressure: a theoretical essay
    Co-auteur: Jean-Philippe Platteau
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 29 avril 2009
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    Marta REYNAL (Pompeu Fabra) : Do democracies select better leaders?
    Co-auteur: Tim Besley
  • Mercredi 1er avril 2009
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    Frederico FINAN (UCLA) : Motivating Politicians: The Impacts of Monetary Incentives on Quality and Performance
    co-auteur: Claudio Ferraz (PUC-Rio)
  • Mercredi 25 mars 2009
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    Martin RAVAILLON (World Bank) : Weakly Relative Poverty
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 18 mars 2009
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    Martina BJORKMAN (Bocconi univ.) : Power To The People: Evidence From A Randomized Field Experiment Of Community-Based Monitoring In Uganda.
    Co-auteur: Jakob Svensson
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 11 mars 2009
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    Dominique VAN DE WALLE (World Bank) : Rural Roads and Local Market Development in Vietnam
    Co-auteur: Ren Mu (Texas A & M University)
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 14 janvier 2009
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    François BOURGUIGNON (Paris School of Economics) & Thierry VERDIER (Paris School of Economics) : The political economy of redistribution and institution building in elite-dominated economies
  • Mercredi 7 janvier 2009
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    Marcos RANGEL (University of Chicago) : Discrimination goes to School? Understanding Racial Differences in Pre-Market Factors' Accumulation
    CHANGEMENT : La localisation est modifiée.
  • Mercredi 17 décembre 2008
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    Latika CHAUDHARI (Standford University) : Taxation and Educational Development: Evidence from British India
    texte intégral [pdf]
    CHANGEMENT : La localisation est modifiée.
  • Mercredi 3 décembre 2008
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    Stéphane STRAUB (Univ. de Toulouse 1) : Public procurement and Rent Seeking - The Case of Paraguay
    Co-auteurs : Emmanuelle Auriol, Thomas Flochel
  • Mercredi 19 novembre 2008
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    David MCKENZIE (World Bank) : The Microeconomic Determinants of Emigration and Return Migration of the Best and Brightest: Evidence from the Pacific
  • Mercredi 5 novembre 2008
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    Hanan JACOBY (World Bank) : Watta Satta: Bride Exchange and Women's Welfare in Rural Pakistan
    Co-auteur : Ghazala Mansuri
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 22 octobre 2008
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    Karen MACOURS (Johns Hopkins University) : Changing households’ investments and aspirations through social interactions
    Co-auteur : Renos Vakis
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 8 octobre 2008
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    Miguel URQUIOLA (Columbia University) : The consequences of going to a better school
    Co-auteur: Cristian Pop-Eleches
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 24 septembre 2008
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    Quy-Toan DO (World Bank) : The Economics of Consanguineous Marriages
    Co-auteurs : Sriya Iyer, & Shareen Joshi
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 18 juin 2008
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    P. LANJOUW (World Bank) : Revisiting Between-Group Inequality Measurement: An Application to the Dynamics of Caste Inequality in Two Indian Villages
    Co-auteur : Vijayendra Rao (World Bank)
    texte intégral
  • Mercredi 11 juin 2008
    CHANGEMENT : La séance est annulée.
  • Mercredi 28 mai 2008
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    H. PANDE (Harvard univ.) : Powerful Women: Does Exposure Reduce Bias?
    Co-auteurs : Lori Beaman, Raghab Chattopadhyay, Esther Duflo and Petia Topalova
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 14 mai 2008
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    J.M. BALAND (Univ. de Namur) : Land and Power: Theory and Evidence from Chile
    Co-auteur : J.A. Robinson
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 26 mars 2008
    CHANGEMENT : La séance est annulée.
  • Mercredi 12 mars 2008
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    E. MIGUEL (Univ. of California, Berkeley, CA) : The Price of Political Opposition: Evidence from Venezuela's Maisanta
    Co-auteurs : C.T. Hsieh, D. Ortega, F. Rodriguez
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 20 février 2008
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    M. RAVALLION (World bank, Washington, DC) : Are There Lasting Impacts of Aid to Poor Areas ?
    Co-auteurs : S. Chen, R. Mu
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 6 février 2008
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    O. BANDIERA (LSE) : The Diminishing Effect of Democracy in Diverse Societies
    Co-auteur: Gilat Levy
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 23 janvier 2008
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    D. CHEN (Univ. of Chicago, Chicago, IL) : Islamic resurgence during the Indonesian financial crisis
    texte intégral [pdf] texte intégral [pdf]
    CHANGEMENT : La localisation est modifiée.
  • Mercredi 16 janvier 2008
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    E. AURIOL (TSE) : Quality signaling through certification: Theory and an application to agricultural seed markets
  • Mercredi 9 janvier 2008
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    Pas de séance
  • Mercredi 19 décembre 2007
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    A. BASU (College of William and Mary, Williamsburg) : Poverty Aversion, Relative Deprivation and the Willingness to Pay for Fair Trade Products
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 12 décembre 2007
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    N. NUNN (Harvard Univ.) : Ruggedness: The Blessing of Bad Geography in Africa
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 28 novembre 2007
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    D. KARLAN (Yale univ., New Haven, CT) : Expanding Credit Access: Using Randomized Supply Decisions to Estimate the Impacts
    Co-auteur : J. Zinman
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 14 novembre 2007
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    N. PAVCNIK (Dartmouth College) : Trade Adjustment and Human Capital Investment: Evidence from Indian Tariff Reform
    Co-auteurs : E. Edmonds and P. Topalova
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 7 novembre 2007
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    P. GLEWWE (Univ. of Minnesota) : The Impact of Eyeglasses on the Academic Performance of Primary School Students: Evidence from a Randomized Trial in Rural China
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 17 octobre 2007
    CHANGEMENT : La séance est reportée au 19/12/2007.
  • Mercredi 26 septembre 2007
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    S. DERCON (Oxford univ.) : Consumption risk, technology adoption and poverty traps: evidence from Ethiopia
    Co-auteur : Luc Christiaensen
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 20 juin 2007
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    C. UDRY (Yale univ., New Haven, CT) : The Profits of Power: Land Rights and Investment in Rural Ghana
    texte intégral [pdf]
    CHANGEMENT : L'horaire et la localisation sont modifiés.
  • Mercredi 13 juin 2007
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    E. LA FERRARA (Bocconi univ., Milano) : Detecting illegal arms trade
    Co-auteur (s) : S. DellaVigna
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 16 mai 2007
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    F. GUBERT (DIAL, Paris) : Migration, Self-selection and Returns to Education in the WAEMU ?
    Co-auteur (s) : P. De Vreyer et F. Roubaud
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 9 mai 2007
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    E. VERHOOGEN (Columbia univ., New York, NY) : Class Size and Sorting in Market Equilibrium: Theory and Evidence
    Co-auteur (s) : M. Urquiola
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 25 avril 2007
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    D. COGNEAU (DIAL, Paris) : Development at the border - A study of national idiosyncrasies in post-colonial West-Africa
    Co-auteur (s) : C. Guénard, S. Mesplé-Somps, G. Spielvogel et C. Torelli
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 21 mars 2007
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    M. VERA-HERNANDEZ (Institute for fiscal studies, London) : Decomposing the determinants of the non-use of health care
    Co-auteur (s) : B. Álvarez
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 14 mars 2007
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    S. BANDYOPADHYAY (Oxford univ.) : Rich States, Poor States: Convergence and Polarisation across India
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 7 février 2007
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    K. BEEGLE (World bank, Washington, DC) : The Consequences of Child Labor in Rural Tanzania: Evidence from Longitudinal Data
    Co-auteur(s) : R. H. Dehejia et R. Gatti
    texte intégral [pdf]
    CHANGEMENT : La localisation est modifiée.
  • Mercredi 31 janvier 2007
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    J.P. PLATTEAU (Univ. of Namur, Namur) : On the feasibility of power and status ranking in traditional setups
    Co-auteurs : P. G. Sekeris
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 17 janvier 2007
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    E. DUFLO (MIT, Cambridge, MA) : Why don't farmer use fertilizer: Evidence from field experiments in Western Kenya
    Co-auteur(s) : M. Kremer et J. Robinson
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 13 décembre 2006
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    I. RASUL (Univ. college London) : Family Networks and Schooling Outcomes: Evidence from a Randomized Social Experiment
    Co-auteurs : M. Angelucci, G. de Giorgi, M. A. Rangel
    texte intégral [pdf] texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 6 décembre 2006
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    H. KAZIANGA (World bank, Washington, DC) : The Intra-household Economics of Polygyny: Fertility and Child Mortality in Rural Mali
    Co-auteur (s) : S. Klonner
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 22 novembre 2006
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    L. IYER (Harvard business school, Boston, MA) : Direct versus indirect colonial rule in India : long-term consequences
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 15 novembre 2006
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    N. ASHRAF (Harvard business school, Boston, MA) : Can Higher Prices Stimulate Product Use? Evidence From a Field Experiment in Zambia
    Co-auteur(s) : J. Berry, J. Shapiro
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 27 septembre 2006
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    M. MANACORDA (LSE, London) : Grade Failure, Drop out and Subsequent School Outcomes: Quasi-Experimental Evidence from Uruguayan Administrative Data
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Jeudi 1er juin 2006
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    F. FERREIRA (World bank, Washington, DC) : Local inequality and project choice in a social investment fund
    Co-auteurs : M. Caridad Araujo, P. Lanjouw et B. Özler
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 10 mai 2006
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    L. BRANDT (Univ. of Toronto, Toronto) : Inequality and Growth in Rural China: Does Higher Inequality Impede Growth?
    Co-auteurs : D. Benjamin et J. Giles
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 3 mai 2006
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    S. D. ROZELLE (Univ. of California, Davis, CA) : Growth, Population and Industrialization and Urban Land Expansion of China
    Co-auteur : X. Deng, J. Huang & E. Uchida
    texte intégral
  • Mercredi 12 avril 2006
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    X. GINE (World bank, Washington D.C.) : Group versus Individual Liability: A Field Experiment in the Philippine
    Co-auteur : D. Karlan
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 22 mars 2006
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    A. S. RAI (Williams college, Williamstown) : Borrower runs
    Co-auteur : P. Bond
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 8 mars 2006
    CHANGEMENT : La séance est annulée.
  • Mercredi 1er mars 2006
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    C. TERRA (Fundação Getulio Vargas, Rio de Janeiro) : Political Business Cycles Through Lobbying
    Co-auteur(s) : M. BONOMO
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 1er février 2006
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    J. HUNT (Mc Gill univ., Montréal) : Bribery: Who Pays, Who Refuses, What Are The Payoffs?
    Co-auteur : S. Lazlo
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 7 décembre 2005
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    A. DE JANVRY (Univ. of California, Berkeley, CA) : Can conditional cash transfer programs serve as safety nets to keep children at school and out of the labor market when exposed to schocks ?
    Co-auteur(s) : F. Finan et R. Vakis
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 23 novembre 2005
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    R. AKRESH (Univ. of Illinois) : School enrollment impacts of non-traditional household structure
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 16 novembre 2005
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    K. MUNSHI (Brown univ., Providence, RI) : Why is mobility in India so low ? Social insurance, inequality, and growth
    Co-auteur(s) : M. Rosenzweig
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 19 octobre 2005
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    A. KOCHAR (Stanford center for international development, Stanford, CA) : Social banking and poverty : a micro-empirical analysis of the Indian experience
    texte intégral
  • Mercredi 12 octobre 2005
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    E. DUFLO (MIT, Cambridge, MA) : Dams
    Co-auteur(s) : R. Pande
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 11 mai 2005
    CHANGEMENT : La séance est annulée.
  • Mercredi 20 avril 2005
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    M. OLARREAGA (World bank, Washington, DC) : Subsistence farming, adjustment costs and agricultural prices : evidence from Madagascar
    Co-auteur(s) : O. Cadot et L. Dutoit
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 6 avril 2005
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    C. WOODRUFF (Univ. of California, San Diego, CA) : Do Entry Costs Provide an Empirical Basis for Poverty Traps ? Evidence from Mexican Microenterprises
    Co-auteur(s) : D. Mc Kenzie
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 23 mars 2005
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    A. CHARLTON (Oxford univ., Oxford) : Why is there so little foreign investment in most developing countries ? Vertical FDI in a multi-country world
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 9 mars 2005
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    A. M. MAYDA (Univ. de Georgetown, Washington, DC) : Who Is Against Immigration? A Cross-Country Investigation of Individual Attitudes Towards Immigrants
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 16 février 2005
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    S. PONCET (Univ. de Paris 1) : Are Chinese provinces forming an Optimal Currency Area? Magnitude and determinants of Business Cycles with China
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 2 février 2005
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    C. STROZZI (Univ. di Modena e reggio Emilia, Modena) : Citizenship laws and international migration in historical perspective
    Co-auteur(s) : G. Bertocchi
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 19 janvier 2005
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    S. STRAUB (Univ. of Edinburg) : Concessions of Infrastructure in Latin America : governement-led renegotiation
    Co-auteur(s) : L. Guasch et J.J. Laffont
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 5 janvier 2005
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    E. FIELD (Harvard univ., Cambridge, MA) : Entitled to work property rights and labor supply in Peru
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 15 décembre 2004
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    S. DESSY (Univ. de Laval) : The economics of child trafficking
    Co-auteur(s) : F. Mbiekop et S. Pallage
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 8 décembre 2004
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    R. FANI (Univ. Tor Vergata, Rome) : Trade liberalization in a globalizing world
    texte intégral
  • Mercredi 10 novembre 2004
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    J. JUTTING (OCDE, Paris) : The impact of social institutions on the economic role of women in Developping countries
    Co-auteur(s) : C. Morisson
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 20 octobre 2004
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    A. BANERJEE (MIT, Cambridge, MA) : Productivity and the Misallocation of Capital
    Co-auteur(s) : E. Duflo
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 6 octobre 2004
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    P. GLEWWE (Univ. of Minnesota) : Teacher Incentives
    Co-auteur(s) : I. Nauman et M. Kremer
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 2 juin 2004
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    M. GARCIA (PUC, Rio de Janeiro) : A risk management approach to emerging market's sovereign debt sustainability with an application to brazilian data
    Co-auteur(s) : R. Rogobon
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 26 mai 2004
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    S. KLONNER (Cornell univ.) : Does credit rationing reduce default ?
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 5 mai 2004
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    O. ATTANASIO (Univ. college London) : Is the food ? Nutrition intervention in Columbia
    Co-auteur(s) : M.V. Hernandez
    texte intégral
  • Mercredi 28 avril 2004
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    R. MURGAI (World bank, Washington, DC) : The impact of farmer-fields-schools on knowledge and productivity
    Co-auteur(s) : E. Gotland, E. Sadoulet, A. de Janvry et O. Ortiz
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 31 mars 2004
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    M. GOLDSTEIN (LSE, London) : Gender, power and agricultural investment in Ghana
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 17 mars 2004
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    S. ANDERSON (Univ. of British Columbia, Vancouver) : Should dowries be banned ?
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 3 mars 2004
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    J. SVENSSON (IIES) : The power of information : evidence from a newspaper campaign to reduce capture
    Co-auteur(s) : R. Reinikka
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 4 février 2004
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    E. SKOUFIAS (World Bank, Washington, DC) : An evaluation of the performance of regression discontinuity design on PROGRESA
    Co-auteur(s) : H. Buddelmeyer
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 28 janvier 2004
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    E. DUFLO (MIT, Cambridge, MA) : Intrahousehold resources allocation in Côte-d'ivoire : social norms, separate accounts and consumption choices
    Co-auteur(s) : C. Udry
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 17 décembre 2003
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    B. MILANOVIC (World bank, Washington, DC) : Is global inequality going up or down and does openness increase within-country inequality : results from household surveys
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 3 décembre 2003
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    E. EDMONDS (Dartmouth college) : The response of child labor supply to anticipated income
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 26 novembre 2003
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    A. HARRISON (Univ. of California, Berkeley, CA) : Quantifiying the impact of the human rights activism : the cas of Indonesia
  • Mercredi 19 novembre 2003
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    A. FOSTER (Brown univ., Providence, RI) : Agricultural development, industrialization and rural inequality
    Co-auteur(s) : M. Rosenzweig
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Dimanche 5 octobre 2003
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    C. GARCIA-PENALOSA (GREQAM, Marseille) : Second best optimal taxation of capital and labor in a developing economy
    Co-auteur(s) : S. Turnovsky
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 1er octobre 2003
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    M. RAVALLION (World bank, Washington, DC) : Land allocation in Vietnam's agrarian transition
    Co-auteur : D. van de Walle
  • Mercredi 4 juin 2003
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    M. KREMER (Harvard univ., Cambridge, MA) : The illusion of stuinability
    texte intégral
  • Mercredi 28 mai 2003
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    G. GROSMAN (Princeton univ., Princeton, NJ) : Managerial incentives and the international organization of production
    Co-auteur(s) : E. Helpman
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 7 mai 2003
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    F.M. GONZALEZ (Univ. of British Columbia, Vancouver) : Effective property rights, conflict and growth
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 9 avril 2003
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    S. GURIEV (New economic school, Moscou) : Human Smuggling and Illegal Immigration
    Co-auteur(s) : G. Friebel
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 2 avril 2003
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    F. GUBERT (DIAL, Paris) : Contingent loan repayment in the Philippines
    Co-auteur(s) : M. Fafchamps
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 12 mars 2003
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    L. WANTCHEKON (New York univ., New-York, NY) : Ethnicity, gender and demand for public goods : experimental evidence from Benin
  • Mercredi 26 février 2003
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    S. KLASEN (München Univ.) : Income mobility and household dynamics in South-Africa : 1993-1998
    Co-auteur(s) : I. Woolard
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 12 février 2003
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    E. MIGUEL (Univ. of California, Berkeley, CA) : Poverty and witch killing
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 29 janvier 2003
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    S. AMBEC (INRA-ESR, Grenoble) : Roscas as financial agreements to cope with social pressure
    Co-auteur(s) : N. Treich
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 15 janvier 2003
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    P. GERTLER (Univ. of California, Berkeley, CA) : Sex sells, but risky sex sells for more
    Co-auteur(s) : M. Shah et S. Bertozzi
    texte intégral
  • Mercredi 18 décembre 2002
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    D. RODRIK (Harvard univ., Cambridge, MA) : Institutions rule : the primacy of institutions over geography and integration in economic development
    Co-auteur(s) : A. Subramaniany et F. Trebbi
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 4 décembre 2002
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    J.M. BALAND (FUNDP, Namur) : Sustainability and organizational design in Roscas : some evidence from Kenya
    Co-auteur(s) : S. Anderson et K.O. Moene
    texte intégral
  • Mercredi 27 novembre 2002
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    M. ROSENZWEIG (Univ. of Pennsylvania) : Democratization, decentralization and the distribution of local public goods in a poor rural economy
    Co-auteur(s) : A. Foster
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 6 novembre 2002
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    D. COGNEAU (DIAL, Paris) : Colonisation, éducation et développement en Afrique. Une analyse empirique
    texte intégral [pdf]
  • Mercredi 9 octobre 2002
    Archives du Campus Jourdan
    D. MOOKHERJE (Boston univ., Boston, MA) : Poverty-environment linkages : empirical tests for firewood collection in rural Nepal
    Co-auteur(s) : P. Bardhan, J.M. Baland, S. Das et R. Sarkar
    texte intégral [pdf]

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