Chris Blattman - International development, economics, politics, and policy

Web Name: Chris Blattman - International development, economics, politics, and policy

WebSite: http://chrisblattman.com

ID:22058

Keywords:

International,development,Chris,

Description:

Guest post by Jeff Mosenkis of Innovations for Poverty ActionProfessor Lisa Cook explains that black and white inventors put in equivalent numbers of patent applications once in 1899, and never again. First, a great webinar by Professor Lisa Cook, former economic advisor to President Obama, among many other accomplishments, on how lynchings, violence, and discrimination caused African-American inventions (measured by patent applications) to peak in 1899 and never recover. Here s the video and slides, but for a fast summary, I did my best to live tweet it. She covered a lot of ground, but some parts that stuck with me in particular:The number of missing patents never filed because of the decreased numbers is on the order of the contribution of a medium-sized European country. It s hard to imagine what innovations and prosperity we ve all missed out on.Prof Cook mentioned in passing that a cousin helped found a town in North Carolina intended as a safe place for African-Americans to live and prosper without harassment. The story of Soul City, NC is fascinating.The most compelling part of the story wasn t even in the webinar. It was her decade-long uphill battle to get the paper published, and what it tells us about the field of economics, which she explains to Planet Money s The Indicator (Apple).The NYTimes has a piece explaining the problems with the culture of economics, and Dania Francis Anna Gifty Opoku-Agyeman offer three tips for the field in NewsweekThe Sadie Collective has recommendations for what institutions and individuals in the field can do better.The best piece I ve read on how subtle assumptions about race get absorbed into economists reasoning is this from Professor William Spriggs.How the field got to be the way it is is a bit easier to understand if you read this horrible piece by George Stigler in 1962: The Problem of the Negro.If you haven t seen it yet, this was a great explanation for the general US culture:Kimberly Jones Monopoly game metaphor reminds me of this Howard French brilliant deconstruction of a UK historian s book (gated, sorry) about African history.  French shows that Europeans destroyed sophisticated civilizations and hollowed out countries populations for hundreds of years by dragging away the workforce, and today cast about for roundabout theories for why they re underdeveloped  I m side-eyeing historians, but also hard to ignore the asymmetry in where development economists ideas come from, and the assumption that countries where the rich people are also must know how to get rich.Along those lines, here s a great piece by Francesco Loiacono, Mariajose Silva-Vargas, Apollo Tumusiime (written before the pandemic) about how research designs can be more sensitive and less biased by the views of the researchers (better informed consent, for example, and not assuming their programs happen in a vacuum, or realizing that local politicians may swoop in and take credit for cash transfers). (h/t David McKenzie s links)Today, I learned that the UK s abolition of slavery was accomplished through paying the slaveowners for their lost property, to the tune of today s $17 Billion (and requiring an additional 5 years of unpaid labor, which I feel like there s a name for ) British taxpayers just finished paying back that borrowed money in 2015, which means that descendants of slaves have been paying back their own ancestors slavemasters.Jennifer Doleac put together a series of flash webinars on policing research, more info here.A series of simple police reform ideas in this article and tweet thread on how to fix many policing problems by looking at financial incentives, moving the benefit of the taxes levied disproportionally on the poor by the criminal justice system away from the local municipalities (revenues from fines, seized assets, and the like) and redistributing them at the state level, prioritizing the poor.Share:EmailTwitterFacebookReddit Guest post by Jeff Mosenkis of Innovations for Poverty ActionStanford Political Scientist Hakeem Jefferson hosted a great conversation with a number of scholars on race and the criminal justice systemThe readings mentioned are assembled in this Dropbox folder and thread, and the Stanford Daily summarized the conversation.A couple of points that jumped out at me were what counts as research/evidence in academic research circles (it seems common for scholars of the black experience to face skepticism, or the view that its a specific niche topic).At the same time, a lot of sloppy (or fundamentally flawed) research on policing or other areas of policy makes it through peer review and gets a lot of public attention. And just like COVID, we might be about to be deluged with a huge wave of hasty research papers on race and everything under the sun from well-intentioned researchers new to the area.Or to put it more succinctly:reg wage educ black black_x_educ, robust Abdoulaye Ndiaye (@and_joy_) June 4, 2020Here s a Jennifer Doloeac thread on evaluations of specific policy interventions around policing.I think I caught part of a discussion wondering if these RCT-able micro policy interventions miss the point (the policies that lead to police abuses, and massive racial disparities in so many social outcomes are much larger, and approaches looking at one tiny tweak divert our attention from them. It seemed reminiscent of the RCT debate around research priorities in dev econ a bit global poverty is so massive a problem in other words, it s great that your youth empowerment program is RCT-able (at one place at one particular point in time) and makes for a fine study, but is it really going to make a dent in the bigger problems, even if it works?I ll cop-out by saying both sides have a point. We should absolutely be solving the big problems, but if we have a choice of small programs that are going to be implemented anyway be they youth empowerment or police body cams it seems at least helpful to weed out the ones that don t work. But not at that cost of solving the big picture problems.Guest post by Jeff Mosenkis of Innovations for Poverty ActionCoronavirus patient, comedian Noam Shuster, found herself at the center of an accidental social experiment profiled on the Rough Translation podcastMy colleague Kate Glynn-Broderick writes today with an example of how her existing project in Bangladesh, exploring gender gaps in access to mobile money and banking is quickly pivoting to COVID-19, as Bangladesh s government plans to use those same platforms to distribute social protection, threatening to leave the most marginalized people out of the government response.South Africa s National Research Foundation COVID-19 Africa Rapid Grant Fund offers funding to researchers and also journalists and policy communicators from 15 sub-Saharan African countries working on COVID-19. Applications due June 17.Some good news stories over the last few weeks help upend some implicit thinking- many African countries took COVID seriously and prepared while European and U.S. governments didn t:Africa Is Not Waiting to Be Saved From the Coronavirus, which points out how journalists go in looking for stories shapes how it will be remembered later.What African Nations are Teaching the West About Fighting the Coronavirus is very good.Also, from India, How Kerala s rock star health minister helped save it from Covid-19Elsewhere, Greece and Argentina have also done better than expected, because political leaders took the advice of health officials early on.This was also a good reminder about the usual script when it comes to how viruses play out in poor vs. rich countries:People like hearing about my research interests when I start talking about the role of West African funeral rites in Ebola outbreaksThey don’t like hearing about my research interests when I start talking about the role of American cultural aspects in the spread of COVID-19 Allison Elizabeth Bailey (@AEBaileyEpi) May 16, 2020People everywhere are resistant to changes to their culture and traditions Don’t throw stones from glass houses Allison Elizabeth Bailey (@AEBaileyEpi) May 16, 2020The Economist has a nice profile of Princeton economist Leonard Wantchekon, who escaped from being a political prisoner in Benin, and went on to found the African School of Economics there to make top notch econ training more accessible. But you can read his story in his own words: He s posted the introduction and chapter 7 of his book here.One of the points made in the Economist profile about the school is that talent is found all over, opportunity is not. It s a helpful reminder that if you re an econ researcher who relies on talented staff in another country for data collection (even if your communication goes through an American RA), a helpful thing to do is set aside some time to talk to them about their career goals and how you can help.Dave Evans pioneers a YouTube paper reaction video format, walking the viewer through a paper in this case, on refugee child education. And today he has a movie trailer -style one explaining how advance market commitments for vaccines work.A good podcast from Rough Translation: Hotel Corona (Apple) about how a hotel leased to the Israeli government for recovering Corona patients became a nation-captivating social experiment and unwitting reality show.Click through for this thread of the best historical U.S. Congressional facial hair, you won t be sorry.I am on a mission to find out which historical Member of Congress had the wildest facial hair.The Honarable George Frederic Kribbs (D-PA, 1893-1895) is currently leading in the standings. pic.twitter.com/vSbwfLF2tL Amelia Frappolli (@AmeliaFrappolli) May 22, 2020Share:EmailTwitterFacebookReddit Guest post by Jeff Mosenkis of Innovations for Poverty ActionLast week I mentioned the new COVID research RECOVR hub, which was still in development. This week it s been launched officially, to help development researchers share information about ongoing studies, survey instruments, and funding opportunities. If you are doing related work, please share or have a look at what other researchers are doing so we can build on one another s work.A great initiative from the Busara Center, Give More Tomorrow,   lets better-off Kenyans pledge to give the money from their new tax breaks to the poor during this crisis, but it s not limited to Kenyans. Anybody can use the Busara pledge on their site for their tax refund or stimulus check as well and donate to Kenyans in crisis via GiveDirectly.Congrats to Penn s Sharon Wolf Jere R. Behrman, NYU s Larry Aber, and IPA Ghana s Edward Tsinigo, on winning the Society for Research on Early Childhood Education s 2019 paper of the year, about an experimental program to improve preschool education in Ghana by getting teachers to move from a memorization and spitback style of teaching to an inquiry and social one. It s also the subject of one of my favorite podcast episodes (Apple) from NPR s Rough Translation, because they spend most of the time talking to teachers and families to explain why it didn t go according to plan.Congratulations to Melissa Dell for winning the Clark Medal for her work on economic history and development.Michael Kremer s seminar at Princeton about financing a COVID vaccine is below (slides here, Michael s slides start at p13 of the PDF)). He has a paper from last fall about his work on the financing the pneumonia vaccine for poor countries here here s a plain language discussion from Scientific American.(if the video is missing/broken, check the Princeton Economics YouTube channel)For those of you who haven t messed up your Zoom calls like me and want a cheap way to improve your lighting without buying a ring light, take these tips from Maureen Dowd s interview with Larry David:To shore up confidence beforehand I asked my lighting sensei, Tom Ford, for some tips and he kindly sent these instructions, which you all are welcome to use:“Put the computer up on a stack of books so the camera is slightly higher than your head. Say, about the top of your head. And then point it down into your eyes. Then take a tall lamp and set it next to the computer on the side of your face you feel is best. The lamp should be in line with and slightly behind the computer so the light falls nicely on your face. Then put a piece of white paper or a white tablecloth on the table you are sitting at but make sure it can’t be seen in the frame. It will give you a bit of fill and bounce. And lots of powder, et voilà!”or head into your Zoom settings:Send me your online meeting tips and I ll post em. Have a good weekend everybody.Share:EmailTwitterFacebookReddit Guest post by Jeff Mosenkis of Innovations for Poverty ActionFirst some good news congratulations to development economist and dewormer Ted Miguel, social psychologist of diversity and justice Jennifer Richeson, gynecologist and Nobel laureate, Denis Mukwege of the DRC, and the other newly elected members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.For researchers working on (or interested in working on) COVID in low- and middle-income countries: to facilitate collaboration, with support from the Gates Foundation, IPA, with J-PAL, CEGA, the IGC, CGD, Northwestern s Global Poverty Research Lab, Yale s Y-RISE, are going to launch a COVID research hub next week listing ongoing research studies (with data results when ready), funding opportunities, and survey research instruments. If you or anyone you know is working on a COVID project in development, please submit your instruments from the link there so the community can share compatible research tools and coordinate work. And please share with your colleagues!Realizing the situation of the job market, IPA s Peace and Recovery program, led academically by Chris Blattman, is offering a new one-year postdoc related to peace, violence, fragility, and recovery, suitable for someone from econ, political science, psych or related training.Massive crop-eating locust swarms are heading back to East Africa, and much bigger than before, while COVID has disrupted the supply chain for pesticides.David s Dev Impact links today include helpful ones on new COVID papers and funding for COVID research.A couple of interesting papers using cell phone data with current relevance:A new paper from Nicolas Ajzenman, Tiago Cavalcanti, Daniel Da Mata looks at a country highly politically divided where a President who has a questionable relationship with science minimized the COVID threat in early days and find words matter. They find that after Brazilian president Bolsonaro gave speeches minimizing the importance of social distancing, people in municipalities where he had strong support did less social distancing.Sveta Milusheva uses 15 billion mobile phone records in Senegal to track movement from areas with more malaria cases to areas with fewer, and matches it up with data showing an accordant rise in new infections at the destinations. She estimates: an infected traveler contributes to 1.7 additional cases reported in the health facility at the traveler’s destination. This paper develops a simulation-based policy tool that uses mobile phone data to inform strategic targeting of travelers based on their origins and destinations. The simulations suggest that targeting informed by mobile phone data could reduce the caseload by 50 percent more than current strategies that rely only on previous incidence. A new paper estimates the return on investment for personal protective equipment for community health workers in low and middle-income countries at $241.1 billion or 6,918% (h/t Grant Gordon). In my brief glance that s just the immediate ROI; during the  Ebola outbreak, researchers estimated the deaths of healthcare workers would lead to more child and maternal deaths even after the outbreak (h/t Dave Evans)If you re having weird or vivid dreams these days, it s not just you (h/t Osman Siddiqi)And it s not your imagination, all commercials are alike these days (h/t David Batcheck)Share:EmailTwitterFacebookReddit Guest post by Jeff Mosenkis of Innovations for Poverty ActionRemember to fill out your U.S. Census form if you got a mailing! Of course accurate counts are important for apportioning leadership and federal resources, but more importantly (as someone else pointed out) so that researchers 80 years from now looking at historical trends won t pull out their hair in frustration of the lost 2020 census data the same way ones today do about the 1890 census data fire.The Dev Impact blog had a pair of postings for research in the time of COVID-19. First, how your interventions and methods will have to change in the times of COVID-19, and dilemmas for researchers when your study is interrupted and what to do about them, which goes into specific past examples of how researchers adjusted when something unexpected happened to still get a useful study when things didn t go according to plan.I spoke with Oeindrila Dube of the University of Chicago about her new papers about health systems in Sierra Leone and Ebola, and the implications for COVID-19. The work, with Darin Christensen, Johannes Haushofer, Bilal Siddiqi, and Maarten Voors, started out as an evaluation of two interventions to improve health clinics, specifically by building trust and communication with the communities they served. Ebola hit after their study ended, but recall that one big barrier then given all the fear and stigma was getting people to come forward to get tested and treated. The researchers later matched up location-specific data to the areas where their programs had been and found that in the communities with the programs, more people came forward to get tested and treated. Two takeaways were how a social intervention helped save lives when a disease hit, and also how researchers can use recent or ongoing studies to inform a crisis response.Also see Dube and Katherine Baicker s op-ed in the New York Times on trust and leadership in times of crisis.As the crisis rips into economies CGAP has a nice collection of lessons from previous studies on how financial tools can help the poor during crises (and you can contribute more there if you know of relevant work).Martin Ravallion has a really helpful collection of thoughts on the many ways COVID might affect low-income countries and what people should be thinking about.Mushfiq Mobarak talks in more detail about fighting the virus in Bangladesh and other low-income countries, and why we can t copy and paste prevention strategies or even assumptions about spreading patterns from high-income countries to low-income countries. He explains new data collection efforts underway and how strategies will have to be developed that are location-appropriate.South Africa appears to have cracked down, both more ruthlessly and effectively than many countries, including sending police out to arrest or just beat people violating quarantine. (h/t W. Gyude Moore, former Liberian Minister of Public Works and current Visiting Fellow at the Center for Global Development, who s definitely worth a follow if you re on twitter)An ultra-Orthodox town in Israel supposedly went from a corona hotspot to no new cases by putting in stricter-than-required behavioral restrictions supported by local religious figures, but also following the make it easy rule so people wouldn t have to be outside. The supermarket allowed people to submit a grocery list to a 24-hour hotline and their groceries would be delivered, and books and toys were delivered to families inside.A helpful thread of African writers on COVID-19 there (h/t Rachel Strohm, who s always sharing useful information)And for some non virus breaks:I really enjoyed this Tyler Cowen podcast (Apple/iTunes) with linguist John McWhorter, who just seems like a store of so much knowledge (reinforcing my opinion that linguistics is the social science that learns the most from other subfields)For a cheap read and an occasional chuckle, marketing professor and humor researcher Peter McGraw, a friend of mine, has a new general audience book trying to distill wisdom from comedians for the workplace. He tries to dissect different types of jokes and what makes ideas unexpected, with the help of a comedian. One creativity exercise he says he sometimes uses in consulting is Sh*tstorming brainstorming, but trying to come up with the worst ideas possible. He says it often loosens up people to be less inhibited, and occasionally generates good ideas. Anyway, the electronic version of the book is a buck on Amazon until Tuesday.This article asserts the real problem behind the toilet paper shortages isn t runs on stores, it s that national usage has shifted abruptly from at workplaces, schools, and businesses to home. The problem is that manufacturers make very different types of toilet paper for each (even the size and shape of the rolls), and with the market experiencing so much movement, the industry has to quickly adjust supply chains on the back end.Share:EmailTwitterFacebookReddit Guest post by Jeff Mosenkis of Innovations for Poverty Action.It s a little tricky to write links when it feels like things are changing hourly. Here s the main message to keep in mind for the research community you can do more than idle your projects. COVID-19 will affect every aspect of development, health, education, entrepreneurship, mobile money, cash transfers, political systems and trust in authority. But, if you have a research expertise in some area of development, now s the time to use it, not in three years to get a good retrospective paper. The advantage we have is that (as far as we know), it hasn t hit the Southern Hemisphere badly yet, and we still have a shot at slowing or containing it there. The bad news is that, as far as I can tell, research orgs aren t well-positioned to anticipate this. Specifically grants tied to a specific project are good for getting that project done, but when work is suspended, as the majority of face-to-face research will be (or is already) those research abilities should be redirected to fighting COVID and mitigating its impacts.Some funders have committed to allowing resources to be redirected, with the Philanthropy Pledge 2020 led by the Ford Foundation, but most of the signatories (last I checked) were domestic U.S. and I haven t seen as many international ones coalesce in the same way. We do list several leaders here, but the field needs to move faster.To that end, IPA s adapting it s resources across 22 countries to fight it, and we ll be doing matchmaking between what countries need, what funders are willing to support, and researchers soon, please reach out to the email addresses there if you can be involved:Researchers, implementers, and funders can contact our Peace and Recovery team who s leading our internal effort [email protected]We re also also exploring partnerships to launch a competitive fund for COVID response research there, if you can help with that email [email protected] A crucial mindset for academics will be not how can I track the effects to write about what happened later but what can I do to help mitigate the effects before they happen? which may be a different type of data work than you re used to. Departments should also allow enough flexibility to count this kind of work toward advancement as well.Tavneet Suri is running a webinar discussing switching the Kenya Universal Basic Income RCT survey to phone interviews, and best practices in phone surveys tomorrow at 9 EasternDina generously points out cash transfers aren t just for governments:I hope this is not controversial. For those of us who have secure jobs, e.g. in research or policy, and field work projects which now come to a halt: If we continue to get a salary, but our field staff in lower income countries don t, we should share some of our income with them. pic.twitter.com/gGXcAnGVOg Dina D. Pomeranz (@DinaPomeranz) March 18, 2020And GiveDirectly is taking donations for low-income Americans likely to be hit by the virus fallout.The map at the top comes from Ugo Gentilini, who has done an impressive and fast review of 45 countries social protection measures in response to COVID (typically cash transfers). As of his review, all regions of the world were represented, except Africa. A consortium of researchers have a behavioral responses to COVID-19 survey in 35 languages to take http://www.covid19-survey.org/ And, if you haven t seen it necessity is the mother of invention-FWIW, I m seeing the quarantine affect people in different and unexpected ways. I don t have a solution, but I did talk to someone in Hong Kong, which is about 8 weeks ahead of us, and she said they d settled into a routine there. So if they re any guide it ll be weird for a while, and then we ll get used to it, but in the meantime, it s weird for everybody, not just you. Here s a live cam of underwater penguins (and without human visitors in the building, Chicago s aquarium let the penguins out to walk around)Guest post by Jeff Mosenkis of Innovations for Poverty ActionThanks for being patient while the links were on hiatus, we re back!COVID-19 is obviously on everybody s mind. For the dev crowd, let s remember that right now travel from US/Europe to the Southern hemisphere might spread the disease to vulnerable places with much weaker health systems.I apologize for not having it handy, but there was a good thread about how the mental model of the poor countries being the source of diseases may have contributed to U.N. troops bringing cholera to Haiti and discharging their waste into drinking water.The Global Dispatches (formerly UN Dispatch I think) podcast is always very informative. Host Mark Leon Goldberg spoke with Johns Hopkins professor Paul Spiegel who is currently modeling how an outbreak would spread in Rohingya refugee camps in Bangladesh if brought there by outsiders (Apple, transcript here). One aspect of thinking about an outbreak among refugees is the pressure host governments will have to use limited health resources on the native-born population before refugees.How can researchers help? Three suggestions from IPA s perspectiveIPA s Peace and Recovery Program has announced grants of (up to) $50k available off cycle (i.e. now) to study emergency responses in low and middle-income countries, including COVID-19 and is accepting proposals. Please share with colleagues! (and retweet here)When the 2014 Ebola outbreak happened, many research projects were affected, but researchers adapted to integrate questions about Ebola into their research projects. Here s a great brand new (updated today!) paper from Christensen, Dube, Haushofer, Siddiqi, Voors, who already had an RCT in progress in Sierra Leone testing if two social accountability interventions improved health care quality in clinics. When the Ebola outbreak hit they adapted their study to incorporate it and found that giving status awards to nurses and community-monitoring of health clinics improved the perceived quality of health care and health care workers. This in turn appears to have led more people to come forward to be tested and treated for Ebola, saving lives.Another group of researchers reactivated a network of phone-based monitoring of food prices from a previous study to monitor prices and potential shortages in areas that were cut off, and quickly fed that back to government and relief agencies so they could move resources into place. If there is an outbreak (or danger of one), do you have data that might help local authorities plan for how to use resources? And if travel is cancelled, here s some experience on holding a virtual conference For professors teachers thinking about transitioning to streaming classes, one professor was recently surprised to learn several of her students didn t have wi-fi at home, so remember to be sensitive to individuals circumstances (sharing slides in advance and using a service that includes a call-in number). For students who need a written interface I ve heard that Google Hangouts live captioning is pretty good (but haven t experimented extensively. Make sure you don t have a Swedish accent though).International Women s Day is on Sunday:Here are some studies my colleagues liked on women s entrepreneurship in low income countries and in the U.S.From Dina Pomeranz, some useful charts from Our World in Data looking at several global trends over time.Shelly Lundberg has edited a new book that s free for downloading with 18 contributed chapters looking at different aspects of women s status in the economics profession And a pretty remarkable story by Greta Thunberg s mom, excerpted from a new book.Share:EmailTwitterFacebookReddit Guest post by Jeff Mosenkis of Innovations for Poverty Action.A few years ago, Liberia, whose educational system has been troubled to say the least, tried an experiment. In the face of under-resourced and underperforming public schools, they wondered if private education providers could run public schools better than the government was? The country announced that it was going to outsource the whole country s schools to one American company, but after public outcry the plan was scaled back to pilot and included a randomized evaluation with three private and five non-profit school operators running different test schools.Now the three-year evaluation results, from Mauricio Romero and Justin Sandefur (conducted with my IPA colleagues in Liberia), are out: short summary, 3ish page brief full paper. On average, results were not stunning (students from the privately-run schools read about 3 words a minute more in English after 3 years than their peers in the business-as-usual public schools), and though corporal punishment went down a bit, sexual abuse of children did not.Bridge International Academies, the company originally slated to run the whole country s schools, had the largest number of schools in the pilot. It achieved on par results by kicking out several hundred students and the majority of teachers – leading school dropout rates to increase by nearly half over three years – and also cost more than twice the per pupil cost of the next most expensive operator. Justin summarizes the whole thing in a helpful twitter thread here. Bridge s head of research responded here arguing as far as I can tell, that if you only look at the third of the students who stayed in their schools, their results look much better. On the other hand, if you look across operators, some clearly did better than others, which is also encouraging. At least to me it suggests the model might be possible under the right circumstances. As always, the devil s in the details. Quartz reports on it here.World Development quickly put together a special symposium issue on RCTs in development with lots of interesting-looking perspectives (gated unfortunately), but editor Arun Agrawal gives helpful single tweet summaries of each one in this thread.Sir Fazle Hasan Abed, the founder of BRAC, the world s largest NGO, and a pioneer in the field, has passed away.Ugo Gentilini had over a thousand papers this year in his weekly social protection links, he summarizes his favorites in 10 categories (e.g., cash, gender, crime)Great podcasts:Last week I talked about the government putting up hurdles for the poor getting food stamps and school lunches. Georgetown s Pamela Herd and Don Moynihan have a whole book on administrative burdens, how governments (often states) put up unnecessary bureaucracy to prevent people from getting benefits they re entitled to, often as a way around doing it legislatively (behavioral economists think of this as the opposite of a nudge, sludge. ) Some of their work is inspired by the revelations they experienced trying to get benefits for their disabled daughter. They had a great conversation on The Weeds, but make sure you take your blood pressure medication first and there s nothing breakable nearby. (Although a positive update, soon after that came out, Kentucky s governor ended that state s Medicaid work requirement)Tyler Cowen has great interviews with Esther Duflo (Apple), and Samantha Power (Apple)The Indicator has Lisa D. Cook and Anna Gifty Opoku-Agyeman talking about how economics excludes black women (Apple), here s their NYTimes op-ed about it.Some impressive data journalism from the NYTimes, who received a data set with 50 billion cell phone locations, tracked by a private company. They were able to identify semi-public figures, like a senior Department of Defense official at the Women s March on the National Mall. The point of the piece is that the collection and use of this data is largely unregulated. This is probably the last links of the year (decade I guess?). Thanks again to everybody for reading, to Chris and to IPA for continuing to afford me the opportunity, and particularly to my colleague Cara Vu for editing them weekly. I m looking forward to an informative 2020!Share:EmailTwitterFacebookReddit Guest post by Jeff Mosenkis of Innovations for Poverty Action.There s a new evaluation out of the Northern Ghana site of the famous expensive Millennium Villages project most associated with Jeff Sachs. I m not an expert, but as I understand it, the theory is that an intensive big fix (building new institutions like hospitals and many other things at once) could fix the interdependent problems of poor areas.The thing is that Sachs insisted he knew it would work, and it didn t need an independent evaluation, in fact threatening people who criticized the project s inadequate evaluation, and yelling at a reporter (disclosure: she s now my colleague) who asked for the full budget numbers. My understanding is that in addition to the outside funding Sachs brought, it required local government funding and free labor, so also came at a cost to the local region. DFID, the UK aid agency, disagreed and did insist on this evaluation, which finds small or null effects (I couldn t find an ungated version but here s the DFID report version)It s job market season, lots of good job market papers on the Development Impact Blog. In addition, two JMPs/JMC s which caught my attention:Moffii Odunowo has a couple really interesting papers, one thinking about the longer lasting impacts of women s education in Nigeria using natural geographical variation in a 1970 s-era educational reform. Every additional year of school they got increased: the probability of children completing primary school by 22 percent, and attending secondary school by 29 percent. I find that the effects are particularly pronounced for girls. One of her other papers also looks at the effects of exposure to Boko Haram attacks on children s cognition: Children exposed to terror attacks are 0.35 SDs shorter and lag in cognition by 0.18 SDs. The deficits are largest in children exposed to violence at younger ages. Mediation analysis shows that 6% of the effect on height is mediated by nutrition and parental investment can explain 14% of the effect on psychological development. According to her website, she s got an RCT and several other interesting projects in the works, which I m looking forward to seeing. Wayne Sandholtz blogs about his JMP, looking at electoral consequences of an existing Liberian school reform. As it happens, the program was being RCTed, and he ran a parallel study on voting and opinions. He found that parents of kids in the new schools responded to how well the school was doing with their voting, rewarding the incumbent if the new school was performing well, and punishing if it wasn t.Relevant for current U.S. announcements that the administration will take away SNAP food benefits for 700,000 poor adults, and school lunches from nearly a million children (some can reapply), is this brief from Ideas42 on work requirements for benefits. The evidence showed they don t help and just put up barriers (see the game on page 14 to see if you d be able to keep your Medicaid benefits with Arkansas barriers). I ve never seen any evidence that punishing the poor out of poverty works. In fact, one of the themes of Abhijit Banerjee s Nobel lecture was that the poor aren t poor because they re lazy. His donation to the Nobel Prize museum was bags sewn by women in Ghana from a study with my IPA colleagues showing that poor women who got more cash aid became more, not less, productive at work. Also see this part of his Nobel lecture, where he discusses findings from 7 countries where social welfare programs didn t reduce work.Rachel Strohm has a nice piece out about what people mean when they say being in the field. She concludes that it s shorthand for geographic and power dynamics. I ve noticed the same thing, and started just saying where I mean (the name of the place or the study locations )Kenya s new railway from the port has increased costs by nearly 50% for some shippers, due to the high fees needed to repay the Chinese backers of the project. Shippers are being required to use the new railway.The Nobel lectures by Banerjee, Duflo, and Kremer were all very watchable, but my favorite part is probably the fashion articles from India about the traditional clothing Banerjee and Duflo wore to the award. I m guessing it s the first fashion article about MIT economists. Share:EmailTwitterFacebookReddit Photo: Larry George II on UnsplashGuest post by Jeff Mosenkis of Innovations for Poverty ActionFor your travels this weekend I ve put up some favorite podcast recommendations, plus some bonus reading, and kids podcasts. (Though they re all potentially kids podcasts, in that when my kids misbehave in the back seat I threaten to put on an econ podcast and they shape up pretty quick.)The Nathan Nunn article on rethinking economic development was very readable. He argues that instead of investing in development, rich countries could just stop doing things that harm poor countries, like punitive trade and immigration policies, poorly thought out development projects that cause unintended consequences like exacerbating conflict, and academic research that s blind to the country context. The latter includes few development economists from the countries being studied in the fields mainstream, and journals rejecting running the similar evaluations in a different country, if we already know results from one place.On the second, unintended consequences, Jeff Bloem kicked off the series of Dev Impact Blog s job market candidates blogging their job market papers with a really interesting one. He finds the Dodd-Frank act trying to curb conflict minerals, roughly doubled conflicts in the DRC, and the conflicts continued even after the U.S. suspended those provisions.Side note: David McKenzie says a lot of emails from the World Bank are going to spam boxes, and we ve found the same at IPA, so if you subscribe to either of our email lists, please whitelist worldbank.org and poverty-action.org domains (you should be able to unsubscribe from both easily from within the emails if you don t want them). You might also want to check your spam folder to see what else the algorithm is routing there.My colleagues John Branch and Marina Gonzalez have a post on planning ahead to make sure your project (be it program or study) survive political transitions, based on experience in Mexico.Non-academic jobs:Most people know the International Rescue Committee as a great humanitarian aid org, but it also has a fantastic research group, who s looking for a senior research director (Ph.D. level). Bonus, you ll be working with Dr. Jeannie Annan, an amazing researcher and thinker. Washington, D.C. s city policy lab is looking for a data scientist (MA level preferred)The fantastic evidence-based NGO Young1ove is looking for an RA (BA or MA level) and a postdoc (joint w/Oxford).Access to cheap HIV drugs may have been responsible for up to a third of sub-Saharan Africa s economic growth miracle (older ungated version with slightly different numbers). ht/ Lee Crawfurd.Share:EmailTwitterFacebookReddit A slope even non-economists can loveGuest post by Jeff Mosenkis of Innovations for Poverty ActionFirst, please pass along to your skiing friends that the owner of the ski treehouse above in Whitefish, MT (Glacier National Park adjacent) is offering to donate proceeds to the non-profit I work for, IPA, from any rentals between now and Jan 31. (Instructions here)Among other things, IPA s been investing in expanding the things that academics don t always have incentives to do, hiring Ph.D.s and sector experts to do the replications and tinkering (AER probably won t publish the 4th attempt to test a phenomenon, but to get it right, somebody has find out how it works across borders), build infrastructure for open-science and data transparency, and run longer term coordinated cross-country research agendas on big problems. Creating information might not sound like an urgent cause, but all of the work enables us to make sure we re responding to the urgent causes in the right way. We d also welcome your support in this on our donate page. Feel free to share both with friends and social networks also, thanks!Caitlin Tulloch of the IRC shows us one reason testing the practical stuff across contexts matters. Looking at the same humanitarian program, run by the same organization in different places and scales, costs varied by as much as 20x! (Ungated here) But, she s able to model for that knowing some basic characteristics of the program and place.In the wake of Nobel-spawned critiques of RCTs, philosopher Peter Singer, along with Johannes Haushofer and Arthur Baker respond on the ethics of RCTs. Noah Smith responds to Lant Pritchett s criticism, which as far as I ve ever been able to tell amounts to there should be no development microeconomics because national economic growth will lift all ships much more efficiently than tinkering with individual programs. Among other things, Noah points out that we all agree poor people getting richer would solve their problems, but there s no obvious get rich button to hit to make that happen. Meanwhile, as the Nobel committee pointed out, plenty of individual programs *have* improved the lives of many many people. To Lant s credit, rumor has it he enjoyed the tool during one of the last laps around this pool to help you figure out what he thinks of your work (better with sound).In any other time this would be more of a bombshell ProPublica reports that Vice President Mike Pence broke USAID guidelines by overruling career staff to direct aid money to Christian groups in Iraq.A nice starter thread of resources for data management, file control, and the like to organize and future proof your files.In GitHub’s latest annual State of the Octoverse report, developers from Africa created 40% more open source repositories on the software engineering marketplace over the past year—a higher growth percentage than any other continent globally. Among African countries with established developer communities (defined by GitHub as having more than 10,000 contributors to the platform), Morocco accounted for the most growth on the continent.The above from Quartz. Kenya, Nigeria, and Egypt followed Morocco for growth in the large category. But there was major growth from a number of smaller African countries as well, including the French-held islands of Mayotte.Historically Black Colleges and Universities pay more to underwrite bonds on the bond market (older ungated version), suggesting they have a harder time finding buyers. This holds true even when there s no difference in creditworthiness and the effect is three times higher in the deep south. (h/t Jason Zweig)Dr. Jean-Jacques Muyembe, the Congolese doctor who discovered Ebola in 1976 but never got credit for it, hopefully will be recognized now.Share:EmailTwitterFacebookReddit It s complicated, trust me, see below.Guest post by Jeff Mosenkis of Innovations for Poverty ActionTwo Blattman-related things, for researchers and aspiring researchers:IPA s Peace and Recovery program is accepting research proposals, on topics such as war, peace, electoral violence, state-sponsored violence, terrorism, forced displacement, natural disasters, and recovery from all the above.They fund: full randomized trials, pilot studies, exploratory and descriptive work, travel grants, and (in rare but deserving cases) non-experimental evaluations. Applications from early career researchers (including Ph.D. and post-docs) are welcome, and there are small exploratory funds (under $10k) earmarked for them.Deadline December 6th, more here, and you can see previously funded work here.For those who want to do that work someday and want to work with Chris, a very cool Senior RA job posting, to work with Chris in Liberia following up in a landmark study (summary ungated paper) combining cognitive behavioral therapy with cash transfers for seriously at risk youth (if I recall, interviews were sometimes interrupted so the respondent could go pickpocket someone.) Three reasons I think this follow-up project is cool:-It s part of a burgeoning literature on mindset/psychological interventions, and answers questions about the lasting effects. It s also Chris 3rd study following up on the long-term effects of cash transfers, and the first 2 have yielded interesting findings.-Methodologically, working in these circumstances is really interesting. The original team developed a new method to figure out if people were telling the truth in surveys on questions like how much crime they were committing. -The original cognitive-behavioral program was developed by Johnson Borh, a Liberian conflict survivor. You can hear him and Chris talking about it on Freakonomics here.Feel free to send the job link to anybody who might be interested (and really good)I asked for non-academic jobs for Ph.D.s. here s one doing evals w/ the American Institutes for Research in DC, and with Mercy Corps directing research on conflict, governance, and migration (being vacated by Rebecca Wolfe, who s going to UChicago). Feel free to send me more.An amazing interview between Dave Evans and Nobel laureate Michael Kremer this week. I wish I could pick just one excerpt, but it was all really great (stay for the questions at the end). Video here, and audio below for those on the go: DownloadAlso see Dave s blog post summarizing 100+ papers by Esther DufloDamon Jones shares his spreadsheet system for keeping track of travel expenses and reimbursements.A group of Stanford researchers, including political scientist Shelby Grossman, caught Russian-run fake Facebook accounts trying to influence public political opinion in four African countries.In Israel, random assignment of Jewish patients to an Arab doctor (vs a Jewish one) reduces social distance and increases perceptions of possibilities for peace among the patients (via John Holbein).I m still processing this psych paper where 49 authors from 15 research teams tested 5 hypotheses with >15,000 participants (there was also a prediction component), and did both meta and Bayesian analyses on the effect sizes/replicability. As you can see from the graph above, there was a lot of variation in replication, but (if I understand), they attribute it mainly to the choices the research teams made in how to test the hypotheses (e.g. study design). I can t decide if it s good or bad news that researcher choices in how to answer the same question yields so much variation.Share:EmailTwitterFacebookReddit They spend the next 45 minutes arguing about Stata vs. R. (In honor of the new Jack Ryan season) Guest post by Jeff Mosenkis of Innovations for Poverty Action.Dave Evans offers a short PhD in Michael Kremer s work, with quick summaries of 100+ of his papers. But being a Nobel-winning researcher is only one of his jobs. He s founded, or been instrumental in, more than one non-profit, and in USAID DIV. As a friend told me this morning, most people who know him from just one facet of his life often never know about his many other accomplishments.GiveWell is hiring people for their impact research work at the Ph.D. and other levels. Impressively, they do sponsor work visas, so please let people outside the mainstream U.S. world know. Reach out to them at jobs at givewell.org with questions.Side note: The first is another example of a good Ph.D.-level job doing meaningful, applied work. IPA recently hired three Ph.D.s to lead applied research agendas, does anybody know of good resources for Ph.D.s looking for non-professor jobs in development? (let me know and I ll share) Also, a cool (but only part-time) U.S. field RA job in Omaha, working on an eval of unconditional cash transfers for mothers of new babies (including brain/bio measures).An interesting paper reminded me of the 1800 s version of a current debate on the value of philanthropy in providing public goods. (Oversimplifying, tax-exempt philanthropy represents an abdication of government responsibility, and public subsidy to the whims of a few, or else, the counterfactual taxation of that wealth would mean a much smaller amount going to the government, out of which, an even smaller sliver would go to those kinds of causes.) What missing ingredient could help shed some light on this heated controversy? How about Oxford s Asli Cansunar s dataset on Ottoman-era drinking fountains in 1876? (I know, you were about to say it).In Istanbul, clean water, along with many other public services, was provided by wealthy Muslim philanthropists, with little government involvement. Cansunar shows that the majority of the water fountains went into the neighborhoods of other Muslim and elite groups, rather than other religious and ethnic communities, so even the philanthropies set up to provide for the public good ended up showing in-group favoritism. (h/t Dani Rodrik)In Science Obermeyer, Powers, Vogeli, Mullainathan show a pretty dramatic consequence of large dataset-trained algorithms being used to provision public goods (Washington Post summary). The commercial algorithm, sold to help health systems identify at-risk patients for more intensive interventions for millions of patients, misallocated resources away from Black patients to white ones, even though it was developed without ethnicity as a variable. It used prior healthcare spending as a proxy, and less is spent on Black patients. Remedying this disparity would increase the percentage of Black patients receiving additional help from 17.7 to 46.5%, the authors report. As Mullainathan told the Post, It’s truly inconceivable to me that anyone else’s algorithm doesn’t suffer from this. LOST, from Nick Huntington-Klein, is a Wiki Library Of Statistical Techniques including code for doing each function in different stats packages. (h/t this guy who changed his twitter name to a Halloween handle and I don t remember what it was before)Tyler Cowen recommends this article based on a talk by Nathan Nunn on aid and development.Share:EmailTwitterFacebookReddit One of the best Indian dairy cooperative-based Nobel pun cartoons you ll see all day. Guest post by Jeff Mosenkis of Innovations for Poverty Action That is Abhijit Banerjee Esther Duflo above, thanks to Neela Saldanha and Elizabeth Koshy for explaining that Abi Jit means (He) just won or won now, so it means just won the Nobel. And that the dairy cooperative Amul is known in India for their punny billboards (which you can also find on their twitter feed).On the Nobel sugar high, as a friend called it, a couple of nice interviews:The first time the three winners spoke since winning was on the Economist Money Talks podcast (Apple/iTunes). Also stay for the Nordic bank money laundering story.Michael Kremer on Bloomberg s Stephonomics podcast (Apple/iTunes). Where he explains he thought the initial messages about talking urgently from a colleague were a phishing scam.Michael also credits all the people who work on these studies, and there have been some nice tributes to and from them for example here, and here, and the very nice parties with video connections from all the organizations devoted to doing this work in Nairobi and Busia. (James Vancel pointed out that this week in Nairobi may be the only place you can get invited to a joint marathon/Nobel party).Jason Kerwin, Laura Derksen, and a few others mentioned that they got into development econ (or similar academic fields) after going on student trips to low-income countries. Chris Udry had a similar story after being in the Peace Corps in Ghana, and Dean Karlan was heading to Wall Street before what was supposed to be summer in a microfinance org in Latin America turned into a year, then a career. One thing that Kremer s pointed out in a few interviews (including the Bloomberg one above), was that his first RCT (showing textbooks weren t helping kids) happened because he d been a teacher in Kenya, he happened to be back visiting, and talking to a friend in education there. He also knew from his experience that Kenyan kids were being taught in English, which was often their third language.I ve seen a few criticisms of the RCT world over time, but I think the one that resonates with me the most, highlighted by Kremer s teaching example, is how much better our tests and solutions would be if the researchers had the opportunity to spend more time in the countries they study, or if more economists who are afforded the opportunities to do those kinds of studies came from the places being studied. I think there s more being done on this front and hope to see the field expanding over the coming years.Which reminds me applications are now open for The Mawazo Institute s PhD Scholars Programme for African women studying STEM and Social Sciences. More on the program here. Registration is also open for the Sadie Collective conference, Feb 20th, encouraging black women to go into economics and related fields. All the reviews I ve heard from last years were incredibly positive.A correction from last week, I d quoted a statistic of Ethiopia as having the highest number of internally displaced people, nearly 3 million. Reader Pablo Abitbol pointed me to this UNHCR report, which reports Colombia has more than twice that amount, approaching 8 million people.I d been eagerly awaiting the podcast from Mary Daly Zip Code Economies (Apple/iTunes) which (if I recall) had been announced right before she became President and CEO of the San Francisco Fed, and then was understandably delayed a long time so somehow I missed it when it was released in June.Its premise is exploring the economies of 5 local zip codes and I don t know what I was expecting but it was not this. I binged it got about halfway through the season on the first day. It s very NOT central banker, much more documentary style about the everyday lives of people, with the goal of being uplifting. So far, I think she s only mentioned data once, and that was to say that economists data isn t everything, people s lived experiences are important (according to the FAQ, a goal of the podcast is to connect the macro to micro. If you view through the econ lens you ll understand the connection, but it s deliberately jargon-free.). Anyway, kudos to Dr. Daly, the producers and the SF Fed for putting the effort into it. And for more on Mary Daly and her interesting career journey listen to her on Freakonomics (Apple/ITunes) or the St. Louis Fed Women in Economics podcast (Apple/iTunes).Share:EmailTwitterFacebookReddit Ethiopian Prime Minister and Nobel Laureate Abiy Ahmed AliGuest post by Jeff Mosenkis of Innovations for Poverty ActionEthiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed Ali has won the Nobel Peace Prize for his work towards peace with Eritrea, though the committee acknowledged it s still a work in progress. Ethiopia has also loosened some of its more repressive policies around security and journalism recently. Commentary from BBC starting around 6 minutes here (both stories h/t Laura Seay).For longer background on how Ali came from being a relatively minor figure to a reformer, listen to this UN Dispatch podcast from a few months ago (Apple/iTunes). I learned that Ethiopia still has a huge number of internally displaced people in the world because of internal conflicts an astounding 3 million people.UPDATE: While the podcast said Ethiopia s number was the largest, reader Pablo Abitbol pointed me to this UNHCR report, which reports Colombia has more than twice that amount, approaching 8 million people. David Evans and Almedina Music round up let me see . 150 papers from the NEUDC conference, on the Center for Global Development Blog with fancy expanding sections, or the Development Impact Blog for the traditionalists.Uganda s government announced it was reintroducing a bill to make gay sex punishable by death. The bill failed to pass by the required 2/3 majority in 2014.USAID spent $70 million to build a commercial port in Haiti as part of earthquake recovery and successfully built two concrete electrical poles (no electricity or wires, just the poles). Also, the reporter informed the Haitian officials that USAID had cancelled the project, because apparently USAID hadn t. According to the article: By January 2019, nine years after the earthquake, USAid had spent $2.3bn in Haiti. Most of it was given to American companies and hardly any passed through Haitian hands. Less than 3% of that spending went directly to Haitian organisations or firms, according to research by CEPR. In contrast, 55% of the money went to American companies located in and around Washington DC. Most likely, according to the research, the majority of what USAid allegedly spent on Haiti’s recovery ended right back in the US.The 2020 World Development Report is out, focusing on global value chains. Mercy Corps CEO, two board members, and legal counsel, have resigned after a news investigation showing the organization allowed its founder to stay on, ignoring credible allegations that he d sexually abused his daughter for years.Sandip Datta and Geeta Gandhi Kingdon have a paper showing that gender bias favoring sons education over daughters in India appears to have gone down over the 20 years between 1995 and 2014, as daughters enrollment in school rose to levels similar to boys. However, if you look at expenditures, families still spend more on boys, particularly via private schools. (h/t Susannah Hares)Share:EmailTwitterFacebookReddit One of the original Kodak Shirley cardsGuest post by Jeff Mosenkis of Innovations for Poverty ActionHave fun to everybody at the NEUDC conference this weekend! Fun fact: the Northeast Universities Development Consortium conference is being held at Northwestern, which is neither in the Northeast, nor the Northwest. The conference has never been held at Northeastern University. So for everybody complaining about confusing econ speak, this is what they do to themselves.An interesting idea from Michael Lokshin and Martin Ravallion, addressing U.S. (or other wealthy country) labor market needs, immigration, and global poverty at the same time: People in the rich country rent out their right to work to someone who wants to come to the country to work. They outline the basics on VoxEU, Martin goes into more detail on his blog, and here s the full paper. Chinese cell phone manufacturer Transsion is valued at $6.5 billion, despite having never sold a phone in China. It focuses exclusively on African markets, where it sells a phone for the equivalent of $130 that can compete with an iPhone. One thing they ve done well is optimize the camera for dark skin tones. Even before cell phones, this was a problem in the U.S. film camera market which was well-known among photographers. It turns out to go back to Kodak having produced a series of color reference cards for the industry with a light-skinned woman wearing light clothes. In a sense the problem foreshadowed modern AI data training problems the early reference that the system is normed/trained on can have massive and persistent downstream effects.Jobs these might appeal to a different sort of career track than what people often look for at IPA. They involve working with the underlying data on studies to make research projects better across a lot of studies. Ideally these are for someone with a good data background, but is interested in growing in the position long-term (e.g. not a stopover on the way to grad school). Please share if you can!Regional Technical Coordinator/Manager (Kenya)Regional Technical Coordinator/Manager (Uganda)Global Data Scientist (New York or DC)J-PAL is recruiting for U.S. office-based RA positions (deadline Oct 11), and of course the main jobs portal for IPA, J-PAL and affiliated orgs is here.A fascinating paper from Andrew Bacher-Hicks and Elijah de la Campa. They use the quasi-random movement of police commanders between New York City police precincts to study the effects of the stop-and-frisk policies those commanders bring with them on the long-run educational outcome of kids in the neighborhoods. The stop-and-frisk policies apparently improves education and safety outcomes slightly for white and Asian kids, who interact with the police the least, while it substantially reduces high school and college outcomes for African-American kids, who have the most interaction with police. (via John Holbein, who often shares interesting papers like this.)In 1998, Dutch civil servant Sirak Asfaw, who was born in Ethiopia, noticed something shiny in a houseguest s suitcase. It turned out to be a stolen Ethiopian religious crown. He locked out the guest, took the crown and hid it for 21 years, afraid officials in Ethiopia might have been complicit with the looting, and is now trying to have it returned.A cool travel hack below (and follow the thread for more in the replies). Also, if you have trouble sleeping on the road or at home, I really like the podcast Sleep With Me (Apple). He s just a savant at telling really boring stories (I don t know how else to describe it, but he s got a huge following).Share:EmailTwitterFacebookReddit Guest post by Jeff Mosenkis of Innovations for Poverty ActionFirst, a word from Chris (click the linked screenshot below for the whole interesting story):Here s that link to his CV (including a graduate degree from Columbia). But you can hear him and Chris on Freakonomics talk about the program he developed in Liberia.The American Economic Association released its full report on the professional climate survey it ran and it s not good. Ben Casselman from The New York Times, who has done a lot of reporting on this, excerpts some of the more stunning responses.@itsafronomics points out the number of things black and Latina women report having had to do to avoid harassment or discrimination (such as giving up a job or other opportunity) is remarkably high 4.4 compared to 1.5 for the average white male respondent.Brett Matsumoto points out that people with disabilities including mental health issues also reported being made to feel worse about it by their colleaguesI was also surprised by the rates of religious discrimination experienced by Muslims (table 5D) rates of 29-39%Mexico s famously randomized Prospera (previously called Progresa and Oportunidades) national program designed to support the production of econ papers about conditional cash transfers, is being phased out. One of the arguments for getting rid of it was that it was poorly targeted (money ended up going not just to the poorest families). It will be replaced in part with a scholarship program, which I believe was evaluated and found not to be effective, in part because it was poorly targeted. In Why I Resigned From the Gates Foundation, Sabah Hamid explains the issues with the foundation presenting a personal award to Prime Minister Modi.The John Heinz Dissertation Award for dissertations about social insurance is accepting nominations until October 21.Rwanda s gender quotas mandating seats for women in the legislature are often presented as a strong pro-woman policy, but it takes more than quotas to change culture (you may have to click Read More ). Also see this episode of Invisibilia (audio or Apple/iTunes).Share:EmailTwitterFacebookReddit Guest post by Jeff Mosenkis of Innovations for Poverty ActionThe animation above comes from a cool page of causal inference animations by Nick Huntington-Klein (h/t Alex Tabarrok), which go through, step-by-step with scatterplots, how different methods work. Alex was one of many who offered helpful tips for getting through undergrad econometrics. Call for papers for the Y-Rise conference Dec 15-21 on the science of scaling promising interventions. They have research networks looking at broad questions (Political Economy; Evidence Aggregation/External Validity; Macro, Growth, Welfare Effects of Policy Interventions; and Spillovers, Network Equilibrium Effects), as well as working groups on three promising intervention areas (seasonal poverty, informational failures, and improving agricultural extension). Submission deadline Oct 2.Bloomberg has an article and short video following a driver for Jumia, Nigeria s equivalent of Amazon.com. One commonality between Jumia and Amazon s private delivery network in the U.S. seems to be high pressure and risk shifted from the firms onto the drivers.Here are two good econ and two non-econ but fun podcasts:The St. Louis Fed Women in Economics Podcast (Apple), interviewed Anna Opoku-Agyeman and Fanta Traore about their work with the Sadie Collective, which gets more black women involved in Economics (one sobering statistic I learned, in 2017 seven out of 1,150 Ph.D.s in economics awarded were to black women.)Today, from NPR Planet Money s The Indicator (Apple), the fascinating life of economist Edith Penrose. She helped colleagues escape the Nazis in Europe, worked with Eleanor Roosevelt on the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, earned a Ph.D. in Economics in 1950, and later ended up in Baghdad studying the oil industry. Penrose s understanding of firms as dynamic creative organizations advanced how economists think about how businesses grow. You can read more in Tyler Cowen s review of her biography.Dave Chang (the chef behind Momofuku) has an interview podcast, I enjoyed one from a few months ago interviewing Michael Shur (Apple), who s behind the TV show The Good Place (as well as Parks and Rec and The Office), about making ethics and philosophy funny and appealing to a broad audience (and lots of other stuff in their lives).NPR s Rough Translation (Apple) is one of my favorites, The Man Who Sedated Eichman (Apple), is about the late anesthesiologist who sedated Adolph Eichman to be kidnapped out of Argentina and stand trial, and why he refused to ever talk about it (it s more complicated than you might think).And a fun web cartoon, Mzungus in Development and Governments, is a satirical look at expat researchers and development workers, I couldn t pick just one frame but it s well done. After you re done reading what s already up there, you can subscribe by email for updates, or follow the adventures on twitter Facebook. Make sure to share it in your expat FB groups).Share:EmailTwitterFacebookReddit Guest post by Jeff Mosenkis of Innovations for Poverty Action A very cool job market paper and explanatory thread, from Ph.D. candidate Matthew Klein. He, Bradford L. Barham, and Yuexuan Wu, link women s household bargaining power to malaria rates in Malawi. They find that a one standard deviation increase in a woman s household bargaining power implies a 40% reduction in chances that anybody in the household contracts malaria. They caution their ability to infer why this works is limited in their data set, but it offers an intriguing route to test to decrease malaria rates, something the WHO just called for.The review paper How effective is nudging? A quantitative review on the effect sizes and limits of empirical nudging studies , the source of the figure above, reminds us that nudge effect sizes aren t huge (except for changing defaults). But that never should have been the claim they re just usually cheap and scaleable, if they involve things like rearranging information on an existing form, or another way of presenting information differently.It reminds me of the paper Do The Effects of Social Nudges Persist? Theory and Evidence from 38 Natural Field Experiments , which reviews several studies showing that effects of habit change interventions often fade after the intervention ends. If I understand it, they then look at a series of field experiments on home energy reports (those mailings from the power company about your energy use) which is considered a very successful nudge. First, they mention that it only reduces power use by 2.4 percent (which over a big population is nothing to shrug at), and that the effects fade by over half after the program ends. The remaining effects are driven by people who ve invested in physical capital (more energy-efficient appliances), which in a sense is like changing the default. Big behavior change is hard, but if you can change the setup around people to reduce the continuing challenge, you ll have a better chance.A nice read via David McKenzie s links last week: Humans of Policy Research the personal perspectives of policymakers in Ethiopia who are collaborating with researchers, and what they hope to get out of it.How do we liberate agriculture and development from academic preferences? By Charles Dhewa, on the FP2P blog, argues slow academic literature accumulation led by professors far away is not a good way to either capture or retain what s actually known by the people who know their areas best. But there s been elite academic capture of development agencies which then privilege those kinds of limited distant knowledge when it comes to directing development efforts. Literature review cannot explain emerging issues in agriculture and health. For instance, many countries in Southern Africa are now experiencing crop and livestock diseases like Tuta Absoluta, Fall Army Worm and January diseases as well as several human ailments which did not exist a few years ago. You cannot find useful literature on these diseases going back 10 years to 50 years. When literature review is prioritized ahead of real-time knowledge, countries in the Global South end up recycling old ideas at the expense of new ideas that speak to the evolving context. Countries end up doing endless policy reviews instead of developing new fluid policies.He suggests an alternative way of thinking about knowledge management that collects what people are currently talking about. (Sorry about the formatting break)Duncan s weekly audio summary podcast of his daily FP2P blog posts (Apple) are a great quick way to get the point of that week s posts or to find out which ones are of interest to go back and read in full. IPA and J-PAL have merged their RCT data hubs on Dataverse, and now have 149 data sets for free download there. They list some of their most recent and most popular downloads in the blog announcement.And, this important replication came out this week and thankfully is open access. Really, the paper is a gift that keeps on giving:Share:EmailTwitterFacebookReddit I'm a Professor in the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago. I use field work and statistics to study poverty, political engagement, the causes and consequences of violence, and policy in developing countries. [Read more]CategoriesCategoriesArchives Archives Recent Comments Robert on IPA s weekly links: keymonika satyawali on Best blog comment of all time?: nice post . Thank you for posting something like this keep up the good workifajig on Best blog comment of all time?: I ve been surfing on the web more than 3 hours today, yet I never found any stunning...honey khatri on Best blog comment of all time?: nice article, waiting for your another :)Wwe2k18 on Best blog comment of all time?: Really nice article and helpful meMilan Yenurkar on Best blog comment of all time?: I read this post your post so nice and very informative post thanks for sharing this...Josh Angela on A Family-Friendly Policy That’s Friendliest to Male Professors : Hello, i want to use this medium to share...Duncan Green on IPA s weekly links: You need to get your spam filter sorted Chris. Either that or your commenters have suddenly...Essay Writers UK on How to write an essay: Wow! this is amazing. Thank you so much for sharing this amazing and useful information with...Kajalsen on Best blog comment of all time?: Really nice article and helpful meCancelPost was not sent - check your email addresses! Email check failed, please try again Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.

TAGS:International development Chris 

<<< Thank you for your visit >>>

International development, economics, politics, and policy

Websites to related :
Best Stock Research Tools - Inve

  Robo-Analyst Technology For Safer/Smarter Investing Alerts, ratings screeners on 10,000+ stocks, ETFs and mutual funds. Better data drives better rese

Zinn Education Project

  Greed as a Weapon: Teaching the Other Iraq War Teaching Activity. By Adam Sanchez. 14 pages. Rethinking Schools.A role play investigating the economic

The Global Speculator

  Free Research Ideas on Gold and Silver Stocks, Gold Investing Economic Cycles. Our website provides the following: A macro overview of why the precio

Digital Commons at NLU | Nation

  Welcome to Digital Commons at NLUDigital Commons at NLU preserves and provides access to the research and scholarship created by the students, faculty

Naked Politics | Miami Herald &

  @doug_hanksDaniella Levine Cava is a Democrat hoping to ride a blue wave into County Hall in the 2020 race for Miami-Dade mayor, and she s using her p

Commodity Futures Trading Commis

  Overview and resources for market participants on CFTC’s response efforts to COVID-19. Learn more icon-go-arrow Created with Sketch. Press Releas

Stock Gumshoe | Secret Teaser St

  What's Hilary Kramer teasing as "The biggest profit opportunity I've ever seen?" 14 Comments Read Article And in 2020… we could see an onslaught of n

Homepage | Media Matters for Ame

  How Tucker Carlson deceptively edited a video to accuse veteran Democratic Sen. Tammy Duckworth of hating America Article 07/07/20 9:51 AM EDT The

Digital Commons @ RIC | Rhode I

  DigitalCommons@RIC collects, preserves, and provides access to scholarship by students, staff, and faculty at Rhode Island College. This digital repos

PhRMA Org | PhRMA

  About PhRMA represents the country’s leading biopharmaceutical research companies and supports the search for new treatments and cures. Advocacy From

ads

Hot Websites