Essays in Development Economics


Book Description

Understanding how the poor respond to programs, policies, and shocks in the developing world is central to the study of development economics. In this dissertation, I examine how households and communities respond to various stressors at three scales and in three different contexts. First, I examine how changes in rainfall and temperature affect household's investment in schooling for their children in Indonesia. Secondly, I examine how communities alter the distribution of aid in a large social safety net program in rural Ethiopia when communities are not given sufficient resources to implement the program as designed. Thirdly, I examine the behavioral response to the presence of researchers during the data collection process of a field evaluation of fuel-efficient cookstoves in Uganda. By examining the varied responses to stressors, these essays contribute to understanding the processes of development around the world.






















Essays on Human Capital, Labor and Development Economics


Book Description

In sum, the evidence in this paper shows that providing access to justice for women can be a powerful tool to reduce domestic violence and increase education of children, suggesting a positive inter-generational benefit.




Essays in Development Economics


Book Description

This PhD dissertation consists of four self-contained chapters in the field of development economics. The topic of the first three chapters is human capital in East Africa, whereas the topic of the fourth chapter is measurement of sub-national state capacity. The first chapter studies the effect on exam scores from attending private school relative to attending public school in Tanzania. I compare secondary school exam scores for students who went to the same primary school, in the same cohort, and achieved the same primary school exam scores, but one went on to public secondary school and the other to private secondary school. The second chapter studies the effect of private schools at the district level. Based on data from Kenya, we analyse whether an increase in the share of children enrolled in private schools affect average performance in cognitive tests. The third chapter evaluates the impacts on enrolment and learning from a reform eliminating secondary school fees in Tanzania. The fourth and final chapter develops a method for measuring state capacity at a local level in Sub-Saharan Africa. This measure is used to test whether areas with high predicted state capacity have lower risk of armed conflict relative to areas with low predicted state capacity.