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Handbook of Field Experiments provides tactics on how to conduct
experimental research, also presenting a comprehensive catalog on
new results from research and areas that remain to be explored.
This updated addition to the series includes an entire chapters on
field experiments, the politics and practice of social experiments,
the methodology and practice of RCTs, and the econometrics of
randomized experiments. These topics apply to a wide variety of
fields, from politics, to education, and firm productivity,
providing readers with a resource that sheds light on timely
issues, such as robustness and external validity. Separating itself
from circumscribed debates of specialists, this volume surpasses in
usefulness the many journal articles and narrowly-defined books
written by practitioners.
Handbook of Field Experiments, Volume Two explains how to conduct
experimental research, presents a catalog of research to date, and
describes which areas remain to be explored. The new volume
includes sections on field experiments in education in developing
countries, how to design social protection programs, a section on
how to combat poverty, and updates on data relating to the impact
and determinants of health levels in low-income countries.
Separating itself from circumscribed debates of specialists, this
volume surpasses the many journal articles and narrowly-defined
books written by practitioners. This ongoing series will be of
particular interest to scholars working with experimental methods.
Users will find results from politics, education, and more.
FROM THE WINNERS OF THE 2019 NOBEL PRIZE IN ECONOMICS 'Refreshingly
original, wonderfully insightful . . . an entirely new perspective'
Guardian Why would a man in Morocco who doesn't have enough to eat
buy a television? Why do the poorest people in India spend 7
percent of their food budget on sugar? Does having lots of children
actually make you poorer? This eye-opening book overturns the myths
about what it is like to live on very little, revealing the
unexpected decisions that millions of people make every day.
Looking at some of the most paradoxical aspects of life below the
poverty line - why the poor need to borrow in order to save, why
incentives that seem effective to us may not be for them, and why,
despite being more risk-taking than high financiers, they start
businesses but rarely grow them - Banerjee and Duflo offer a new
understanding of the surprising way the world really works. Winner
of the FT Goldman Sachs Business Book of the Year Award 2011
FROM THE WINNERS OF THE 2019 NOBEL PRIZE IN ECONOMICS 'Wonderfully
refreshing . . . A must read' Thomas Piketty In this revolutionary
book, prize-winning economists Abhijit V. Banerjee and Esther Duflo
show how economics, when done right, can help us solve the
thorniest social and political problems of our day. From
immigration to inequality, slowing growth to accelerating climate
change, we have the resources to address the challenges we face but
we are so often blinded by ideology. Original, provocative and
urgent, Good Economics for Hard Times offers the new thinking that
we need. It builds on cutting-edge research in economics - and
years of exploring the most effective solutions to alleviate
extreme poverty - to make a persuasive case for an intelligent
interventionism and a society built on compassion and respect. A
much-needed antidote to polarized discourse, this book shines a
light to help us appreciate and understand our precariously
balanced world.
Why do the poor borrow to save? Why do they miss out on free
life-saving immunizations, but pay for unnecessary drugs? In Poor
Economics , Abhijit V. Banerjee and Esther Duflo, two practical
visionaries working toward ending world poverty, answer these
questions from the ground. In a book the Wall Street Journal called
marvellous, rewarding," the authors tell how the stress of living
on less than 99 cents per day encourages the poor to make
questionable decisions that feed,not fight,poverty. The result is a
radical rethinking of the economics of poverty that offers a
ringside view of the lives of the world's poorest, and shows that
creating a world without poverty begins with understanding the
daily decisions facing the poor.
Billions of government dollars and thousands of charitable
organizations and NGOs are dedicated to helping the world's poor.
But much of the work they do is based on assumptions that are
untested generalizations at best, flat out harmful misperceptions
at worst. Banerjee and Duflo have pioneered the use of randomized
control trials in development economics. Work based on these
principles, supervised by the Poverty Action Lab at MIT, is being
carried out in dozens of countries. Drawing on this and their 15
years of research from Chile to India, Kenya to Indonesia, they
have identified wholly new aspects of the behaviour of poor people,
their needs, and the way that aid or financial investment can
affect their lives. Their work transforms certain presumptions:
that microfinance is a cure-all, that schooling equals learning,
that poverty at the level of 99 cents a day is just a more extreme
version of the experience any of us have when our income falls
uncomfortably low. Throughout, the authors emphasize that life for
the poor is simply not like life for everyone else: it is a much
more perilous adventure, denied many of the cushions and advantages
that are routinely provided to the more affluent: if they do not
have a piped water supply the poor cannot benefit from
chlorination; if they cannot afford ready-made breakfast cereals
they cannot gain the enriched vitamins and other nutrients; they
are routinely denied access to markets; and, they get negative
interest rates on their savings, while exorbitant rates are charged
on their loans. The daily stress of poverty discourages long-term
thinking and often leads to bad decision-making. Add to that the
fact the poor are routinely denied the information that might help
them manage the nightmarish predicament that in most cases they are
born into through no fault of their own.
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