20/03/2015 16:58 Here is information about the course and references to some papers for those who are eager to start reading early. The lecture and reading list will be completed soon. Master Course: Advanced Development Economics March-April 2015 1. Lectures and readings More detailed reading instructions will be provided during the lectures Preliminary list, very incomplete Wed 2015-03-25 09:00 - 12:00 Lecture 2: Development Challenges AB Chen, S., Ravallion, M. (2012), More Relatively-Poor People in a Less Absolutely-Poor World, Policy Research Working Paper no 6114, World Bank, Washington D.C. Corden C.M., Findlay R., (1975), "Urban Unemployment, Intersectoral Capital Mobility and Development Policy", Economica 42: 56-78. Johnson, S, Ostry, J.D., Subramanian,A. (2010). "Prospects for Sustained Growth in Africa: Benchmarking the Constraints," IMF Staff Papers, 57(1), pages 119-171, April. Thu 2015-03-26 13:00 - 16:00 Lecture 2: Economic Growth and Polices for Growth DD Bloom. David and Jeffrey Williamson (1998) “Demographic Transitions and Economic Miracles in Emerging Asia”. CAER Discussion Paper No. 40 and World Bank Economic Review, 12 (3), 419-455. Quamrul Ashraf, David Weil and Joshua Wilde (2012) "The Effect of Fertility Reduction on Economic Growth," Population and Development Review 39(1) : 97–130 (March, 2013) ((October 2012 Version -- contains material on age-specific saving rates and the effect of land in the production function that is cut out of the published version) Possibly plus one more paper 20/03/2015 16:58 Fri 2015-03-27 13:00 - 16:00 Lecture 3: Economic Growth and Polices for Growth DD Growth constraints Hausmann, Ricardo Klinger, Bailey Wagner, Rodrigo (2008) Doing Growth Diagnostics in Practice: A ‘Mindbook’ CID Working Paper No. 177 September 2008 Or Lea, Nicholas and Lucia Hanmer “Constraints to Growth in Malawi” The World Bank, Africa Region Southern Africa Poverty Reduction and Economic Management Unit October 2009, WPS5097. Structural adjustment and Washington Consensus Williamson, J. (2009) Short History of the Washington Consensus, Law & Bus. Rev. Am. 15(7). Rodrik, Dani (2006) “Goodbye Washington Consensus, Hello Washington Confusion? A Review of the World Bank's Economic Growth in the 1990s: Learning from a Decade of Reform” Journal of Economic Literature, Volume 44, Number 4. Birdsall, Nancy, Augusto De la Torre, and Felipe Valencia Caicedo (2010) “The Washington Consensus: Assessing a Damaged Brand” Center for Global Development Working Paper No. 213 ……… Wed 2015-04-15 13:00 - 16:00 Lecture 10: Education, web-based lecture Web-based lecture by Anne Case. The slides will be available on the course homepage. Note that we are only allowed to show this lecture in the lecture hall DD 20/03/2015 16:58 (voluntary reading) Robert E. Lucas, Jr (2004) The Industrial Revolution: Past and Future 2003 Annual Report Essay, Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis http://www.minneapolisfed.org/publications_papers/pub_display.cfm?id=3333 Esther Duflo, (2001) Schooling and Labor Market Consequences of School Construction in Indonesia: Evidence from an Unusual Policy Experiment, American Economic Review, Vol. 91No. 4 Case Anne and Angus Deaton (1999) “School Inputs and Educational Outcomes in South Africa” The Quarterly Journal of Economics 114 (3): 1047-1084 Plus Hanushek, Eric A. (2013) “Economic growth in developing countries: The role of human capital” Economics of Education Review 37:204–212 Sam Jones, Youdi Schipper, Sara Ruto, and Rakesh Rajani Can Your Child Read and Count? Measuring Learning Outcomes in East Africa J Afr Econ (2014) 23 (5): 643-672 Fri 2015-04-17 09:00 - 12:00 Lecture 12: Randomized Control Trials (RCTs), the effectiveness of foreign aid and use of instrumental variables Web-based lecture by Angus Deaton. The lecture is on RCTs, foreign aid effectiveness and challenges in the use of instrumental variables. Deaton is quite critical of RCTs and instrumental variables (compared to many other economists), but gives a good overview of their strengths and limitations. The slides are available on the course homepage. Mon 2015-04-20 09:00 - 12:00 Seminar 1: Student presentations DD Mon 2015-04-20 13:00 - 16:00 Seminar 2: Student presentations DD 20/03/2015 16:58 Thu 2015-04-23 13:00 - 16:00 Lecture 14: Health and Human Capital DD 2. Computer lab assignment You are required to do a computer lab assignment, in groups of two (or three). It is compulsory to hand in and pass the lab assignment. An assignment that doesn’t receive Pass needs to be revised. Assignments with Pass can receive between 0 and 4 points. This means that you can get 4 additional points on the exam by doing the assignments in time. You can get a maximum of 60 points on the exam. We will give you a deadline for the assignment and deduct one point for each day you are late. If the lab assignment needs to be revised you will not get any points. 3. Presentation and note Each student should read at least one paper carefully, chosen from the list provided below or in collaboration with the lecturers. It should be presented at the seminar and summarized in a note. It is compulsory to attend both seminars. The seminar presentation and the note should contain the following, if applicable: the purpose of the study and why is it of interest (according to the authors); the exact research question(s); a brief description of previous research on the topic; a description method (explain the method in a way that fellow students understand), data, results and conclusions; an evaluation of the quality of the study and (possible) weaknesses. In the note you should include two key questions to the authors (as if they were presenting the study and you were part of the audience). Another difference between the presentation and the note is that the method should be explained in detail in the note. You can do the presentation and the note individually or in groups of two people (but not three). Each presentation will be allocated about 30 minutes (depending on the number of students presenting). Prepare to talk for 15 to 20 minutes; the rest of the time will be used for questions and answers. You probably need to use slides, but beware that there a limit on how many you can show during the presentation. Test your talk at home to make sure you can make it within the time limit. The note should be submitted via Urkund. The address is [email protected] 20/03/2015 16:58 The note should consist of about three pages, excluding references, line spacing 1.5, font size 12. Write the note as if you were writing a report, using headings and proper references. The note will be graded Pass or Fail. The grade Pass is required to pass the course. Students who fail to present a paper must write an essay. It should contain at least 1 750 words and have the same structure as the note but be more detailed. In particular, the section on previous research should be expanded beyond the one in the paper that the essay is based upon; in other words, you need to look for additional references. Suggested papers for presentations and note (TO BE UPDATED) Here is a list of relatively accessible papers. You may choose a paper that is not on the list, but it should be a research paper published or publishable in an economic journal, not a survey or discussion paper. Aid Nunn, Nathan, and Nancy Qian. 2014. "US Food Aid and Civil Conflict." American Economic Review, 104(6): 1630-66. Gender Ashraf, N. (2009). "Spousal Control and Intra-household Decision Making: An Experimental Study In The Philippines." American Economic Review 99(4): 1245-1277. Ashraf, Nava, Erica Field, And Jean Lee. "Household Bargaining And Excess Fertility: An Experimental Study In Zambia." American Economic Review 104, No. 7 (July 2014). Institutions Daron Acemoglu, Tristan Reed, James A. Robinson. 2013. “Chiefs - Economic Developement And Elite Control Of Civil Soceity In Sierra Leone,” Journal Of Political Economy The Colonial Origins Of Comparative Development: An Empirical Investigation: Comment. (Sole-Authored) American Economic Review, 102(6), October 2012, Pp. 3059-3076. . Corruption Olken, B. A. (2006). "Corruption and the costs of redistribution: Micro evidence from Indonesia." Journal of Public Economics 90(4–5): 853-870. Olken, B. A. (2009). "Corruption perceptions vs. corruption reality." Journal of Public Economics 93(7–8): 950-964. 20/03/2015 16:58 RCTs Martina Björkman-Nyqvist, Jakob Svensson, David Yanagizawa-Drott. 2013. The Market for (Fake) Antimalarial Medicine: Evidence from Uganda” Mimeograph Religion David Clingingsmith, Asim Ijaz Khwaja, Michael Kremer. 2009. “Estimating The Impact Of The Hajj: Religion And Tolerance In Islam’s Global Gathering,” The Quarterly Journal Of Economics. Sonia Bhalotraa, Irma Clots-Figueras, Guilhem Cassanc, Lakshmi Iyer. 2014. “Religion, Politician Identity And Development Outcomes:Evidence From India”, Journal Of Economic Behavior And Organization. History Diego Puga And Daniel Trefler. 2014. 'International Trade And Institutional Change: Medieval Venice's Response To Globalization', Quarterly Journal Of Economics 129(2), May 2014: 753-821 Conflict Bernd Beber And Christopher Blattman. 2013. “The Logic Of Child Soldiering And Coercion”, International Organization, 67: 65-104 Christopher Blattman And Jeannie Annan. 2010. “The Consequences Of Child Soldiering,” The Review Of Economics And Statistics, 92(4): 882–898 Political targeting Hsieh, C.-T., E. Miguel, D. Ortega and F. Rodriguez (2011). "The Price of Political Opposition: Evidence from Venezuela's Maisanta." American Economic Journal: Applied Economics 3(2): 196-214. Manacorda, M., E. Miguel and A. Vigorito (2011). "Government Transfers and Political Support." American Economic Journal: Applied Economics 3(3): 1-28. Inequality and poverty Ravallion, Martin. 2012. "Why Don't We See Poverty Convergence?" American Economic Review, 102(1): 504-23. Milanovic, B. (2011), “A short history of global inequality: The past two centuries”, Explorations in Economic History 48: 494-506. Education Robert Jensen: “The (Perceived) Returns to Education and the Demand for Schooling” (2010). Quarterly Journal of Economics, 125 (2) May 2010: 515-548. 20/03/2015 16:58 Duflo, Esther, Pascaline Dupas, and Michael Kremer “Peer Effects, Teacher Incentives, and the Impact of Tracking: Evidence from a Randomized Evaluation in Kenya” (2011). American Economic Review, No. 101 (August 2011): 1739–1774. Or a longer but somewhat more explicit version “Peer Effects, Pupil-Teacher Ratios, and Teacher Incentives: Evidence from a Randomized Evaluation in Kenya” (2007). Working paper version of the AER paper above. Health and HIV/AIDS Papageorgiou, C. and P Stoytcheva (2008) ``What Do We Know about the Impact of AIDS on Cross-Country Income So Far?'', unpublished draft Asiedu, Christobel, Asiedu, Elizabeth Owusu, Francis (2012) The Socio-Economic Determinants of HIV/AIDS Infection Rates in Lesotho, Malawi, Swaziland and Zimbabwe” Development Policy Review, 30 3 305- 326 Marcella M. Alsan and David M. Cutler (2013) Girls Education and HIV Risk: Evidence from Uganda, Journal of Health Economics, 32:863-72 Alderman et al. (2006), “Long term consequences of early childhood malnutrition” Oxford Economic Papers, vol. 58, 450-474 Durevall, D. and A. Lindskog ”HIV and Inequality: (2012) The Case of Malawi” World Development, Vol. 40, No. 7. Child labor Kambhampati, U.S. and R. Rajan (2006) “Economic growth: a panacea for child labour?” World Development 34(3): 426.445. Micro credits and finance Cull, Robert, Asli Demirguc-Kunt & Jonathan Morduch (2009). ”Microfinance meets the market,” Journal of Economic Perspectives 23(1), 167-192 Beck, Thorsten, Asli Demirguc-Kunt, and Patrick Honohan (2009). “Access to Financial Services: Measurement, Impact, and Policies,” World Bank Research Observer 24(1), 119-145. Labour and migration Ardington, C, A. Case and V. Hosegood, ”Labor supply responses to large social transfers: Longitudinal evidence from South Africa”, American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, vol. 1, iss. 1, pp. 22-48 (2009) 20/03/2015 16:58 Property Rights and Household Behaviour Field, E. (2005) “Property rights and investment in urban slums”, Journal of the European Economic Association, 3(2-3), pp. 279-290. Agricultural Development Bandeira P. and J. M. Sumpsi, 2009, “Access to Land, Rural Development and Public Action: The When and the How" Development Policy Review. 27 (1): 33-49. Duflo E., M. Kremer and J. Robinson, 2010, “Why don’t farmers use fertilizers: Evidence from field experiments in western Kenya”, Working paper Sources and causes of productivity differences Van Biesebroeck, J. “Firm Size Matters: Growth and Productivity Growth in African Manufacturing” Economic Development and Cultural Change, 2005, 53 (3). Söderbom, M. and F. Teal “Size and Efficiency in African Manufacturing Firms Evidence from Firm-Level Panel Data” Journal of Development Economics, 2004, 73, pp. 369-394. Some good books Banerjee and Duflo, Poor Economics 2011 Acemoglu and Robinson, Why Nations Fail 2012 Deaton, Angus, The Great Escape 2013 Floud, Fogel, Harris, and Hong (2011): The Changing Body: Health, Nutrition, and Human Development in the Western World since 1700 Cambridge Univ. Press. Collier, Paul, The Bottom Billion 2007 David Landes (1999), The Wealth and Poverty of Nations: Why Some are So Rich and Some So Poor, New York: Norton Mokyr, Joel, The Lever of Riches (1992) and The Gifts of Athena (2004) Diamond, Jared, Guns, Germs, and Steel (1998) Easterlin, Richard, Growth Triumphant: The Twenty First Century in Historical Perspective University of Michigan Press, 1996. 20/03/2015 16:58 Livi‐Bacci, Massimo, A Concise History of World Population
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