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This week in development economics at VoxDev: 06/12/2024

VoxDev Blog

Published 06.12.24

This week we featured research on cash transfers, anti-migrant sentiment, teacher reform & more...

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We released two fascinating podcasts this week. In Tuesday's episode of VoxDevTalks, Ugo Gentilini discussed his new book on the history of cash transfers. On Thursday, Tim Phillips spoke to Marianne Bertrand and Stefano Caria about the huge potential of signalling interventions

In agriculture, mobile-based extension programmes hold significant promise for disseminating information about modern inputs and management practices to millions of smallholder farmers who would otherwise be difficult to reach through in-person visits. In today's article, Raissa Fabregas and Michael Kremer evaluate six different text-message-based agricultural extension programmes that collectively reached over 128,000 farmers in Kenya and Rwanda.

Teacher quality is widely recognised as a key determinant of student learning. The methods by which teachers are recruited, selected, and retained are of significant interest to policymakers seeking to improve student outcomes. On Tuesday, Matias Busso, Sebastian Montano, Juan Muñoz-Morales and Nolan Pope outline how student outcomes suffered as a result of a merit-based teacher hiring reform

Despite its potential, most individuals never manage to successfully obtain online work, particularly in developing countries. A key question is whether people already have the technical skills needed to compete on online platforms, but need help learning how to get onto such platforms and get contracts, or whether they also need more extensive training on technical skills. Maria Victoria Fazio, Richard Freund and Rafael Novella explore this question in the context of El Salvador. 

Understanding how host societies perceive and respond to large influxes of migrants is crucial for fostering social cohesion and guiding effective integration policies. On Wednesday, Jeremy Lebow, Jonathan Moreno-Medina, Salma Mousa and Horacio Coral outlined why anti-migrant sentiment in Latin America may be a national-level phenomenon, driven by national narratives rather than based on local experiences with migrants.

An unresolved policy question is whether support in the form of grants should be flexible (“cash grant”) and its exact use left to the discretion of the beneficiary or whether it should be earmarked and accompanied by strict procurement rules and possibly an own contribution (“matching grant”). In Monday's article, Michael Grimm, Sidiki Soubeiga and Michael Weber outline their research on whether cash grants or earmarked grants are better for supporting firms in Burkina Faso.

Malnutrition has been well-established as a cause of long-term physiological harm and has been strongly associated with impaired cognitive development, lower academic achievement, and behavioural issues in children. Yesterday, Mehreen Mookerjee, Manini Ojha and Sanket Roy outline evidence from India showing contraception plays a vital role in reducing child malnutrition, potentially by enabling parents to invest more resources in each child.

Make sure to check out ReCIPE's new website (CEPR's new research programme on Reducing Conflict and Improving Performance in the Economic), with details on their first annual conference in February.

Elsewhere, there was lots of interesting reading:

Two great podcasts:

Plus the following announcements:

We will be back on Monday with a full week of content on sustainable urbanisation, menstrual stigma and more!