No. 22-4, November 2018
Index
- Corruption and the shadow economy at the regional level
- Do big countries always win a tariff war? A reappraisal
- Does economic crisis have different impact on husbands and wives? Evidence from the Asian Financial Crisis in Indonesia
- Female autonomy and women's welfare: An introduction
- Female labor supply, fertility rebounds, and economic development
- Female leaders and gender gaps within the firm: Evidence from three Sub‐Saharan African countries
- Gone with the wind: Demographic transitions and domestic saving
- Household coping behavior and its contribution to resilience to global macroeconomic shocks in Vanuatu and Solomon Islands
- Impact of improved maize varieties on food security in Eastern Zambia: A doubly robust analysis
- Impact of soil conservation adoption on intra‐household allocations in Zambia
- Impact of trade imbalances on domestic trade policy: Does multilateral trade policy matter?
- Issue Information
- Job quality and poverty in Latin America
- Labor market segmentation and occupational mobility in Algeria: Repeated cross‐sectional and longitudinal analyses (2007 to 2012)
- Market effects of farmer field schools in Sub‐Saharan Africa: The case for cocoa
- Mechanize or exit farming? Multiple‐treatment‐effects model and external validity of adoption impacts of mechanization among Nepalese smallholders
- Microloans, education and growth
- Monetary authority's transparency and income inequality
- Parental absence, remittances and educational investment in children left behind: Evidence from Nepal
- Political role models and child marriage in India
- Psychosocial status and cognitive achievement in Peru
- Social norms and female labor participation in Brazil
- The detrimental effects of luxury goods consumption on socially excluded groups
- The impact of hosting refugees on the intra‐household allocation of tasks: A gender perspective
- The impact of natural disasters on children's education: Comparative evidence from Ethiopia, India, Peru, and Vietnam
- The microeconomic impact of political instability: Firm‐level evidence from Tunisia