No. 23-2, May 2019
Index
- Addiction to debt forgiveness in developing countries: Consequences and who gets picked?
- Cities, slums, and child nutrition in Bangladesh
- Education stock and its implication for income inequality: The case of Asian economies
- Explaining the effect of financial development on the quality of property rights
- Industrial structure and economic performance: The role of productive public expenditure
- International migration, foreign direct investment, and development stage in developing economies
- Issue Information
- Love conditionally: The ownership structure and bribery behavior of Chinese firms
- Married women's labor supply and economic development: Evidence from Sri Lankan household data
- Microfinance and income inequality: New macrolevel evidence
- Occupational segregation by race in South Africa after apartheid
- Oil booms and inequality in Iran
- Persistence of cities: Evidence from China
- Positive versus negative incentives for loan repayment in microfinance: A game theory approach
- Productivity spillovers through backward linkages: The role of the origin of investors and absorptive capacity of domestic firms
- Redistributive pensions in the developing world
- Religious polarization, religious conflicts and individual financial satisfaction: Evidence from India
- Sri Lankan households a decade after the Indian Ocean tsunami
- The eye of the beholder. Reconsidering the notions of pro‐poor growth and progressivity, with an application to Vietnam
- The health consequences of hazardous and nonhazardous child labor
- Timing and duration of paternal migration and the educational attainment of left‐behind children: Evidence from rural China
- Ukraine's unconsidered losses from the annexation of Crimea: What should we account for in the DCFTA forecasts?
- Untangling gender differentiated food security gaps in Bhutan: An application of exogenous switching treatment regression
- Using paradata to collect better survey data: Evidence from a household survey in Tanzania
- Using sparse categorical principal components to estimate asset indices: new methods with an application to rural southeast asia