1.
Angrist, Joshua David & Pischke, Jörn-Steffen. Mostly harmless econometrics: an empiricist’s companion. (Princeton University Press, 2009).
2.
Bardhan, Pranab K. & Udry, Christopher. Development microeconomics. (Oxford University Press, 1999).
3.
Bardhan, Pranab K. & Udry, Christopher. Readings in Development Economics, Volume 1: Micro-Theory. (MIT Press, 2000).
4.
Bardhan, Pranab K. & Udry, Christopher. Readings in Development Economics, Volume 2: Empirical Microeconomics, Cambridge: MIT Press. (MIT Press, 2000).
5.
Barro, Robert J. & Sala-i-Martin, Xavier. Economic growth. vol. McGraw-Hill advanced series in economics (McGraw-Hill, 1995).
6.
Basu, Kaushik & Basu, Kaushik. Analytical development economics: the less developed economy revisited. (MIT, 1997).
7.
Dasgupta, Partha. An inquiry into well-being and destitution. (Clarendon Press, 1993).
8.
Deaton, Angus. The analysis of household surveys: a microeconometric approach to development policy. (Published for the World Bank [by] Johns Hopkins University Press, 1997).
9.
Ray, Debraj. Development economics. (Princeton University Press, 1998).
10.
Johnston, J. & DiNardo, John E. Econometric methods. (McGraw-Hill, 1997).
11.
Wooldridge, Jeffrey M. Econometric analysis of cross section and panel data. (MIT Press, 2002).
12.
Wooldridge, Jeffrey M. Introductory econometrics: a modern approach. (South-Western College Pub, 2003).
13.
Greene, William H. Econometric analysis. (Prentice Hall International, 2003).
14.
Joshua D. Angrist and Alan B. Krueger. Instrumental Variables and the Search for Identification: From Supply and Demand to Natural Experiments. The Journal of Economic Perspectives 15, 69–85 (2001).
15.
Marianne Bertrand, Esther Duflo and Sendhil Mullainathan. How Much Should We Trust Differences-in-Differences Estimates? The Quarterly Journal of Economics 119, 249–275 (2004).
16.
Blundell R. & Costa Dias, M. Evaluation methods for non-experimental data. Fiscal Studies 21, 427–468 (2000).
17.
Angus Deaton. Instruments, Randomization, and Learning about Development. Journal of Economic Literature 48, 424–455 (2010).
18.
Duflo, E., Glennerster, R. & Kremer, M. Chapter 61:Using Randomization in Development Economics Research: A Toolkit. in Handbook of development econmics vol. 4 3895–3962 (Elsevier, 2007).
19.
Imbens.G.W and J.Wooldridge. Recent Developments in the Econometrics of Program Evaluation. IZA Discussion Paper No. 3640. IZA Discussion Paper No. 3640 (2009).
20.
Mark R. Rosenzweig and Kenneth I. Wolpin. Natural ‘Natural Experiments’ in Economics. Journal of Economic Literature 38, 827–874 (2000).
21.
Wooldridge, Jeffrey M. Econometric analysis of cross section and panel data. (MIT Press, 2002).
22.
Abhijit V. Banerjee and Esther Duflo. The Economic Lives of the Poor. The Journal of Economic Perspectives 21, 141–168 (2007).
23.
Abhijit V. Banerjee and Esther Duflo. What Is Middle Class about the Middle Classes around the World? The Journal of Economic Perspectives 22, 3–28 (2008).
24.
Robert J. Barro. Notes on Growth Accounting. Journal of Economic Growth 4, 119–137 (1999).
25.
Timothy Besley and Robin Burgess. Halving Global Poverty. The Journal of Economic Perspectives 17, 3–22 (2003).
26.
Hoyt Bleakley. Disease and Development: Evidence from Hookworm Eradication in the American South. The Quarterly Journal of Economics 122, 73–117 (2007).
27.
Deaton, A. Income, aging, health and welbeing around the world: evidence from the gallup world poll. National Bureau of Economic Research (2007).
28.
Deaton, A. Price Indexes, Inequality, and the Measurement of World Poverty. American Economic Review 100, 5–34 (2010).
29.
Deaton, A. S., Friedman, J. A. & Alatas, V. Purchasing Power Parity Exchange Rates from Household Survey Data: India and Indonesia,. (2004).
30.
David Dollar and Aart Kraay. Growth Is Good for the Poor. Journal of Economic Growth 7, 195–225 (2002).
31.
*Helliwell.J.F. How’s Life? Combining Individual and National Variables to Explain Subjective Well-Being. NBER Working Paper No 9065 (2002).
32.
Robert E. Lucas, Jr. Making a Miracle. Econometrica 61, 251–272 (1993).
33.
Sala-i-Martin, Xavier ; Pinkovskiy, Maxim. African Poverty is Falling...Much Faster than You Think! (2010).
34.
Sen.A. The Concept of Development”, Chapter 2 in H.Chenery and T.N. Srinivasan, (eds), Handbook of Development Economics Volume I, Amsterdam: North- Holland. in Handbook of Development Economics vol. 1 9–26 (1986).
35.
Aghion, Philippe, Brant-Collett, Maxine, García-Peñalosa, Cecilia, & Howitt, Peter. Endogenous growth theory. (The MIT Press, 1998).
36.
Aghion, P., Howitt, P. H., , 2005 & Foulkes, D. M. The Effect of Financial Development on Convergence: Theory and Evidence. Quarterly Journal of Economics 120, (2005).
37.
Banerjee.A and E.Duflo. Growth Theory Through the Lens of Development Economics. MIT Department of Economics Working Paper No. 05-01 (2004).
38.
Mark Bils and Peter J. Klenow. Does Schooling Cause Growth? The American Economic Review 90, 1160–1183 (2000).
39.
Hsieh, C.-T. & Klenow, P. J. Misallocation and Manufacturing TFP in China and India. Quarterly Journal of Economics 124, 1403–1448 (2009).
40.
Nazrul Islam. Growth Empirics: A Panel Data Approach. The Quarterly Journal of Economics 110, 1127–1170 (1995).
41.
Charles I. Jones. R & D-Based Models of Economic Growth. Journal of Political Economy 103, 759–784 (1995).
42.
Ross Levine and David Renelt. A Sensitivity Analysis of Cross-Country Growth Regressions. The American Economic Review 82, 942–963 (1992).
43.
N. Gregory Mankiw, David Romer and David N. Weil. A Contribution to the Empirics of Economic Growth. The Quarterly Journal of Economics 107, 407–437 (1992).
44.
Romer, David. Advanced macroeconomics. vol. McGraw-Hill advanced series in economics (McGraw-Hill Companies, 1996).
45.
Alwyn Young. The Tyranny of Numbers: Confronting the Statistical Realities of the East Asian Growth Experience. The Quarterly Journal of Economics 110, 641–680 (1995).
46.
Almond, D. Is the 1918 Influenza Pandemic Over? Long‐Term Effects of                              Influenza Exposure in the Post‐1940 U.S. Population. Journal of Political Economy 114, 672–712 (2006).
47.
Banerjee, Abhijit. LONG-RUN HEALTH IMPACTS OF INCOME SHOCKS: WINE AND PHYLLOXERA IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY FRANCE. LONG-RUN HEALTH IMPACTS OF INCOME SHOCKS: WINE AND PHYLLOXERA IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY FRANCE. 92, (2010).
48.
Anne Case, Darren Lubotsky and Christina Paxson. Economic Status and Health in Childhood: The Origins of the Gradient. The American Economic Review 92, 1308–1334 (2002).
49.
Partha Dasgupta and Debraj Ray. Inequality as a Determinant of Malnutrition and Unemployment: Theory. The Economic Journal 96, 1011–1034 (1986).
50.
Abhijit Banerjee, Angus Deaton and Esther Duflo. Wealth, Health, and Health Services in Rural Rajasthan. The American Economic Review 94, 3–330 (2004).
51.
Edward Miguel and Michael Kremer. Worms: Identifying Impacts on Education and Health in the Presence of Treatment Externalities. Econometrica 72, 159–217 (2004).
52.
Miller, G. & Urdinola, B. P. Cyclicality, Mortality, and the Value of Time: The Case of Coffee Price Fluctuations and Child Survival in Colombia. Journal of Political Economy 118, 113–155 (2010).
53.
John Strauss and Duncan Thomas. Health, Nutrition, and Economic Development. Journal of Economic Literature 36, 766–817 (1998).
54.
Strauss, J. & Thomas, D. Chapter 34 Human resources: Empirical modeling of household and family decisions. in Handbook of Development Economics vol. 3 1883–2023 (Elsevier, 1995).
55.
T. N. Srinivasan. Destitution: A Discourse. Journal of Economic Literature 32, 1842–1855 (1994).
56.
Shankar Subramanian and Angus Deaton. The Demand for Food and Calories. Journal of Political Economy 104, 133–162 (1996).
57.
David N. Weil. Accounting for the Effect of Health on Economic Growth. The Quarterly Journal of Economics 122, 1265–1306 (2007).
58.
Acemoglu, D. & Johnson, S. Disease and Development: The Effect of Life Expectancy on Economic Growth. Journal of Political Economy 115, 925–985 (2007).
59.
Almond, D., Chay, K. & Greenstone, M. Civil Rights, the war on poverty, and black-white convergence in infant mortality in the rural south and Mississippi. MIT Economics Working Paper No. 07–04. (2006).
60.
Anderson, S. & Ray, D. Missing Women: Age and Disease. Review of Economic Studies 77, 1262–1300 (2010).
61.
Björkman, M. & Svensson, J. Power to the People: Evidence from a Randomized Field Experiment on Community-Based Monitoring in Uganda. Quarterly Journal of Economics 124, 735–769 (2009).
62.
Bleakley, Hoyt. DISEASE AND DEVELOPMENT: EVIDENCE FROM HOOKWORM ERADICATION IN THE AMERICAN SOUTH. DISEASE AND DEVELOPMENT: EVIDENCE FROM HOOKWORM ERADICATION IN THE AMERICAN SOUTH. 122, (2007).
63.
Cohen, J. & Dupas, P. Free Distribution or Cost-Sharing? Evidence from a Randomized Malaria Prevention Experiment. Quarterly Journal of Economics 125, 1–45 (2010).
64.
Field, E. & Ambrus, A. Early Marriage, Age of Menarche, and Female Schooling Attainment in Bangladesh. Journal of Political Economy 116, 881–930 (2008).
65.
Galiani, S., Gertler, P. & Schargrodsky, E. Water for Life: The Impact of the Privatization of Water Services on Child Mortality. Journal of Political Economy 113, 83–120 (2005).
66.
ayachandran, S. & Kuziemko, I. Why Do Mothers Breastfeed Girls Less than Boys? Evidence and Implications for Child Health in India*. Quarterly Journal of Economics 126, 1485–1538 (2011).
67.
Alwyn Young. The Gift of the Dying: The Tragedy of Aids and the Welfare of Future African Generations. The Quarterly Journal of Economics 120, 423–466 (2005).
68.
Joshua D. Angrist and Victor Lavy. Using Maimonides’ Rule to Estimate the Effect of Class Size on Scholastic Achievement. The Quarterly Journal of Economics 114, 533–575 (1999).
69.
Abhijit Banerjee and Esther Duflo. Addressing Absence. The Journal of Economic Perspectives 20, 117–132 (2006).
70.
Abhijit V. Banerjee, Shawn Cole, Esther Duflo and Leigh Linden. Remedying Education: Evidence from Two Randomized Experiments in India. The Quarterly Journal of Economics 122, 1235–1264 (2007).
71.
Roland Bénabou and Jean Tirole. Intrinsic and Extrinsic Motivation. The Review of Economic Studies 70, 489–520 (2003).
72.
Anne Case and Angus Deaton. School Inputs and Educational Outcomes in South Africa. The Quarterly Journal of Economics 114, 1047–1084 (1999).
73.
Esther Duflo. Schooling and Labor Market Consequences of School Construction in Indonesia: Evidence from an Unusual Policy Experiment. The American Economic Review 91, 795–813 (2001).
74.
Michael Kremer. Randomized Evaluations of Educational Programs in Developing Countries: Some Lessons. The American Economic Review 93, 3–106 (2003).
75.
Alan B. Krueger and Mikael Lindahl. Education for Growth: Why and For Whom? Journal of Economic Literature 39, 1101–1136 (2001).
76.
Muralidharan, K. & Sundararaman, V. Teacher Incentives in Developing Countries: Experimental Evidence from India. Mimeo Harvard Universit. (2007).
77.
Paul Schultz, T. School subsidies for the poor: evaluating the Mexican Progresa poverty program. Journal of Development Economics 74, 199–250 (2004).
78.
Duncan Thomas, John Strauss and Maria-Helena Henriques. How Does Mother’s Education Affect Child Height? The Journal of Human Resources 26, 183–211 (1991).
79.
Manuela Angelucci and Giacomo De Giorgi. Indirect Effects of an Aid Program: How Do Cash Transfers Affect Ineligibles’ Consumption? The American Economic Review 99, 486–508 (2009).
80.
Angelucci et al., M. Family networks and school enrolment: Evidence from a randomized social experiment. Journal of Public Economics 94, 197–221 (2010).
81.
Bandiera, O. & Rasul, I. Social Networks and Technology Adoption in Northern Mozambique. The Economic Journal 116, 869–902 (2006).
82.
Abhijit V. Banerjee. A Simple Model of Herd Behavior. The Quarterly Journal of Economics 107, 797–817 (1992).
83.
Timothy G. Conley and Christopher R. Udry. Learning about a New Technology: Pineapple in Ghana. The American Economic Review 100, 35–69 (2010).
84.
Cox, D. & Fafchamps, M. Chapter 58 Extended Family and Kinship Networks: Economic Insights and Evolutionary Directions. in "Extended Family and Kinship Networks: Economic Insights and Evolutionary Directions vol. 4 3711–3784 (Elsevier, 2007).
85.
Dercon, S. & Krishnan, P. In Sickness and in Health: Risk Sharing within Households in Rural Ethiopia. Journal of Political Economy 108, 688–727 (2000).
86.
Pierre Dubois, Bruno Jullien and Thierry Magnac. Formal and Informal Risk Sharing in LDCs: Theory and Empirical Evidence. Econometrica 76, 679–725 (2008).
87.
Glenn Ellison and Drew Fudenberg. Rules of Thumb for Social Learning. Journal of Political Economy 101, 612–643 (1993).
88.
Andrew D. Foster and Mark R. Rosenzweig. Learning by Doing and Learning from Others: Human Capital and Technical Change in Agriculture. Journal of Political Economy 103, 1176–1209 (1995).
89.
Eliana La Ferrara. Kin Groups and Reciprocity: A Model of Credit Transactions in Ghana. The American Economic Review 93, 1730–1751 (2003).
90.
Kaivan Munshi. Networks in the Modern Economy: Mexican Migrants in the U. S. Labor Market. The Quarterly Journal of Economics 118, 549–599 (2003).
91.
Christopher Udry. Risk and Insurance in a Rural Credit Market: An Empirical Investigation in Northern Nigeria. The Review of Economic Studies 61, 495–526 (1994).
92.
Timothy Besley. Property Rights and Investment Incentives: Theory and Evidence from Ghana. Journal of Political Economy 103, 903–937 (1995).
93.
Timothy Besley. Property Rights and Investment Incentives: Theory and Evidence from Ghana. Journal of Political Economy 103, 903–937 (1995).
94.
Besley, T. & Ghatak, M. Property Rights and Economic Development, mimeo LSE. (2009).
95.
Soto, Hernando de. The mystery of capital: why capitalism triumphs in the West and fails everywhere else. (BasicBooks, 2000).
96.
Di Tella, R., Galiant, S. & Schargrodsky, E. The Formation of Beliefs: Evidence from the Allocation of Land Titles to Squatters. The Quarterly Journal of Economics 122, 209–241 (2007).
97.
Djankov, S., Glaeser, E., La Porta, R., Lopez-de-Silanes, F. & Shleifer, A. The new comparative economics. Journal of Comparative Economics 31, 595–619 (2003).
98.
Erica Field. Entitled to Work: Urban Property Rights and Labor Supply in Peru. The Quarterly Journal of Economics 122, 1561–1602 (2007).
99.
Field, E. & Torero, M. Do Property Titles Increase Credit Access Among the Urban Poor? Evidence from a Nationwide Titling Program†. (Harvard University).
100.
Hornbeck, Richard. Barbed wire: property rights and agricultural development. Barbed wire: property rights and agricultural development 125, (2010).
101.
Simon Johnson, John McMillan and Christopher Woodruff. Property Rights and Finance. The American Economic Review 92, 1335–1356 (2002).
102.
Ackerberg, D. A. & Botticini, M. Endogenous Matching and the Empirical Determinants of Contract Form”,. (2002).
103.
Banerjee, A. V., Gertler, P. J. & Ghatak, M. Empowerment and Efficiency: Tenancy Reform in West Bengal. Journal of Political Economy 110, 239–280 (2002).
104.
Conning, J. H. & Robinson, J. A. Property rights and the political organization of agriculture. Journal of Development Economics 82, 416–447 (2007).
105.
Mukesh Eswaran and Ashok Kotwal. A Theory of Contractual Structure in Agriculture. The American Economic Review 75, 352–367 (1985).
106.
Hanan G. Jacoby, Rinku Murgai and Saeed Ur Rehman. Monopoly Power and Distribution in Fragmented Markets: The Case of Groundwater. The Review of Economic Studies 71, 783–808 (2004).
107.
Justin Yifu Lin. Rural Reforms and Agricultural Growth in China. The American Economic Review 82, 34–51 (1992).
108.
Radwan Ali Shaban. Testing between Competing Models of Sharecropping. Journal of Political Economy 95, 893–920 (1987).
109.
Joseph E. Stiglitz. Incentives and Risk Sharing in Sharecropping. The Review of Economic Studies 41, 219–255 (1974).
110.
Udry.C.R and M. Goldstein. The Profits of Power: Land Rights and Agricultural Investment in Ghana. Journal of Political Economy (2008).
111.
Banerjee.A. Contracting Constraints, Credit Markets, and Economic Development. Advances in Economics and Econometrics: Theory and Applications.
112.
Banerjee, A. & Munshi, K. How Efficiently is Capital Allocated? Evidence from the Knitted Garment Industry in Tirupur. Review of Economic Studies 71, 19–42 (2004).
113.
Robin Burgess and Rohini Pande. Do Rural Banks Matter? Evidence from the Indian Social Banking Experiment. The American Economic Review 95, 780–795 (2005).
114.
Paul Gertler and Jonathan Gruber. Insuring Consumption against Illness. The American Economic Review 92, 51–70 (2002).
115.
Karlan, D. S. & Zinman, J. Credit Elasticities in Less-Developed Economies: Implications for Microfinance. American Economic Review 98, 1040–1068 (2008).
116.
Eliana La Ferrara. Kin Groups and Reciprocity: A Model of Credit Transactions in Ghana. The American Economic Review 93, 1730–1751 (2003).
117.
Jonathan Morduch. The Microfinance Promise. Journal of Economic Literature 37, 1569–1614 (1999).
118.
Christina H. Paxson. Using Weather Variability to Estimate the Response of Savings to Transitory Income in Thailand. The American Economic Review 82, 15–33 (1992).
119.
Pitt, M. M. & Khandker, S. R. The Impact of Group-Based Credit Programs on Poor Households in Bangladesh: Does the Gender of Participants Matter? Journal of Political Economy 106, (1998).
120.
Joseph E. Stiglitz and Andrew Weiss. Credit Rationing in Markets with Imperfect Information. The American Economic Review 71, 393–410 (1981).
121.
Robert M. Townsend. Risk and Insurance in Village India. Econometrica 62, 539–591 (1994).
122.
Christopher Udry. Risk and Insurance in a Rural Credit Market: An Empirical Investigation in Northern Nigeria. The Review of Economic Studies 61, 495–526 (1994).
123.
Timothy Besley and Torsten Persson. The Origins of State Capacity: Property Rights, Taxation, and Politics. The American Economic Review 99, 1218–1244 (2009).
124.
Robin Burgess and Nicholas Stern. Taxation and Development. Journal of Economic Literature 31, 762–830 (1993).
125.
Fisman, R. & Miguel, E. Corruption, Norms, and Legal Enforcement: Evidence from Diplomatic Parking Tickets. Journal of Political Economy 115, 1020–1048 (2007).
126.
Gordon, R. & Li, W. Tax structures in developing countries: Many puzzles and a possible explanation. Journal of Public Economics 93, 855–866 (2009).
127.
Andrea Ichino and Giovanni Maggi. Work Environment and Individual Background: Explaining Regional Shirking Differentials in a Large Italian Firm. The Quarterly Journal of Economics 115, 1057–1090 (2000).
128.
Jones, B. F. & Olken, B. A. Do Leaders Matter? National Leadership and Growth Since World War II. The Quarterly Journal of Economics 120, 835–864 (2005).
129.
Stephen Knack and Philip Keefer. Does Social Capital Have an Economic Payoff? A Cross-Country Investigation. The Quarterly Journal of Economics 112, 1251–1288 (1997).
130.
Kuziemko, I. & Werker, E. How Much Is a Seat on the Security Council Worth? Foreign Aid and Bribery at the United Nations. Journal of Political Economy 114, 905–930 (2006).
131.
J. A. Mirrlees. An Exploration in the Theory of Optimum Income Taxation. The Review of Economic Studies 38, 175–208 (1971).
132.
North, Douglass Cecil. Institutions, institutional change, and economic performance. vol. The Political economy of institutions and decisions (Cambridge University Press, 1990).
133.
Olken, B. A. Monitoring Corruption: Evidence from a Field Experiment in Indonesia. Journal of Political Economy 115, 200–249 (2007).
134.
Olken, B. A. & Singhal, M. Informal Taxation. American Economic Journal: Applied Economics 3, 1–28 (2011).
135.
Thomas Piketty and Nancy Qian. Income Inequality and Progressive Income Taxation in China and India, 1986–2015. American Economic Journal: Applied Economics 1, 53–63 (2009).
136.
Jakob Svensson. Eight Questions about Corruption. The Journal of Economic Perspectives 19, 19–42 (2005).