Esther Duflo
MIT and CEPR
Esther Duflo is the Abdul Latif Jameel Professor of Poverty Alleviation and Development Economics in the Department of Economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She is a co-founder and director of the Poverty Action Lab, Research Associate at the National Bureau for Economic Research, and on the board of directors of the Bureau for Research and Economic Analysis of Development (BREAD). She is also the co-director of the CEPR Development Economics programme and editor of the American Economic Journal: Applied Economics. She received her undergraduate degree in history and economics from the Ecole Normale Supérieure (Paris) in 1994, a master’s in economics from DELTA (Paris) in 1995, and her Ph.D. in economics from MIT in 1999. She is the recipient of the Bronze Medal from the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (2005), Le Monde’s Cercle des économistes Best Young French Economist Prize (2005), and the Elaine Bennett Prize for Research (2003). Duflo specializes in development economics and the design and evaluation of effective anti-poverty policy. She has studied household behavior, educational choice and returns to education, decentralization, industrial organization in developing countries, and credit constraints.
Articles by Esther Duflo:
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Job placement and displacement: Evidence from a randomised experiment
24 April 2013, 8241 reads
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AIDS prevention: Abstinence vs. risk reduction
20 April 2009, 35043 reads
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Do not rely on bankers
6 March 2009, 14794 reads
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Can political affirmative action reduce gender bias?
8 January 2009, 42500 reads
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Too many bankers?
8 October 2008, 17583 reads
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China’s demographic imbalance: Too many boys
18 August 2008, 45242 reads
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Help for the Burmese people
25 May 2008, 9507 reads
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Food prices: The need for insurance
25 April 2008, 41041 reads
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Does mass media influence voters? Evidence from the US
3 January 2008, 65556 reads
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Anti-immigrant sentiments
4 December 2007, 20951 reads
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