Programs that provide lower-skill employment are a popular anti-poverty strategy in developing countries, with India’s employment-guarantee program (MGNREGA) employing adults in 23% of Indian households. MGNREGA has reduced rural poverty, but some have raised concerns that guaranteeing lower-skill employment opportunities may discourage investment in human capital and long-run income growth. Using large-scale administrative data and household survey data, I estimate precise spillover impacts on education that reject substantive declines in children’s education from the government’s rollout of MGNREGA. Further, I estimate that these small negative impacts are in- expensive to counteract, particularly compared to MGNREGA expenditures on rural employment and poverty alleviation.

Working Paper·Sep 20, 2023

Private Actions in the Presence of Externalities: The Health Impacts of Reducing Air Pollution Peaks but not Ambient Exposure

Susanna B. Berkouwer, Joshua Dean
Topics: Development Economics, Energy & Environment, Health care
Working Paper·Nov 16, 2021

Converging to Convergence

Michael Kremer, Jack Willis, Yang You
Topics: Economic Mobility & Poverty
Working Paper·Mar 27, 2020

Building Resilient Health Systems: Experimental Evidence from Sierra Leone and the 2014 Ebola Outbreak

Darin Christensen, Oeindrila Dube, Johannes Haushofer, Bilal Siddiqi, Maarten Voors
Topics: COVID-19, Health care