Welcome back to the world of econometrics debates! I hope you enjoyed the first installment. Round 2 pits Heckman and Urzúa against Imbens, and is about instrumental variables and estimates the local average treatment effect (LATE).
First, a little bit of background about instrumental variables...
Read More
A new video on global health features BRAC USA CEO Susan Davis and Partners in Health founder Paul Farmer. BRAC has been a pioneer in taking a holistic approach to reducing poverty, and their healthcare programs reach more than 92 million people in Asia and Africa. Farmer recently spoke as part of NYU’s “Social Entrepreneurship in the 21st Century” speaker series about his success with Partners In Health in providing healthcare services for the poor in Latin America, Africa and Russia...
Read More
So far, 2009 has been a fertile time for methodological debates in econometrics. One hot debate touches directly on randomized control trials (RCTs), a methodology often used in impact evaluations of development interventions. On one side, renowned Princeton development economist Angus Deaton argues that randomized experiments are overhyped and that other methods of learning about impacts provide guidance which is often more closely related to theory. On the other side, Guido Imbens reminds readers of the reasons why randomized experiments have gained a wide following. Other methods rely on assumptions that often make them not quite fully convincing.
Read More
It’s time again for the Financial Times Sustainable Banking Awards. The awards recognize financial institutions that show leadership and innovation in incorporating environmental and social sustainability objectives in their operations.
The organizers included a new category this year - Achievement in Basic Needs Financing. The category highlights institutions with solutions to address basic needs such as energy, food and water...
Read More
A recent Times (UK) Online article resurrects two debates about microfinance. The first is whether it really works as a poverty-fighting tool, and the second is whether the increasing commercialization of microfinance should be seen as a challenge or an opportunity.
Aneel Karnani of the University of Michigan weighs in on the first debate as the leading naysayer..
Read More
The Microinsurance Network and ILO's Microinsurance Innovation Facility and STEPprogramme are conducting a survey on Third-Party Payment Mechanisms in Health Microinsurance in Developing Countries.
Payment mechanisms form an integral component of insurance schemes because they not only affect the financial flexibility available to customers, but also afect the quality of care delivered by the health provider...
Read More
This seems to be our week to blog about Bill Easterly's blog. Although in this one, we aren't going to agree as much. I was really excited to see his report about Women's Trust until I got to the final paragraph...
Read More
As banks tighten their lending criteria in response to the financial crisis, would-be entrepreneurs are finding that they can’t get start-up capital from the usual sources, and some small business owners are turning to microlenders like ACCION USA, Grameen America, and home-grown institutions like the Wisconsin Women’s Business Initiative...
Read More
A recent post from Alex in the Philippines addressed the common uses of microfinance loans, which leads logically to two follow-up questions. How do we actually know with any certainty what microfinance clients do with their loans given that money is fungible? And, secondly, should we care as long as the loans are paid back?
Read More
A frequent question that I get from friends and family members about the microfinance projects I work on for IPA is, “What do people actually do with the loans?”
Perhaps these questions come from confusion over the large differences between the economies of the developed versus developing world. About 13% of the labor force in the developed world is self-employed versus about 49% in the developing world...
Read More
Cash under your mattress? These days it’s easy to feel like keeping our money at home—literally– may be the safest place for it. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, though, is making a global push to get money into savings accounts, and Pascaline Dupas and Jonathan Robinson have just finished a paper that makes the cleanest case yet for getting money out from under the mattress...
Read More
Seed Magazine is perched at the overlap between science and culture. It aims to be the bi-monthly rag of a new breed of science-savvy global citizens ...
Read More
Researchers and financial analysts are still sorting through causes of the financial crisis. One target is the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA), which requires that banks to lend to low and moderate income people in the communities where they take deposits. Among the naysayers are Ron Paul, who charged the CRA with "forcing banks to lend to people who normally would be rejected as bad credit risks," and Jeffrey A. Miron, an economics professor at Harvard, who called for “getting rid” of policies like the CRA that “pressure banks into subprime lending.” But Paul and Miron may now have to eat their words...
Read More
At a recent microfinance conference hosted by Innovations for Poverty Action, the Financial Access Initiative and Yale University, the Philanthropy Action editors sat down with Esther Duflo and Abhijit Banerjee, two of the founders of the Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab (JPAL) at MIT and IPA Research Affiliates...
Read More
Fast, convenient and easy: the holy trinity of marketing adjectives. Any product or service that can legitimately claim to be all three should sell itself, or at least catch on fast. This blend of attractive features underlies the enthusiasm around mobile banking. Plus it just seems cool—who doesn’t like a story of technological leapfrogging?
Read More
At the end of October, I was at the Riverside Church, one of New York’s great centers of social action and charity, for a panel held as part of Columbia's annual Social Enterprise conference. The gothic setting was an odd match for the panel, but the timing was perfect for the topic: "Transitions in Capital Market Financing for Microfinance Institutions." If there was ever a time for thinking about financial transitions, this is it.
Read More
Researchers and financial analysts will spend years trying to understand exactly what happened on Wall Street over the past four weeks. No one was prepared for the rapid expansion of an economic crisis on such a massive scale. At the Financial Access Initiative offices in New York, however, we have been tracking a different expansion of the global financial system—one that is fueled by the possibility of financial empowerment instead of by risk and irresponsible lending...
Read More
A few months ago I did a quick review of the literature on financial literacy training to find out whether there was any indication that those programs have been successful. I was struck by the lack of evidence. Out of all the studies I could find only a couple stood out as being remotely credible...
Read More