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Dive into the research topics where Erica Field is active.

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Featured researches published by Erica Field.


Journal of Political Economy | 2008

Early Marriage, Age of Menarche, and Female Schooling Attainment in Bangladesh

Erica Field; Attila Ambrus

Using data from rural Bangladesh, we explore the hypothesis that women attain less schooling as a result of social and financial pressure to marry young. We isolate the causal effect of marriage timing using age of menarche as an instrumental variable. Our results indicate that each additional year that marriage is delayed is associated with 0.22 additional year of schooling and 5.6 percent higher literacy. Delayed marriage is also associated with an increase in use of preventive health services. In the context of competitive marriage markets, we use the above results to obtain estimates of the change in equilibrium female education that would arise from introducing age of consent laws.


Journal of the European Economic Association | 2008

Repayment Frequency and Default in Microfinance: Evidence from India

Erica Field; Rohini Pande

In stark contrast to bank debt contracts, most micro-finance contracts require that repayments start nearly immediately after loan disbursement and occur weekly thereafter. Even though economic theory suggests that a more flexible repayment schedule would benefit clients and potentially improve their repayment capacity, micro-finance practitioners argue that the fiscal discipline imposed by frequent repayment is critical to preventing loan default. In this paper we use data from a field experiment which randomized client assignment to a weekly or monthly repayment schedule and find no significant effect of type of repayment schedule on client delinquency or default. Our findings suggest that, among micro-finance clients who are willing to borrow at either weekly or monthly repayment schedules, a more flexible schedule can significantly lower transaction costs without increasing client default. (JEL: O12, O16, O22) (c) 2008 by the European Economic Association.


Health Economics | 2010

Social Security Health Insurance for the Informal Sector in Nicaragua: A Randomized Evaluation

Rebecca Thornton; Laurel Hatt; Erica Field; Mursaleena Islam; Freddy Solís Diaz; Martha Azucena González

This article presents the results from an experimental evaluation of a voluntary health insurance program for informal sector workers in Nicaragua. Costs of the premiums as well as enrollment location were randomly allocated. Overall, take-up of the program was low, with only 20% enrollment. Program costs and streamlined bureaucratic procedures were important determinants of enrollment. Participation of local microfinance institutions had a slight negative effect on enrollment. One year later, those who received insurance substituted toward services at covered facilities and total out-of-pocket expenditures fell. However, total expenditures fell by less than the insurance premiums. We find no evidence of an increase in health-care utilization among the newly insured. We also find very low retention rates after the expiration of the subsidy, with less than 10% of enrollees still enrolled after one year. To shed light on the findings from the experimental results, we present qualitative evidence of institutional and contextual factors that limited the success of this program.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Repayment Flexibility Can Reduce Financial Stress: A Randomized Control Trial with Microfinance Clients in India

Erica Field; Rohini Pande; John Papp; Y. Jeanette Park

Financial stress is widely believed to cause health problems. However, policies seeking to relieve financial stress by limiting debt levels of poor households may directly worsen their economic well-being. We evaluate an alternative policy – increasing the repayment flexibility of debt contracts. A field experiment randomly assigned microfinance clients to a monthly or a traditional weekly installment schedule (N = 200). We used cell phones to gather survey data on income, expenditure, and financial stress every 48 hours over seven weeks. Clients repaying monthly were 51 percent less likely to report feeling “worried, tense, or anxious” about repaying, were 54 percent more likely to report feeling confident about repaying, and reported spending less time thinking about their loan compared to weekly clients. Monthly clients also reported higher business investment and income, suggesting that the flexibility encouraged them to invest their loans more profitably, which ultimately reduced financial stress.


National Bureau of Economic Research | 2015

Friendship at Work: Can Peer Effects Catalyze Female Entrepreneurship?

Erica Field; Seema Jayachandran; Rohini Pande; Natalia Rigol

Does the lack of peers contribute to the observed gender gap in entrepreneurial success, and is the constraint stronger for women facing more restrictive social norms? We offered two days of business counseling to a random sample of customers of India’s largest women’s bank. A random subsample was invited to attend with a friend. The intervention had a significant immediate impact on participants’ business activity, but only if they were trained in the presence of a friend. Four months later, those trained with a friend were more likely to have taken out business loans, were less likely to be housewives, and reported increased business activity and higher household income. The positive impacts of training with a friend were stronger among women from religious or caste groups with social norms that restrict female mobility.


Journal of the European Economic Association | 2005

PROPERTY RIGHTS AND INVESTMENT IN URBAN SLUMS

Erica Field


The American Economic Review | 2010

Do Traditional Institutions Constrain Female Entrepreneurship? A Field Experiment on Business Training in India

Erica Field; Seema Jayachandran; Rohini Pande


The American Economic Review | 2014

Household Bargaining and Excess Fertility: An Experimental Study in Zambia

Nava Ashraf; Erica Field; Jean N. Lee


American Economic Journal: Applied Economics | 2009

Educational Debt Burden and Career Choice: Evidence from a Financial Aid Experiment at Nyu Law School

Erica Field


American Economic Journal: Applied Economics | 2009

Iodine Deficiency and Schooling Attainment in Tanzania

Erica Field; Omar Robles; Maximo Torero

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Natalia Rigol

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Maximo Torero

International Food Policy Research Institute

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Benjamin Feigenberg

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Nava Ashraf

London School of Economics and Political Science

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Sharon Barnhardt

Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad

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