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Dive into the research topics where Hassan Zaman is active.

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Featured researches published by Hassan Zaman.


Archive | 2004

The Scaling-Up of Microfinance in Bangladesh: Determinants, Impact, and Lessons

Hassan Zaman

The microfinance industry in Bangladesh currently provides access to credit to around 13 million poor households. The author describes the factors that led to the scaling-up of micro-credit in Bangladesh, the impact this has had on the poor, future challenges in Bangladesh, and possible lessons for other countries. The consensus in the literature is that micro-credit plays a significant role in reducing household vulnerability to a number of risks and that it contributes to improving social indicators. The author argues that strategic donor investments in a handful of well-managed institutions that offer a simple, easily replicable financial product could lead to large gains in access to finance for the poor. However, this approach could sacrifice other objectives of financial sector development, such as product and institutional diversity, which could be promoted after the initial expansion has taken place. Governments can also have a crucial role in promoting access to microfinance by ensuring macroeconomic stability, enforcing a simple regulatory structure, and developing communications networks that reduce transaction costs. Another lesson is that while visionary leadership cannot simply be franchised, the internal management systems that led to the scaling-up can be replicated in other settings.


Archive | 2010

The Impact of Economic Shocks on Global Undernourishment

Sailesh Tiwari; Hassan Zaman

This paper estimates the impact of the 2008 food price spike and the 2009 contraction in global growth on undernourishment rates. The analysis is based on a methodology that uses a calorie-income relationship and income distribution data. The authors find that the 2008 global food price spike may have increased global undernourishment by about 6.8 percent, or 63 million people. Moreover, they show that the sharp slowdown in global growth in 2009 could have contributed to 41 million more undernourished people compared with what would have happened if the economic crisis had not occurred.


Journal of Developing Areas | 2009

Who Migrates Overseas and Is It Worth Their While?: An Assessment of Household Survey Data from Bangladesh

Manohar Sharma; Hassan Zaman

The paper assesses the costs and household level benefits of migrating overseas from Bangladesh. The authors survey households who have had overseas migrants to assess their characteristics compared to non-migrants. They also compute various types of migration and remittance related transaction costs and discuss the channels by which overseas migration is financed, remittances sent and the constraints faced by the poorest. Using the Propensity Score Matching method, the paper finds that overseas migration conveys substantial benefits to families as measured by household consumption, use of modern agricultural inputs, and level of household savings. The authors also offer some possible policy directions to strengthen the returns from migration as well as reduce some of the costs.


Archive | 2010

To What Extent are Bangladesh's Recent Gains in Poverty Reduction Different from the Past?

Aphichoke Kotikula; Ambar Narayan; Hassan Zaman

The poor in Bangladesh are more likely to belong to households with a larger number of dependents and lower education among household members, be engaged in daily wage labor, own little land, and be less likely to receive remittances. This poverty profile for 2005 is similar to the profile in the mid-1980s and hence at first glance it would appear that little has changed over time. A closer look at national household survey data suggests a more nuanced story. This paper uses the latest two rounds of the Bangladesh Household Income and Expenditure Survey to decompose the micro-determinants of poverty reduction between 2000 and 2005, closely following a similar analysis using five earlier rounds of the Survey. The comparison of results shows that the spatial distribution of poverty seen in earlier decades has changed with time and the drivers of poverty reduction are different in several respects.


World Bank Research Observer | 2008

Rising Food Prices in Sub-Saharan Africa: Poverty Impact and Policy Responses

Quentin Wodon; Hassan Zaman


Archive | 2008

Poverty assessment for Bangladesh : creating opportunities and bridging the East-West divide

Ambar Narayan; Hassan Zaman


Archive | 2013

Improving nutrition through multisectoral approaches

Sailesh Tiwari; Hassan Zaman; Yurie Tanimichi Hoberg; Aparajita Goyal; Anna Whitson Herforth; Julie Ruel Bergeron; Jaime Saavedra Chanduvi; Meera Shekar; Leslie K. Elder; Harold H. Alderman; Alessandra Marini


Archive | 2011

Can We Rely on Cash Transfers to Protect Dietary Diversity During Food Crises? Estimates from Indonesia

Emmanuel Skoufias; Sailesh Tiwari; Hassan Zaman


World Bank Economic Review | 2012

Crises, Food Prices, and the Income Elasticity of Micronutrients:Estimates from Indonesia

Emmanuel Skoufias; Sailesh Tiwari; Hassan Zaman


Archive | 2002

The Changing Distribution of Public Education Expenditure in Malawi

Samer Al-Samarrai; Hassan Zaman

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Bart Minten

International Food Policy Research Institute

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