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Dive into the research topics where Renos Vakis is active.

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Featured researches published by Renos Vakis.


American Economic Journal: Applied Economics | 2008

Cash transfers, behavioral changes, and cognitive development in early childhood: evidence from a randomized experiment

Karen Macours; Norbert Schady; Renos Vakis

Cash transfer programs have become extremely popular in the developing world. A large literature analyzes their effects on schooling, health and nutrition, but relatively little is known about possible impacts on child development. This paper analyzes the impact of a cash transfer program on early childhood cognitive development. Children in households randomly assigned to receive benefits had significantly higher levels of development nine months after the program began. There is no fade-out of program effects two years after the program ended. Additional random variation shows that these impacts are unlikely to result from the cash component of the program alone.


Journal of Development Studies | 2012

Mobile Phones and Economic Development in Rural Peru

Diether Wolfgang Beuermann; Christopher McKelvey; Renos Vakis

Abstract We estimate the effects of mobile phone coverage on different measures of economic development. We exploit the timing of mobile coverage at the village level merging it with a village-level panel dataset for rural Peru. The main findings suggest that mobile phone expansion has increased household real consumption by 11 per cent, reduced poverty incidence by 8 percentage points and decreased extreme poverty by 5.4 percentage points. Moreover, those benefits appear to be shared by all covered households regardless of mobile ownership.


Archive | 2008

Spatial Specialization and Farm-Nonfarm Linkages

Uwe Deichmann; Forhad Shilpi; Renos Vakis

Using individual level employment data from Bangladesh, this paper presents empirical evidence on the relative importance of farm and urban linkages for rural nonfarm employment. The econometric results indicate that high return wage work and self-employment in nonfarm activities cluster around major urban centers. The negative effects of isolation on high return wage work and on self-employment are magnified in locations with higher agricultural potential. The low return nonfarm activities respond primarily to local demand displaying no significant spatial variation. The empirical results highlight the need for improved connectivity of regions with higher agricultural potential to urban centers for nonfarm development in Bangladesh.


Archive | 2013

Demand versus returns ? pro-poor targeting of business grants and vocational skills training

Karen Macours; Patrick Premand; Renos Vakis

Interventions aimed at increasing the income generating capacity of the poor, such as vocational training, micro-finance or business grants, are widespread in the developing world. How to target such interventions is an open question. Many programs are self-targeted, but if perceived returns differ from actual returns, those self-selecting to participate may not be those for whom the program is the most effective. The authors analyze an unusual experiment with very high take-up of business grants and vocational skills training, randomly assigned among nearly all households in selected poor rural communities in Nicaragua. On average, the interventions resulted in increased participation in non-agricultural employment and higher income from related activities. The paper investigates whether targeting could have resulted in higher returns by analyzing heterogeneity in impacts by stated baseline demand, prior participation in non-agricultural activities, and a wide range of complementary asset endowments. The results reveal little heterogeneity along observed baseline characteristics. However, the poorest households are more likely to enter and have higher profits in non-agricultural self-employment, while less poor households assigned to the training have higher non-agricultural wages. This heterogeneity appears related to unobserved characteristics that are not revealed by stated baseline demand, and more difficult to target. In this context, self-targeting may reduce the poverty-reduction potential of income generating interventions, possibly because low aspirations limit the poors ex-ante demand for productive interventions while the interventions have the potential to increase those aspirations. Overall, targeting productive interventions to poor households would not have come at the cost of reducing their effectiveness. By contrast, self-targeting would have limited poverty reduction by excluding the poorest.


Journal of Development Economics | 2006

Can Conditional Cash Transfer Programs Serve as Safety Nets in Keeping Children at School and From Working when Exposed to Shocks

Alain de Janvry; Frederico Finan; Elisabeth Sadoulet; Renos Vakis


Archive | 2012

Economic Mobility and the Rise of the Latin American Middle Class

Luis-Felipe Lopez-Calva; Maria Ana Lugo; Renos Vakis; Francisco H. G. Ferreira; Julian Messina; Jamele Rigolini


World Development | 2009

Urban proximity, agricultural potential and rural non-farm employment: evidence from Bangladesh.

Uwe Deichmann; Forhad Shilpi; Renos Vakis


Archive | 2009

Changing Households' Investments and Aspirations Through Social Interactions: Evidence from a Randomized Transfer Program

Karen Macours; Renos Vakis


Archive | 2003

Measuring transactions costs from observed behavior: market choices in Peru

Renos Vakis; Elisabeth Sadoulet; Alain de Janvry


Archive | 2012

Transfers, diversification and household risk strategies : experimental evidence with lessons for climate change adaptation

Karen Macours; Patrick Premand; Renos Vakis

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Karen Macours

Paris School of Economics

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Norbert Schady

Inter-American Development Bank

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