Tesfaye A. Gebremedhin
University of Canberra
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Publication
Featured researches published by Tesfaye A. Gebremedhin.
Kyklos | 2013
Tesfaye A. Gebremedhin; Astghik Mavisakalyan
Immigration may adversely affect political stability if immigrants are perceived unfavourably by host country populations. Using a large sample of countries this study confirms that a higher immigrant share of a population is associated with decrease in the level of political stability. We further demonstrate that a higher immigrant share leads to increased military spending through the channel of political stability. The negative effect of immigration on political stability appears to be stronger in countries with assimilative citizenship laws. We account for the endogeneity of immigrant share by using an instrument constructed from gravity model estimates.
PLOS ONE | 2018
Itismita Mohanty; Tesfaye A. Gebremedhin
This paper examines the effect of maternal socio-economic status in the household, such as their autonomy, ability, freedom and bargaining power, on child birth registration in India using the nationally representative India Human Development Survey-II (IHDS-II), 2011–12. We have estimated a multilevel mixed effects model which accounts for the hierarchical structure of the data and allows us to examine the effects of unobserved ‘district’ and ‘community’ characteristics along with individual child level characteristics on probability of birth registration. The results show that between-districts and between individuals differences share a considerably high and an almost equal proportion of the variations in probability of birth registration in India. At individual child level, mother’s socio-economic status such as her ability to move around independently and her exposure to outside world, significantly raise the probability of birth registration. More importantly, the marginal effects of the maternal autonomy indicators: mother’s ability to move around freely and her control over resources, on birth registration vary across districts in India. Other variables such as institutional birth, mother’s antenatal care seeking behaviour, caste, religion, household wealth and parental education are significant determinants of birth registration.
PLOS ONE | 2016
Tesfaye A. Gebremedhin; Itismita Mohanty; Jacobus P. van Wouwe
This paper examines the effects of maternal autonomy on child schooling outcomes in Ethiopia using a nationally representative Ethiopian Demographic and Health survey for 2011. The empirical strategy uses a Hurdle Negative Binomial Regression model to estimate years of schooling. An ordered probit model is also estimated to examine age grade distortion using a trichotomous dependent variable that captures three states of child schooling. The large sample size and the range of questions available in this dataset allow us to explore the influence of individual and household level social, economic and cultural factors on child schooling. The analysis finds statistically significant effects of maternal autonomy variables on child schooling in Ethiopia. The roles of maternal autonomy and other household-level factors on child schooling are important issues in Ethiopia, where health and education outcomes are poor for large segments of the population.
Journal of African Economies | 2008
Tesfaye A. Gebremedhin; Stephen Whelan
Australian Journal of Labour Economics | 2013
Anne Daly; Tesfaye A. Gebremedhin; Muhammad Sayem
Economic Papers: A Journal of Applied Economics and Policy | 2015
Anne Daly; Tesfaye A. Gebremedhin
Archive | 2012
Anne Daly; Tesfaye A. Gebremedhin; C Preece
Archive | 2012
Anne Daly; Tesfaye A. Gebremedhin
Archive | 2011
Anne Daly; Tesfaye A. Gebremedhin; Carolyn Preece
2006 Conference (50th), February 8-10, 2006, Sydney, Australia | 2006
Tesfaye A. Gebremedhin