词条 | Paul Glewwe |
释义 |
BiographyPaul Glewwe earned a B.A. in economics from the University of Chicago in 1979 as well as a Ph.D. from Stanford University in 1985, the latter with a doctoral thesis analysing labour markets and the distribution of income in Sri Lanka. Already prior to graduation, Glewwe began working as a consultant for the World Bank (1984–85, 86-88), followed by appointments as economist in the World Bank's population and human resources department (1988–93) and as senior economist in its policy research department (1994–99). In parallel, Glewwe worked in various academic positions at Pennsylvania State University, George Washington University and Oxford University. Since 1999, he has worked in the Department of Applied Economics of the University of Minnesota, first as assistant professor (1999-2001), then as associate professor (2001–06), and finally as full professor (since 2006). Moreover, since 2013, Paul Glewwe has held the title of Distinguished McKnight University Professor. In terms of professional service, Glewwe is member of the AEA, Econometric Society, and Royal Economic Society, and has served on the editorial boards of the World Bank Economic Review (since 2009), Journal of the Asia Pacific Economy (since 2008), Journal of African Economies (since 2011), Economics of Education Review (since 2013), and the American Journal of Agricultural Economics.[3] Additionally, he has served as co-chair of the education programme of J-PAL from 2010 to 2014[4] and as Director of the Center for International Food and Agricultural Policy from 2007 to 2011.[5] ResearchGlewwe's research generally focuses on the economics of education, poverty and inequality in developing countries, and applied econometrics.[6] Overall, Glewwe belongs to the top 2% of most cited economists as ranked by IDEAS/RePEc.[7] Relationship between health and educationOne of Glewwe's main research areas concerns the relationship between health and education. For example, he (with Hanan Jacoby) finds early childhood malnutrition - and not borrowing constraints or the rationing of school places - to be the likely cause of delayed enrollment in primary school in Ghana,[8] and documents (with Jacoby and Elizabeth M. King) how malnutrition among young children in the Philippines impairs their academic achievements by delaying the age at which they enroll into school and causing them to learn more slowly, though not by decreasing their effort exerted at school (in terms of attendance, homework, etc.).[9] Looking into the link between child health and maternal education, Glewwe argues based on evidence from Morocco that mothers' health knowledge, which is generally correlated with (though not necessarily caused by) their schooling, is probably the main pathway how maternal education achieves its strongly positive impact on child health and nutrition in developing countries, which consequently suggests large public health payoffs to female health education in school.[10] Impact of the quality of the supply of education on learningSince the early 2000s, Glewwe has used randomized controlled trials (RCTs) in order to investigate the impact of the quality of the supply of education, e.g. in terms of school supplies or the quality of teaching, on learning outcomes. For example, Glewwe finds (with Michael Kremer, Sylvie Moulin, and Eric Zitzewitz) that in Kenya neither the provision of textbooks nor of flipcharts was effective in raising average student scores and that generally only the best students were able to take advantages of the improvement in school supplies. This in turn raises the question of whether the emphasis of many developing countries' (strongly centralized) education systems on top-down improvements to the supply of education may be guided rather by elite bias than by a concern for broad increases in students' learning outcomes.[11][12] In another RCT, Glewwe (with Michael Kremer and Nauman Ilias) finds that rewarding primary school teachers in Kenya based on students' test scores and penalizing them based on their students not attending the exam leads teachers to increase the number of test preparation sessions (but not teacher attendance or homework assignments), which then increases students' test scores and exam participation, but is ineffective in reducing dropout rates.[13] Earlier on, having found school characteristics in Ghana to be highly correlated with student achievement, e.g. via average grade attainment, Glewwe (with Jacoby) had argued that improvements to school quality, such as repairs of classrooms, may be a cost-effective investment into education in Ghana relative to the provision of more teaching materials and better trained teachers.[14] Returns to schooling, determinants of household vulnerability, and willingness to pay for educationGlewwe's other findings include the following:
Views on priorities for education policy in developing countriesFinally, taking stock of the literature on the supply of education in developing countries, Glewwe (with Michael Kremer) criticizes that, although school enrollment rates have risen rapidly in the developing world between 1960 and 2000, dropout rates remain high and learning outcomes disappointing, and thus argues that the primary policy question should be which policies most effectively improve learning, with RCTs as the preferred tool to conduct that investigation.[18] More recently, Glewwe has emphasized (with Karthik Muralidharan) that educational spending in developing countries could be much more cost effective, as improvements to pedagogy (e.g. remedial classes for children lagging behind) as well as improvements to school governance and teacher accountability tend to be much more cost effective than mere (yet widespread) increases in "standard" school inputs (e.g. more books); by contrast, interventions aimed at increasing the demand for education by raising students' returns to (or decreasing households' costs of) school enrollment and effort are also generally effective in improving learning outcomes, but vary widely in terms of cost effectiveness.[19] Selected publications
References1. ^[https://www.apec.umn.edu/people/paul-glewwe Webpage of Paul Glewwe at the University of Minnesota. Retrieved February 6, 2018.] 2. ^[https://www.povertyactionlab.org/glewwe Webpage of Paul Glewwe at J-PAL. Retrieved February 6, 2018.] 3. ^[https://www.apec.umn.edu/sites/apec.umn.edu/files/paul-glewwe-cv.pdf Curriculum vitae of Paul Glewwe on the website of the University of Minnesota. Retrieved February 6, 2018.] 4. ^[https://www.povertyactionlab.org/glewwe Webpage of Paul Glewwe at J-PAL. Retrieved February 6, 2018.] 5. ^[https://www.cifap.umn.edu/leadership/past Past Directors of the Center for International Food and Agricultural Policy. Retrieved February 6, 2018.] 6. ^[https://www.povertyactionlab.org/glewwe Webpage of Paul Glewwe at J-PAL. Retrieved on February 6, 2018.] 7. ^[https://ideas.repec.org/top/top.person.all.html#pgl14 Ranking of economists by IDEAS/RePEc. Retrieved on February 6, 2018.] 8. ^[https://ideas.repec.org/a/tpr/restat/v77y1995i1p156-69.html Glewwe, P., Jacoby, H. (1995). An Economic Analysis of Delayed Primary School Enrollment in a Low Income Country: The Role of Early Childhood Nutrition. Review of Economics and Statistics, 77(1), pp. 156-169.] 9. ^[https://ideas.repec.org/a/eee/pubeco/v81y2001i3p345-368.html Glewwe, P., Jacoby, H.G., King, E.M. (2001). Early childhood nutrition and academic achievement: a longitudinal analysis. Journal of Public Economics, 81(3), pp. 345-368.] 10. ^[https://ideas.repec.org/a/uwp/jhriss/v34y1999i1p124-159.html Glewwe, P. (1999). Why Does Mother's Schooling Raise Child Health in Developing Countries? Evidence from Morocco. Journal of Human Resources, 34(1), pp. 124-159.] 11. ^[https://ideas.repec.org/a/eee/deveco/v74y2004i1p251-268.html Glewwe, P. et al. (2004). Retrospective vs. prospective analyses of school inputs: the case of flip charts in Kenya. Journal of Development Economics, 74(1), pp. 251-268.] 12. ^[https://ideas.repec.org/a/aea/aejapp/v1y2009i1p112-35.html Glewwe, P., Kremer, M., Moulin, S. (2009). Many Children Left Behind? Textbooks and Test Scores in Kenya. American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, 1(1), pp. 112-135.] 13. ^[https://ideas.repec.org/a/aea/aejapp/v2y2010i3p205-27.html Glewwe, P., Ilias, N., Kremer, M. (2010). Teacher Incentives. American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, 2(3), pp. 205-227.] 14. ^[https://ideas.repec.org/a/uwp/jhriss/v29y1994iii1p843-864.html Glewwe, P., Jacoby, H. (1994). Student Achievement and Schooling Choice in Low-Income Countries: Evidence from Ghana. Journal of Human Resources, 29(1), pp. 843-864.] 15. ^[https://ideas.repec.org/a/eee/deveco/v51y1996i2p267-290.html Glewwe, P. (1996). The relevance of standard estimates of rates of return to schooling for education policy: A critical assessment. Journal of Development Economics, 51(2), pp. 267-290.] 16. ^[https://ideas.repec.org/a/eee/deveco/v56y1998i1p181-206.html Glewwe, P., Hall, G. (1998). Are some groups more vulnerable to macroeconomic shocks than others? Hypothesis tests based on panel data from Peru. Journal of Development Economics, 56(1), pp. 181-206.] 17. ^[https://ideas.repec.org/a/eee/pubeco/v42y1990i3p251-275.html Gertler, P., Glewwe, P. (1990). The willingness to pay for education in developing countries: Evidence from rural Peru. Journal of Public Economics, 42(3), pp. 251-275.] 18. ^[https://ideas.repec.org/h/eee/educhp/2-16.html Glewwe, P., Kremer, M. (2006). Schools, Teachers, and Education Outcomes in Developing Countries. In: Hanushek, E., Welch, F. (eds.). Handbook of the Economics of Education (vol. 2). Amsterdam: Elsevier, pp. 945-1017.] 19. ^[https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/B9780444634597000105 Glewwe, P., Muralidharan, K. (2016). Improving Education Outcomes in Developing Countries: Evidence, Knowledge Gaps, and Policy Implications. In: Hanushek, E.A., Machin, S., Woessmann, L. (eds.). Handbook of the Economics of Education (vol. 5). Amsterdam: Elsevier, pp. 653-743.] External links
7 : 1958 births|University of Chicago alumni|Stanford University alumni|University of Minnesota faculty|Labor economists|Education economists|Living people |
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