AEA RCT Registry currently lists 3246 studies with locations in 142 countries.
In this study, we are collaborating with the Punjab Commission on the Status of Women in Punjab, Pakistan on a randomized trial of training of marriage registrars.
This document provides a pre-analysis plan for a health intervention in the Northern region of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Our study is interested in better understanding how variation in age sets practices -- initiation rituals for young men -- affect the accountability of local leaders. Anthropologists hypothesized that age sets increase accountability of leaders by creating cohesive groups of young men. We test this with an intervention providing village chiefs with grants to purchase health products, which are provided at subsidized rates and delivered to the village. As part of the project, village oversight committees are formed to monitor the chief's management of the project and its resources. The primary experimental manipulation is varying the composition of the over...
High transaction costs may affect the quality of the interactions between citizens and the public sector leading to low trust in the government and low take up of services provided by the government. We study the effects of a proactive approach to public-service delivery on citizens trust in public institutions. We partnered with Panama’s Tribunal Electoral (Electoral College) and developed an online app allowing citizens to renew their IDs online and avoid rather lengthy visits to the offices of the Tribunal Electoral. We then randomly vary the opportunity of using the application among citizens whose IDs are about to expire and compare the effect of access to the online application relative to a) the effect of simply receiving reminders and b) neither receiving reminders nor access to...
This study analyzes the effects of incentives on paternalistic interventions on "repugnant transactions."
An increasing number of decisions are guided by machine learning algorithms. An individual’s behavior is typically used as input to an estimator that determines future decisions. But when an estimator is used to allocate resources, individuals may strategically alter their behavior to achieve a desired outcome. This paper develops a new class of estimators that are stable under manipulation, even when the decision rule is fully transparent. We explicitly model the costs of manipulating different behaviors, and identify decision rules that are stable in equilibrium. Through a large field experiment in Kenya, we test decision rules estimated with our strategy-robust method.
The lack of adequate literacy preparation is a key risk factor for poor performance in primary school worldwide (Behrman et al, 2006). Even in Kenya, one of the best-educated populations in Sub-Saharan Africa, only 34% of preschool children meet language and numeracy development milestones (Kenya National Bureau of Statistics, 2013). The proposed research builds on a cluster-randomized evaluation of an early literacy intervention that combined dialogic reading training for parents of young children with mother tongue children’s storybooks. Participation in the early literacy program was over 89% of targeted households under intensive researcher-managed recruitment, with 91% of participants being mothers and other female caregivers. Short-term results show that the intervention improved ...
Research shows that reading to children promotes their cognitive development. However, parents disadvantaged by low income and low education are less likely than more advantaged parents to read to their children even though they report having books and time to read and believe that reading to their children will improve their child's life chances. Children and Parents Engaged in Reading (CAPER) is a 6-month reading intervention that uses behavioral tools to increase the amount of time parents spend reading to their pre-school aged children, with the aim of improving children's literacy skills. CAPER study builds on the Parents and Children Together (PACT) study (Mayer, Kalil, Oreopoulos, and Gallegos 2018), which demonstrated the ability of behavioral tools to double the amount of...
This study analyzes the effectiveness of a dual apprenticeship program implemented as part of the Youth Employment and Skills Development Project (PEJEDEC) in Cote d'Ivoire.The dual apprenticeship program offers a subsidy paid directly to the apprentice, and complements practical on-the-job training with mentoring and theoretical training. The experiment simultaneously randomizes whether apprenticeship positions opened by firms are filled through the program, and whether interested youths are assigned to a dual apprenticeship. The study has two parts. The objective of the first part of the study is to document short-term impacts of apprenticeships on youths and firms, including to analyze whether the dual apprenticeship program induces substitution effects on youths and firms. The objec...
Data sharing has become more widespread, in part due to progressive policies by biomedical journals that promote its availability. Yet despite programs intended to enforce sharing upon request, scientists may not make their data available for many reasons, including concerns about sufficient time and lack of funding. While there is some evidence that the recipients organization may have an impact on data availability, current data sharing policies do not make distinctions between private and public funding of research by the recipient. The purpose of this randomized controlled trial is to determine whether perceptions of the funding source of the recipient will impact the willingness and ability to share data by scientists conducting and publishing secondary research (i.e., evidence syn...
Entrepreneurs stay in business despite both lower initial earnings and slower growth of income than in paid employment (Hamilton et al., 2000; Moskowitz and Vissing-Jorgensen, 2002; Astebro et al., 2004). This puzzling behavior is commonly explained by nonpecuniary taste-based factors like preferences for autonomy or control (see for review Astebro et al., 2014). Though specific preferences, of course, play a role, the entrepreneurs can stay self-employed simply because they can not find a job since prospective employers could prefer candidates with corporate experience. Some studies show discrimination of entrepreneurs at the labor market ( e.g. Failla et al., 2017). However, these evidence either correlation or inconclusive. Moreover, little is known why employees discriminate the...