Ejemplares similares: Eliciting willingness-to-pay through multiple experimental procedures: Evidence from lab-in-the-field in rural Ghana
- Microcredit and willingness to pay for environmental quality: Evidence from a randomized-controlled trial of finance for sanitation in rural Cambodia
- Social network effects on consumer willingness to pay for biofortified crops
- Microcredit and willingness to pay for environmental quality: Evidence from a randomized-controlled trial of finance for sanitation in rural Cambodia
- Information and consumer willingness to pay for biofortified yellow cassava: Evidence from experimental auctions in Nigeria
- Information, branding, certification, and consumer willingness to pay for high-iron pearl millet: Evidence from experimental auctions in Maharashtra, India
- Developing country consumers’ acceptance of biofortified foods: a synthesis
Autor: Banerji, Abhijit
- Information and consumer willingness to pay for biofortified yellow cassava: Evidence from experimental auctions in Nigeria
- Information and consumer willingness to pay for biofortified yellow cassava: Evidence from experimental auctions in Nigeria
- Private outsourcing and competition: Subsidized food distribution in Indonesia
- Consumer acceptance of provitamin A orange maize in rural Zambia
- Using elicitation mechanisms to estimate the demand for nutritious maize: Evidence from experiments in rural Ghana
- Consumer acceptance of biofortified foods
Autor: Chowdhury, Shyamal
- Setting weights for aggregate indices: An application to the commitment to development index and human development index
- [Review of] Kherallah, M., et al. Reforming Agricultural Markets in Africa
- Spatial coordination in public good allocation: Nonparametric evidence from decentralized Indonesia
- Spatial networks, labor supply, and income dynamics: Evidence from Indonesian villages
- Are consumers willing to pay more for biofortified foods? Evidence from a field experiment in Uganda
- Attaining universal access in rural areas: business-NGO partnership in Bangladesh as a case study