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Aparajita Dasgupta

Assistant Professor of Economics, Ashoka University

Ph.D. University of California, Riverside

Aparajita Dasgupta is an Assistant Professor of Economics at Ashoka. An applied microeconomist by training, she holds a Ph.D. in Economics from the University of California, Riverside. Her research interests are in the areas of development economics, health economics and public policy.

Professor Dasgupta’s current research examines the long term consequences of early childhood shocks on human capital accumulation in developing country settings. She also has extensive field work experience in Andhra Pradesh for her research work which examines the causal impact of National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (NREGA) in buffering impacts of drought shocks on long term nutritional outcomes in children.

Professor Dasgupta has also worked as an evaluation specialist at 3ie where she managed and reviewed research of Impact Evaluation grants in cross-country settings. She served as the Fred.H.Bixby Post Doctoral Fellow at the Population Council, where she worked on impact evaluation and cost effectiveness of an HIV prevention service in New Delhi, India.

I am an applied micro-economist by training and my research mainly deals with policy-relevant questions that crosscut Development Economics, Health Economics and Labour Economics. In the past decade, applied microeconomics has broadened its focus on the dynamics of human capital formation to examine the importance of early childhood investments on later life outcomes and understanding how these decisions on how much to invest at each stages of life are made at the household level. My work contributes to different aspects of this growing literature.Within this broad area I have been working on a wide range of research topics as following. Please find here my recent publications.

My working papers include understanding (i) the fertility response at the household level to changes in infant mortality levels examining a large scale public health program in India; (ii) factors behind sorting of students by socio-economic groups across different types of schools; (iii) examining whether identity (gender and ethnicity) based matching between teacher and student affect student outcomes at the primary level;(iv) the pattern of non-random measurement error in self-assessed health responses across population subgroups in India and  whether anchoring of vignettes can be used to identify this bias;(v) impact of a peer-driven program to providing Injecting Drug Users with HIV Prevention Services in New Delhi, India(vi) long term impact of cattle slaughter ban laws in India on health outcomes (using 2005-06 DHS).

My work in progress/upcoming projects include examining (i)socio-economic, political and demographic factors behind the declining trend of child sex-ratio(CSR) and widening gaps in gender bias across districts in India;(ii) determinants of higher education choice, field choice and the effects on labour market outcomes in India;(iii)how sanskritization process affects labour force participation of women in India; (iv) whether access to sanitation improves labour market participation.

Study at Ashoka

Study at Ashoka

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