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Alexander Rothenberg
Assistant Professor of Economics, Syracuse University
Alexander D. Rothenberg is an Assistant Professor of Economics and Senior Research Associate in the Center for Policy Research, Syracuse University. He is an applied microeconomist whose research interests lie at the intersection of development and urban economics. Prior to joining the Maxwell School, Professor Rothenberg was an economist at the RAND Corporation, and a professor at the Pardee RAND Graduate School.
His research studies the effects of different urban, regional, and private-sector policy interventions. Using a combination of reduced form and structural techniques, his work examines the causal impacts of these policies on growth and development outcomes, whether they have adverse, unintended consequences, and how they might be improved. His ongoing research evaluating the effects of different urban transport policies on commuting outcomes in Jakarta, the long-term growth and development outcomes of a place-based policy in Indonesia's outer Islands, the impacts of a rural migration program on diversity and identity, and how transport improvements affect firm entry and employment.
Professor Rothenberg received his Ph.D. in economics from the University of California, Berkeley in 2012.
Recent work by Alexander Rothenberg
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The benefits of road maintenance: Lessons from Indonesia
Better roads help manufacturers create new jobs, enabling worker transitions out of informal employment, and increasing wages.
Published 23.11.22
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The benefits of road maintenance in Indonesia
Better roads help manufacturers create new jobs, enabling worker transitions out of informal employment, and increasing wages.
Published 23.11.22
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‘Second-best’ Bus Rapid Transit and traffic congestion in developing countries: Lessons from TransJakarta
Evidence from Indonesia’s TransJakarta Bus Rapid Transit suggests that low-cost BRT systems can actually worsen traffic congestion
Published 29.11.19
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Estimating productivity spillovers among firm networks in Indonesia
Clustering of firms in Indonesia only leads to substantial productivity spillovers in a few industries, suggesting the need to review cluster policies
Published 28.11.17
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Designing more effective resettlement programs: Lessons from transmigration in Indonesia
Better matching between transmigrants’ origin and destination agroclimate and languages can substantially improve productivity and integration
Published 08.08.17
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Matching and migration: Lessons from a resettlement programme in Indonesia
Relocation programmes should consider providing agricultural extension services to ensure migrants adapt and cope in new environments
Published 24.03.16