

Jason Kerwin
Associate Professor, Department of Applied Economics, University of Minnesota
Jason Kerwin is an Associate Professor in the Department of Applied Economics and a McKnight Land-Grant Professor at the University of Minnesota, an Affiliated Professor at J-PAL, and a Research Fellow at IZA. His research focuses on understanding the choices people in developing countries make about health, education, employment, and savings, with a specific focus on Malawi, Uganda, and India.
He received his PhD in Economics from the University of Michigan, where he was also an Economic Demography Trainee at Michigan’s Population Studies Center.
Recent work by Jason Kerwin
-
Enhancing secondary school learning: Role of remedial camps and teacher flexibility
A key dilemma in Indian education is that while children are enrolled in school, they are not actually learning. Based on an experiment in Odisha, this article explores possible solutions to the learning deficit in secondary schooling. It finds that ...
Published 30.04.24
-
Some children left behind: When mean impacts and individual impacts differ
Even interventions with large average benefits do not help everyone, which is a serious challenge for education policy in developing countries
Published 24.06.22
-
Healthcare appointments as effective commitment devices: Evidence from Malawi
The offer of an appointment more than doubled the likelihood of men getting an HIV test, and was most effective for men wanting a commitment device
Published 04.02.22
-
Overcoming barriers to savings through deferred wage payments: Evidence from Malawi
Having the option of getting paid later can help developing-country workers save for larger purchases, and make lasting improvements to their homes
Published 28.06.21