Pascaline Dupas Department of Economics • 579 Serra Mall • Stanford, CA 94305 Email: [email protected] • Phone: (650) 725 1870 Webpage: http://www.stanford.edu/~pdupas/

ACADEMIC POSITIONS Professor, Department of Economics, 2019- Associate Professor (with tenure), Department of Economics, Stanford University 2014-2019 Assistant Professor, Department of Economics, Stanford University 2011- 2014 Assistant Professor, Department of Economics, UCLA 2008- 2011 Assistant Professor, Department of Economics, 2006-2008

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE Board of Editors, American Economic Review: Insights December 2017 – Board of Editors, Journal of Economic Literature January 2016 – Associate Editor, Econometrica July 2014 – Associate Editor, Quarterly Journal of Economics July 2014 – Associate Editor, AEJ-Applied Economics January 2014 – Foreign Editor, Review of Economic Studies 2013 –2019 Co-Editor, Journal of 2016 –2018

OTHER AFFILIATIONS Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab (JPAL), Affiliate and Member of the Board of Directors Bureau for Research and Economic Analysis of Development (BREAD), Fellow National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), Research Associate Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR), Research Affiliate Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), Senior Fellow Center for Effective Global Action (CEGA), Affiliate Innovations for Poverty Action (IPA), Associate Researcher

PRIMARY RESEARCH FIELD: Development Economics

EDUCATION Ph.D., Economics, EHESS & PSE-DELTA (France) June 2006 MSc. (Economic Analysis and Policy), PSE-DELTA (France) June 2000 BA (Economics and Econometrics), Ecole Normale Supérieure – Ulm (France) June 1999

AWARDS, HONORS, AND FELLOWSHIPS Guggenheim Fellow, 2019 Fellow of the Econometric Society, 2018 Raymond Barre Visiting Professorship, Goethe University, Frankfurt 2016 Best Young French Economist Prize 2015, Le Monde, Cercle des Économistes Stanford Economics Distinguished Faculty Teaching Award, 2014 Best Paper Prize, American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, 2014 National Science Foundation CAREER Grant, 2013-2018 Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellow, 2012-2014 American Economic Review Excellence in Refereeing Award, 2009, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016

Last update: April 2019

Quarterly Journal of Economics Excellence in Refereeing Award, 2011, 2012 Journal of European Economic Association Excellence in Refereeing Award, 2013 Hellman Faculty Scholarship, 2012-2013 Rainer Arnhold Fellowship, Mulago Foundation, 2005-2007

PUBLICATIONS IN PEER-REVIEWED JOURNALS (REVERSE CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER) 1. Dupas, Pascaline, Anthony Keats and Jonathan Robinson (2019). “The Effect of Savings Accounts on Interpersonal Financial Relationships: Evidence from a Field Experiment in Rural Kenya”. Economic Journal 129 (617): 273-310. 2. Barak Oshri, Annie Hu, Peter Adelson, Xiao Chen, Pascaline Dupas, Jeremy Weinstein, Marshall Burke, David Lobell, Stefano Ermon (2018). “Infrastructure Quality Assessment in Africa using Satellite Imagery and Deep Learning”. Forthcoming, Proc. 24th ACM SIGKDD Conference, 2018. 3. Dupas, Pascaline, Dean Karlan, Jonathan Robinson and Diego Ubfal (2018). “Banking the Unbanked? Evidence from three Countries”. American Economic Journal: Applied Economics Vol. 10(2), pp. 257-97. 4. Dupas, Pascaline, Elise Huillery and Juliette Seban (2018). “Risk Information, Risk Salience, and Adolescent Sexual Behavior: Experimental Evidence from Cameroon”. Journal of Economic Organization and Behavior Vol. 145, pp. 151-175. 5. Dizon-Ross, Rebecca, Pascaline Dupas and Jonathan Robinson (2017). “Governance and Effectiveness of Public Health Subsidies: Evidence from Ghana, Kenya and Uganda”. Journal of Public Economics Vol. 156, pp. 150-169. 6. Peletz, Rachel, Cock-Esteb, Alicea, Ysenburg, Dorothea, Haji, Salim, Khush, Ranjiv and Dupas, Pascaline (2017). “The supply and demand for improved sanitation: Results from randomized pricing experiments in rural Tanzania.” Environmental Science & Technology 51 (12), pp 7138–7147. 7. Dupas, Pascaline, Vivian Hoffmann, and Alix Zwane (2016). “Targeting health subsidies through a non-price mechanism: A randomized controlled trial in Kenya”. Science, Vol. 353, Issue 6302, pp. 889-895. 8. Duflo, Esther, Pascaline Dupas and Michael Kremer (2015). “Education, HIV and Early Fertility: Experimental Evidence from Kenya”. American Economic Review. Vol. 105(9), pp. 2257-97. 9. Duflo, Esther, Pascaline Dupas and Michael Kremer (2015). “School Governance, Pupil-Teacher-Ratios, and Teacher Incentives: Experimental Evidence from Kenyan Primary Schools”. Journal of Public Economics Vol. 123, pp. 92-110. 10. Cohen, Jessica, Pascaline Dupas and Simone Schaner (2015). “Price Subsidies, Diagnostic Tests, and the Targeting of Malaria Treatment: Evidence from a Randomized Trial”. American Economic Review 105(2), pp. 609-645. 11. Benhassine, Najy, Florencia Devoto, , Pascaline Dupas and Victor Pouliquen (2015). “Turning a Shove into a Nudge: A ‘Labeled Cash Transfer’ for Education”. American Economic Journal: Economic Policy 7(3): 86-125. 12. Dupas, Pascaline (2014). “Short-Run Subsidies and Long-Run Adoption of New Health Products: Experimental Evidence from Kenya”. Econometrica 82(1): 197-228. 13. Dupas, Pascaline, and Jonathan Robinson (2013). “Why Don’t the Poor Save More? Evidence from Health Savings Experiments”. American Economic Review 103(4): 1138-71. 14. Dupas, Pascaline, and Jonathan Robinson (2013). “Savings Constraints and Microenterprise Development: Evidence from a Field Experiment”. American Economic Journal: Applied Economics 5(1): 163-92 15. Devoto, Florencia, Esther Duflo, Pascaline Dupas, William Parienté, Vincent Pons (2012). “Happiness on Tap: Piped Water Adoption in Urban Morocco”. American Economic Journal: Economic Policy 4(4): 68-99. 16. Dupas, Pascaline, and Jonathan Robinson (2012). “The (Hidden) Costs of Political Instability: Evidence from Kenya’s 2007 Election Crisis”. Journal of Development Economics 99(2): 314-329.

Pascaline Dupas CV, page 2

17. Bhattacharya, Debopam and Pascaline Dupas (2012). “Inferring Welfare Maximizing Treatment Assignment under Budget Constraints”. Journal of Econometrics, 167(1): 168-196. 18. Duflo, Esther, Pascaline Dupas and Michael Kremer (2011). “Peer Effects and the Impact of Tracking: Evidence from a Randomized Evaluation in Kenya.” American Economic Review, 101(5), pp. 1739-74. 19. Dupas, Pascaline (2011). “Do Teenagers respond to HIV Risk Information? Evidence from a field experiment in Kenya.” American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, 3(1), pp. 1-36. o Awarded the 2014 American Economic Journal: Applied Economics Best Paper Prize 20. Cohen, Jessica, and Pascaline Dupas (2010). “Free Distribution or Cost-Sharing? Evidence from a Randomized Malaria Prevention Experiment” Quarterly Journal of Economics, 125(1), pp. 1-45.

OTHER PUBLICATIONS 1. Dupas, Pascaline, and Edward Miguel (2017). “Impacts and Determinants of Health Levels in Low-Income Countries,” Handbook of Field Experiments, Vol. (2): 3-93, Abhijit Banerjee and Esther Duflo, editors. Elsevier. 2. Dupas, Pascaline, Sarah Green, Anthony Keats, and Jonathan Robinson (2016). “Challenges in Banking the Rural Poor: Evidence from Kenya's Western Province”. NBER volume African Successes: Modernization and Development. Sebastian Edwards, Simon Johnson, and David N. Weil, editors. University of Chicago Press. 3. Dupas, Pascaline (2014). “Getting Essential Health Products to Their End Users: Subsidize, but How Much?” Science Vol. 345, Issue 6202, pp. 1279-1281, 12 September 2014. 4. Dupas, Pascaline (2014). “Global Health Systems: Pricing and User Fees.” Elsevier Encyclopedia of Health Economics, vol. 2. Anthony J. Culyer, Ed. (Elsevier, San Diego, 2014). pp. 136-141. 5. Dupas, Pascaline (2011). “Health Behavior in Developing Countries.” Annual Review of Economics 3: 425-449. 6. Dupas, Pascaline, and Jonathan Robinson (2010). “Coping with Political Instability: Micro Evidence from Kenya’s 2007 Election Crisis.” American Economic Review: Papers and Proceedings, 100(2): 120-124. 7. Dupas, Pascaline (2009). “What matters (and what does not) in households' decision to invest in malaria prevention?” American Economic Review: Papers and Proceedings, 99(2): 224-30. 8. Duflo, Esther, Pascaline Dupas and Michael Kremer (2009). “Can Tracking Improve Learning? Evidence from Kenya.” Education Next, 9 (3), pp. 64-70. 9. Cohen, Daniel, and Pascaline Dupas (2000). “Comparing the Paths of the Unemployed in France and the United States.” Economie et Statistique, 332-333, pp. 17-26.

WORKING PAPERS 1. Basurto, Pia, Pascaline Dupas, and Jonathan Robinson (June 2018). “Decentralization and Efficiency of Subsidy Targeting: Evidence from Chiefs in Rural Malawi”. NBER Working Paper 23383. 2. Duflo, Esther, Pascaline Dupas and Michael Kremer (April 2017). “The Impact of Free Secondary Education: Experimental Evidence from Ghana”. 3. Dupas, Pascaline, Jonathan Robinson and Santiago Saavedra (January 2018). “Daily Needs, Income Targets and Labor Supply: Evidence from Kenya”. 4. Bhattacharya, Debopam, Pascaline Dupas and Shin Kanaya (April 2018). “Empirical Welfare Analysis under Social Interactions”.

Pascaline Dupas CV, page 3

5. Chuang, Erica, Pascaline Dupas, Elise Huillery and Juliette Seban (December 2018). “Sex, Lies and Measurement: Do Indirect Response survey methods work?”

WORK IN PROGRESS 1. Mechanism Design Meets Development: Selective Trials for Technology Adoption. Evidence from Kenya (with Sylvain Chassang and Erik Snowberg). 2. The Incidence of Public Insurance Subsidies for Private Health Care: Evidence from Rajasthan, India (with Radhika Jain) 3. Determinants of Fertility Preferences and Outcomes in Burkina Faso (with Seema Jayachandran, Adriana Lleras- Muney, Idrissa Ouili, and Pauline Rossi) 4. Parental Education and Child Cognitive Development: Experimental Evidence from Ghana (with Esther Duflo, Elizabeth Spelke, and Mark Walsh) 5. Community Health Workers, Subsidies and Safe Drinking Water: Experimental Evidence from Malawi (with Emily Wroe and Zach Wagner) 6. Addis Ababa Panel Study (with Marcel Fafchamps) 7. The role of information, accountability and resource gaps in explaining urban services quality in Ethiopia (with Daniel Agness) 8. Digitalization of Local Tax Collection in Urban Cote d’Ivoire (with Deivy Houeix) 9. Self-timed Credit Contracts: Evidence from Kenyan Farmers (with Daniel Agness, Sylvain Chassang and Erik Snowberg) 10. Investment Decisions with Endogenous Budget Share Allocations Inside the Household (with Nina Buchmann and Roberta Ziparo) 11. In Poverty or in Wealth: The Effects of Digital Credit Access in Malawi (with Valentina Brailovskaya, Eilin Francis and Jonathan Robinson) 12. Every word counts: An information intervention to encourage mothers to talk to infants (with Seema Jayachandran and Mark Walsh)

MAJOR ACTIVE RESEARCH GRANTS  $1,500,000 from Stanford Center on Global Poverty and Development. Stanford Economic Development Research Initiative (SEDRI). Role: Principal Investigator.  $1,200,000 from Fidelity Charitable. Burkina Faso Family Aspirations and Behaviors Study. Role: Principal Investigator.  $350,000 from Dioraphte Foundation. Coupons for Safe Drinking Water in East Africa. Role: Principal Investigator.  $350,000 from Hewlett Foundation. Transparency, Accountability, and Citizen Engagement in West Africa Initiative. Role: Principal Investigator.

CURRENT SERVICE WORK OUTSIDE HOME DEPARTMENT Rotating Member of the Executive Committee, Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab (JPAL) Co-Chair, J-PAL Health Sector Co-Chair, J-PAL Cash Transfers for Child Health Initiative (CaTCH) Board Member, Bureau for Research and Economic Analysis of Development (BREAD) Member of the Executive Committee, Stanford Center for African Studies (CAS) Member of the Steering Committee, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR) Member of the Steering Committee, Stanford Center on Global Poverty and Development (GPaD) Member, Stanford H&S Social Science Curriculum Committee Co-Chair, Social Problem Solving Initiative Design Team, Stanford University Long Range Planning

Pascaline Dupas CV, page 4