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Posts by Jeffrey Bloem

Using Social Media for Professional Visibility
Using Social Media for Professional Visibility YouTube video by Ag Econ (AAEA)

🎉First post here

I had the privilege of moderating a fantastic @aaea-economics.bsky.social webinar today on using social media for professional visibility 🌾💻

If you missed the live session, you can catch the full recording on youtube: www.youtube.com/watch?v=b0fM...

1 week ago 1 1 1 0
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Why/how should multiple hypothesis testing be done differently in empirical work? We give an economic foundation trading off research costs and incentives with implications for empirical practice.

New paper by Viviano, Wüthrich, and Niehaus:

www.restud.com/a-model-of-m...

#REStud
#EconSky

1 week ago 13 2 0 1
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Agricultural technology adoption and deforestation: Evidence from a randomized control trial We study the effect of the adoption of improved agricultural inputs on deforestation using a randomized control trial in Nigeria which introduced a mo…

Some evidence of the improved agricultural productivity -> reduced deforestation link here: www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...

2 weeks ago 0 0 0 0

Yikes! The knock on effects of climate change seem quite bad…

The upside of this is that increasing agricultural productivity, and adaptation to a changing climate, can reduce deforestation pressures…

Let’s slow climate change and increase agricultural productivity!

2 weeks ago 5 1 1 0
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@jeffbloem.bsky.social, Noah Wexler, and I got a Little Lebowski Achievement Award for our 2024 article on the front-door criterion.

Joking aside, this is very nice. It took a while (and many submissions and iterations of the paper) to get this published.

2 weeks ago 12 1 0 0
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Shaken, but Not Deterred : Acute Stressors and the Formation of Hope and Aspirations among Tertiary-Educated Youth in Myanmar in the Aftermath of the 2025 Earthquake Although hope and aspirations are increasingly considered to be both intrinsically and instrumentally valuable, quantitative evidence on the formation of these factors is .

New WB Policy Research Working Paper: “Shaken, but Not Deterred : Acute Stressors and the Formation of Hope and Aspirations among Tertiary-Educated Youth in Myanmar in the Aftermath of the 2025 Earthquake” - check it out!

4 weeks ago 0 0 0 0
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The Future in Mind: Aspirations and Long-Term Outcomes in Rural Ethiopia* Abstract. Aspirations may condition the future-oriented choices of individuals and thus may play a role in the persistence of poverty or the effort to brea

Recently accepted by #QJE: “The Future in Mind: Aspirations and Long-Term Outcomes in Rural Ethiopia,” by Bernard, Dercon (@gamblingondev.bsky.social), Orkin, Schinaia, and Taffesse (@astaffesse.bsky.social): doi.org/10.1093/qje/...

2 months ago 5 3 0 1
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Insuring peace: Index-based livestock insurance, droughts, and conflict* Abstract. We provide quasi-experimental evidence of how an innovative market-based solution using remote-sensing technology can mitigate drought-induced co

Recently accepted by #QJE: “Insuring peace: Index-based livestock insurance, droughts, and conflict,” by Gehring (@kaigehring.bsky.social) and Schaudt (@paulschaudt.bskz.social): doi.org/10.1093/qje/...

2 months ago 12 7 0 3
Video

🆕 African agriculture's underappreciated supply side

Today on VoxDevTalks, @hopecm.bsky.social (UIUC) discusses how understanding the risks, incentives, and constraints faced by agro-dealers is essential for sustained productivity gains: voxdev.org/topic/agricu...

2 months ago 7 5 0 1
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GitHub - echolab-stanford/heat: R package heat: Harmonized Environmental Exposure Aggregation Tools R package heat: Harmonized Environmental Exposure Aggregation Tools - echolab-stanford/heat

Excited to share a new R package: 𝗵𝗲𝗮𝘁 🌡️

`heat` makes it easier to work with climate or other gridded data in applied research, providing a comprehensive + optimized set of tools to compute environmental exposures for admin boundaries or points from gridded/point data.

github.com/echolab-stan...

3 months ago 41 21 3 0
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What would it cost to end extreme poverty?

"We estimate that reducing the poverty rate to 1% ... would cost $170B nominal per year."

"The results correspond to a cost of (approximately) ending extreme poverty of roughly 0.3% of global GDP."

4 months ago 113 50 4 4

Hola Arepa is also serves excellent food!

4 months ago 0 0 0 0
Measuring Food Security with U.S. Federal Data – Use It for Good

Did you hear the USDA plans to cease data collection for the CPS Food Security supplement? We have a blog post to give you more information. If you want to sign a letter asking for data collection to continue, see the threaded opportunities below. blog.popdata.org/food-securit...

6 months ago 9 9 2 1
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Evidence from the same context + the same team (now adding @JeffBloem) that while depression ⬆️ among women in the perinatal period in S Africa, exposure to the grant during the perinatal period eliminates this increased risk
www.dropbox.com/scl/...

6 months ago 1 1 1 0
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Intensification or expansion? A new approach to measuring agricultural change Drawing on a randomised controlled trial among rice farmers in Nigeria, we introduce a new method for linking village-level interventions with high-resolution earth observation data – which captures s...

🆕 Intensification or expansion? A new approach to measuring agricultural change

Today on VoxDev, @jeffbloem.bsky.social (@ifpri.org) & Clark Lundberg (San Diego State University) discuss the impact of agricultural technology adoption on deforestation in Nigeria: voxdev.org/topic/agricu...

7 months ago 6 3 0 1
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Icymi. . .@ifpri is on fire in the latest issue of JDE (well, soon-to-be the Jan 2026 issue of JDE) with six separate papers from 7 different researchers

7 months ago 8 2 1 0
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Agrifood value chain employment and compensation shift with structural transformation - Nature Food The traditional structural transformation narrative emphasizes intersectoral labour reallocation out of agriculture. This study presents ten stylized facts about how employment and compensation evolve...

Read more here: www.nature.com/articles/s43...

7 months ago 0 0 0 0

… Women disproportionately move from primary production to downstream, consumer-facing retail and food service, whereas men migrate to better-paying midstream jobs, increasing gender pay inequality within the value chain."

7 months ago 0 0 1 0

From the abstract, "As incomes grow, labour exits primary production while downstream agrifood value chain segments maintain a steady economy-wide employment share—offering jobs that pay better than farm work…

7 months ago 0 0 1 0
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In a new paper published in Nature Food, Jing Yi, Shiyun Jiang, Dianna Tran, Miguel Gόmez, Patrick Canning, Christopher Barrett, and I show evidence of shifts in agrifood value chain employment and compensation amid the structural transformation process.

7 months ago 1 1 1 0

This traditional narrative, however, ignores whether workers exit agrifood value chains entirely or merely migrate within them.

7 months ago 0 0 1 0

Anyone who has studied development economics has learned about the structural transformation of national economies that occurs amid the development process. The traditional narrative emphasizes intersectoral labour reallocation out of agriculture and into manufacturing and services.

7 months ago 0 0 1 0
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Nature’s ‘double dividend’ from agricultural technology adoption A new form of fertilizer offers advantages.

🆕 #Blog Nature’s ‘double dividend’ from agricultural technology adoption

🖋️ By @jeffbloem.bsky.social.

🔗 Read the full story here: on.cgiar.org/4oR3GUA

@cgiar.org

8 months ago 7 3 0 0
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Nature’s ‘double dividend’ from agricultural technology adoption A new form of fertilizer offers advantages.

New on the @ifpri.org blog today: “Nature’s ‘double dividend’ from agricultural technology adoption” www.ifpri.org/blog/natures...

8 months ago 5 0 0 0
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Webinar in Finance and Development (WEFIDEV) This form collects interest for presentations in the fall season of the Webinar series in Finance and Development (WEFIDEV) for junior scholars working on finance topics in developing countries. We ar...

The #WEFIDEV #webinar series is back this fall!

We are looking for *preliminary or early-stage work* in #Finance and #Development to be presented

We also aim to have a session devoted to job candidates in finance and development on the market this fall

Submit:
docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1F...

8 months ago 4 3 0 1
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Sources of bias when measuring women’s empowerment in fragile and conflict-affected settings: a story of four case studies Accurately measuring women’s empowerment systematically across a variety of settings is critical to ensure equal access to market participation, control of the use of productive resources, opportuniti...

New on the Engendering data blog: “Sources of bias when measuring women’s empowerment in fragile and conflict-affected settings: a story of four case studies”

gender.cgiar.org/news/sources...

8 months ago 1 1 0 0
This graphic illustrates the distribution of the labor force across different sectors—agriculture, industry, and services—based on income levels of countries in 2023.

On the left, there is a stacked bar representing low-income countries, where 59% of the workforce is in agriculture, 10% in industry, and 31% in services. Next, the lower-middle-income group shows a breakdown of 40% in agriculture, 23% in industry, and 37% in services. The upper-middle-income countries have 21% in agriculture, 28% in industry, and 51% in services. Finally, in high-income countries, only 3% of the labor force is in agriculture, with 23% in industry and 74% in services.

The title highlights the trend that higher-income countries have fewer agricultural workers and a greater proportion involved in industry and services. The footer indicates the data source is the International Labor Organization (2025)

This graphic illustrates the distribution of the labor force across different sectors—agriculture, industry, and services—based on income levels of countries in 2023. On the left, there is a stacked bar representing low-income countries, where 59% of the workforce is in agriculture, 10% in industry, and 31% in services. Next, the lower-middle-income group shows a breakdown of 40% in agriculture, 23% in industry, and 37% in services. The upper-middle-income countries have 21% in agriculture, 28% in industry, and 51% in services. Finally, in high-income countries, only 3% of the labor force is in agriculture, with 23% in industry and 74% in services. The title highlights the trend that higher-income countries have fewer agricultural workers and a greater proportion involved in industry and services. The footer indicates the data source is the International Labor Organization (2025)

In low-income countries, most people work in farming; in richer countries, they work in services

8 months ago 58 14 2 3
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Agricultural technology adoption and deforestation: Evidence from a randomized control trial We study the effect of the adoption of improved agricultural inputs on deforestation using a randomized control trial in Nigeria which introduced a mo…

Really excited to have this paper published in the JDE! Available online today, blog post and more coming soon…

“Agricultural technology adoption and deforestation: Evidence from a randomized control trial” co-authored with Clark Lundberg

www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...

8 months ago 6 3 0 0
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Literally joined this platform (finally) to share this AEDE blog. If you are not heartbroken at the scale of child suffering in Gaza, you are not paying attention. Call your federal rep — at the very least. u.osu.edu/aede/2025/07...

8 months ago 9 3 1 0
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