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Kathleen Beegle

Senior Economist
KATHLEEN BEEGLE is an Senior Economist in the Development Research Group.  She is currently working on studies of socio-economic and gender dimensions of HIV/AIDS in Sub-Saharan Africa.  Current empirical studies underway include the examination of coping strategies among households in Tanzania using a 13-year longitudinal survey and a study of the impact of gender income inequality on the spread of HIV/AIDS in Kenya.  Other on-going work focuses on the causes and consequences of child labor, and the dependency of households on food aid in Malawi.  As member of the World Bank Living Standards Measurement Study team, she has expertise in the design and implementation of household survey operations and use of household surveys for poverty and policy analysis.  Prior to joining the World Bank, she was an economist at RAND, a non-profit research institution.  She completed her Ph.D. in Economics from Michigan State University in 1997.

The author's works below are drawn from the World Bank's institutional archives. You can also download other documents by this author.


World Bank working papers and publications

1 .What does variation in survey design reveal about the nature of measurement errors in household consumption ?
2 .Migration and the transition to adulthood in contemporary Malawi
3 .Family planning and fertility : estimating program effects using cross-sectional data
4 .Reliability of recall in agricultural data
5 .Methods of household consumption measurement through surveys : experimental results from Tanzania
6 .Explaining variation in child labor statistics
7 .Do labor statistics depend on how and to whom the questions are asked ? results from a survey experiment in Tanzania
8 .Demographic and socioeconomic patterns of HIV/AIDS prevalence in Africa
9 .The long-run impacts of adult deaths on older household members in Tanzania
10 .Frame-of-reference bias in subjective welfare regressions
11 .Orphanhood and the living arrangements of children in sub-saharan Africa
12 .Migration and economic mobility in Tanzania : evidence from a tracking survey
13 .The consequences of child labor : evidence from longitudinal data in rural Tanzania
14 .The long-run impact of orphanhood
15 .Adult mortality and children's transition into marriage
16 .Adult mortality and consumption growth in the age of HIV/AIDS
17 .Forgone earnings from smoking : evidence for a developing country
18 .The effect of school type on academic achievement : evidence from Indonesia
19 .Why should we care about child labor? The education, labor market, and health consequences of child labor
20 .Child labor, income shocks, and access to credit
21 .Labor effects of adult mortality in Tanzanian households
22 .The World Bank economic review 10(1)




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