Authors
Alessandro Tarozzi, Aprajit Mahajan, Brian Blackburn, Dan Kopf, Lakshmi Krishnan, Joanne Yoong
Publication date
2014/7/1
Journal
American Economic Review
Volume
104
Issue
7
Pages
1909-1941
Publisher
American Economic Association
Description
We describe findings from the first large-scale cluster randomized controlled trial in a developing country that evaluates the uptake of a health-protecting technology, insecticide-treated bednets (ITNs), through micro-consumer loans, as compared to free distribution and control conditions. Despite a relatively high price, 52 percent of sample households purchased ITNs, highlighting the role of liquidity constraints in explaining earlier low adoption rates. We find mixed evidence of improvements in malaria indices. We interpret the results and their implications within the debate about cost sharing, sustainability and liquidity constraints in public health initiatives in developing countries. (JEL D12, G21, H51, I12, I18, O15, O18)
Total citations
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Scholar articles
A Tarozzi, A Mahajan, B Blackburn, D Kopf, L Krishnan… - Unpublished manuscript, Duke University, 2010