ÌÇÐÄvlog¹ÙÍø

The Harvard Center for International Development is home to faculty affiliates from each school at Harvard University, working across sectors in developing nations around the world.

Faculty research is published in a wide range of academic and policy venues and can be found through the feed and filters below. Select faculty research papers are highlighted in our Faculty Research Insights series on our blog, CID Voices.

CID working papers published by Harvard faculty, graduate students, and research fellows prior to 2024 can be found here

Showing results 1 - 10 of 37

Harvard Kennedy School Logo
 
Bruno S. Sergi
Vol. 34
The chapters published in this volume were presented at the SIBR 2023 Tokyo Conference on Interdisciplinary Business and Economic Research organised by the Society of…
Harvard Kennedy School Logo
 
Bruno S. Sergi
The Global South consists of emerging nations with increasing economic and political strength, drawing attention to their unique leadership challenges and opportunities. Visionary…
Harvard Kennedy School Logo
 
Ricardo Hausmann
Working Paper No. 239
In this report, we study Hermosillo's economic performance and assess critical issues affecting the city’s ability to achieve stronger economic growth. Although Hermosillo is far…
Harvard Kennedy School Logo
 
Dani Rodrik
The future of developing countries is in services as that that is where the jobs will be. Enhancing productivity in labor-absorbing services must be an essential priority, for…
Harvard Kennedy School Logo
 
Carmen Reinhart
Working Paper No. 32599
We study sovereign external debt crises with a focus on creditor losses, or "haircuts". Our sample covers 321 sovereign debt restructurings with external private creditors over…
Harvard Kennedy School Logo
 
Dani Rodrik
Working Paper No. 2023-07
In the context of a shift towards longer-term, public-value-oriented economic thinking, there is a real opportunity to reimagine the contracts that structure public-private…
Harvard Kennedy School Logo
 
Jie Bai
This paper studies the impact of FDI via quid pro quo (technology for market access) in facilitating knowledge spillover and quality upgrades. Our context is the Chinese auto-…
Harvard Kennedy School Logo
 
Gautam Nair
Working Paper No. RWP22-009