No. 45 Gertler and van der Gaag, Measuring the Willingness to Pay for Social Services in Developing Countries |
No. 46 Vijverberg, Nonagricultural Family Enterprises in Cte d'Ivoire: A Descriptive Analysis |
No. 47 Glewwe and de Tray, The Poor during Adjustment: A Case Study of Cte d'Ivoire |
No. 48 Glewwe and van der Gaag, Confronting Poverty in Developing Countries: Definitions, Information, and Policies |
No. 49 Scott and Amenuvegbe, Sample Designs for the Living Standards Surveys in Ghana and Mauritania/Plans de sondage pour les enqutes sur le niveau de vie au Ghana et en Mauritanie |
No. 50 Laraki, Food Subsidies: A Case Study of Price Reform in Morocco (also in French, 50F) |
No. 51 Strauss and Mehra, Child Anthropometry in Cte d'Ivoire: Estimates from Two Surveys, 1985 and 1986 |
No. 52 van der Gaag, Stelcner, and Vijverberg, Public-Private Sector Wage Comparisons and Moonlighting in Developing Countries: Evidence from Cte d'Ivoire and Peru |
No. 53 Ainsworth, Socioeconomic Determinants of Fertility in Cte d'Ivoire |
No. 54 Gertler and Glewwe, The Willingness to Payfor Education in Developing Countries: Evidence from Rural Peru |
No. 55 Levy and Newman, Rigidit des salaires: Donnes microconomiques et macroconomiques sur l'ajustement du march du travail dans le secteur moderne (in French only) |
No. 56 Glewwe and de Tray, The Poor in Latin America during Adjustment: A Case Study of Peru |
No. 57 Alderman and Gertler, The Substitutability of Public and Private Health Carefor the Treatment of Children in Pakistan |
No. 58 Rosenhouse, Identifying the Poor: Is "Headship" a Useful Concept? |
No. 59 Vijverberg, Labor Market Performance as a Determinant of Migration |
No. 60 Jimenez and Cox, The Relative Effectiveness of Private and Public Schools: Evidencefrom Two Developing Countries |
No. 61 Kakwani, Large Sample Distribution of Several Inequality Measures: With Application to Cte d'Ivoire |
No. 62 Kakwani, Testing for Significance of Poverty Differences: With Application to Cte d'Ivoire |
No. 63 Kakwani, Poverty and Economic Growth: With Application to Cte d'Ivoire |
No. 64 Moock, Musgrove, and Stelcner, Education and Earnings in Peru's Informal Nonfarm Family Enterprises |
No. 65 Alderman and Kozel, Formal and Informal Sector Wage Determination in Urban Low-Income Neighborhoods in Pakistan |
No. 66 Vijverberg and van der Gaag, Testing for Labor Market Duality: The Private Wage Sector in Cte d'Ivoire |
No. 67 King, Does Education Pay in the Labor Market? The Labor Force Participation, Occupation, and Earnings of Peruvian Women |
No. 68 Kozel, The Composition and Distribution of Income in Cte d'Ivoire |
No. 69 Deaton, Price Elasticities from Survey Data: Extensions and Indonesian Results |
No. 70 Glewwe, Efficient Allocation of Transfers to the Poor: The Problem of Unobserved Household Income |
No. 71 Glewwe, Investigating the Determinants of Household Welfare in Cte d'Ivoire |
No. 72 Pitt and Rosenzweig, The Selectivity of Fertility and the Determinants of Human Capital Investments: Parametric and Semiparametric Estimates |
No. 73 Jacoby, Shadow Wages and Peasant Family Labor Supply: An Econometric Application to the Peruvian Sierra |
No. 74 Behrman, The Action of Human Resources and Poverty on One Another: What We Have Yet to Learn |
No. 75 Glewwe and Twum-Baah, The Distribution of Welfare in Ghana, 1987-88 |
No. 76 Glewwe, Schooling, Skills, and the Returns to Government Investment in Education: An Exploration Using Data from Ghana |
No. 77 Newman, Jorgensen, and Pradhan, Workers' Benefits from Bolivia's Emergency Social Fund |
No. 78 Vijverberg, Dual Selection Criteria with Multiple Alternatives: Migration, Work Status, and Wages |
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