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Mateusz Filipski

Researcher at International Food Policy Research Institute

Publications -  54
Citations -  1265

Mateusz Filipski is an academic researcher from International Food Policy Research Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cash transfers & Impact evaluation. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 49 publications receiving 985 citations. Previous affiliations of Mateusz Filipski include University of California, Davis & University of Georgia.

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Why Are Recessions Good for Your Health

TL;DR: A series of influential papers by Christopher J. Ruhm documents that recessions are “good for your health”—or, more specifically, that state-level mortality rates are strongly procyclical.
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The Best of Times, the Worst of Times: Understanding Pro-cyclical Mortality

TL;DR: This article found that cyclical changes in individuals' own employment-related behavior drives the relationship; own-group employment rates are not systematically related to own group mortality, and most additional deaths that occur when the economy is strong are among the elderly, particularly elderly women and those residing in nursing homes.
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Economic impact of refugees

TL;DR: Simulations using Monte Carlo methods reveal that cash aid to refugees creates significant positive income spillovers to host-country businesses and households, a finding relevant to development aid generally.
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Give a Man a Fishpond: Modeling the Impacts of Aquaculture in the Rural Economy

TL;DR: A Local Economy-wide Impact Evaluation (LEWIE) model is proposed which nests fish farm models within a general-equilibrium model of their local economy and finds that fish-farming, and in particular small-scale commercial aquaculture, may have a significant role to play in rural development and poverty reduction.
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The rapid rise of agricultural mechanization in Myanmar

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors use two pairs of complementary demand side (farm household) and supply side (agricultural machinery retailer) surveys, implemented in Myanmar in 2016 and 2017 across two major agro-ecological zones.