Antonella Bancalari

University of St Andrews
Antonella Bancalari

Antonella Bancalari is an Assistant Professor at the School of Economics and Finance, University of St Andrews. She is also a Research Associate at the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) and the Inter-American Development Bank (IADB). She has completed her Ph.D. at the Department of Social Policy, London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE). She has also served as Consultant for the Government of Peru. Her research lies at the intersection of development, health, and public economics. She investigates the principles underlying effective public goods delivery and its impact on early-life mortality and health. More details about her research can be found on her personal website.

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Antonella Bancalari

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Incentivising quality of public infrastructure: Does it work?

Community toilets in slums are often poorly maintained, and upgrading facilities is difficult due to low willingness-to-pay among potential users and ‘free riding’. Based on an experiment in Uttar Pradesh, this article examines the impact of one-time facility upgrade and cash incentives to caretakers. While there are improvements in the quality of facilities and reduced free-riding, more residents practise open defecation, with poor public health outcomes.

08 October 2021
Human Development
Human Development

Covid-19: Debunking fake news among slum-dwellers

Urban slum-dwellers are among the groups that are most at-risk of Covid-19, and their precarious situation is further compounded by rampant misinformation regarding the Virus. Based on a survey of about 4,000 households in slum areas in Uttar Pradesh, this article shows that recorded phone messages from doctors giving information on Covid-19 – along with high financial incentives to pay attention – can debunk related fake news.

21 January 2021
Human Development
Human Development
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Covid-19: Willingness to vaccinate among slum-dwellers

Vaccination is among the success stories in modern-day medicine, and is seen by the WHO as a key element of the response to the Covid-19 pandemic. In this note, Augsburg et al. discuss findings from a survey of 4,000 slum dwellers in two cities of Uttar Pradesh, on their willingness to vaccinate and pay for it. They contend that, as billions are poured into a vaccine’s development and tackling supply difficulties, policymakers should also prepare for the next challenges: compliance and ability to pay.

05 August 2020
Poverty Inequality
Poverty & Inequality
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