Top 13 Quotes & Sayings by Esther Duflo

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a French economist Esther Duflo.
Last updated on December 18, 2024.
Esther Duflo

Esther Duflo, FBA is a French–American economist who is a professor of Poverty Alleviation and Development Economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). She is the co-founder and co-director of the Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab (J-PAL), which was established in 2003. She shared the 2019 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences with Abhijit Banerjee and Michael Kremer, "for their experimental approach to alleviating global poverty".

In a way, it has been an advantage for me to be a woman because there is always some academic committee that needs you to fill a quota!
Part of me always wanted to do something useful for the world. It came from my mother. She is a paediatrician and she was active in a small NGO for the child victims of war.
The logic is that when you provide schools or any social service to people, they have no choice. They have to take what you give them, because they don't have the money to pay for schools themselves; that's why you provide schools in the first place.
For millions of girls around the world, motherhood comes too early. Those who bear children as adolescents suffer higher maternal mortality and morbidity rates, and their children are more likely to die in infancy.
I've never had a TV in my whole life. Television passed by me. — © Esther Duflo
I've never had a TV in my whole life. Television passed by me.
What is lacking in India are decent social services. The health service is a disaster. Education is a disaster.
The differences in income between the poor world and the rich world are so great that people have to be interested.
Giving more to women will, to some extent, come at the expense of men. People sometimes try to sweep that under the rug by saying you will create so much additional resources that everyone will be better off. I don't think that's true.
I don't go to the beach. There is no value in going to the beach. If I did go I would probably read economics books.
Paternalism is everywhere in our lives. We have to immunise our children unless we are upset about it. In India, it is the opposite. It is possible to get your kids immunised, but you really have to want to.
The poor get bored the same as the rest of us. Their happiness might be as important to them as their health.
And there is a lot of idiosyncrasy. But there are also regularities and phenomena. And what the data is going to be able to do - if there's enough of it - is uncover, in the mess and the noise of the world, some lines of music that actually have harmony. It's there, somewhere.
In technology, we spend so much time experimenting, fine-tuning, getting the absolute cheapest way to do something - so why aren't we doing that with social policy?
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