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female labour

Family planning program
STEG Working Paper Series

Demographic Transition and Structural Transformation

Tania Barham, Randall Kuhn, Brett McCully, Patrick S. Turner 18 June 2025
Gender
STEG Working Paper Series

Home Production and Gender Gap in Structural Change

Huoqing Cao, Chaoran Chen, Xican Xi 18 June 2025
SRG Web Graphic.png
STEG Project Policy Brief

Time Use and Household Welfare in a Structurally Changing Society: The Case of Ghana

Andrew Agyei-Holmes, Nana Amma Asante-Poku, Richmond Atta-Ankomah 17 June 2025
Agriculture
STEG Project Policy Brief

Labour Exchange Groups in Rural Tanzania: Can They Foster Development and Women’s Empowerment?

Christelle Dumas, Christian Arciniegas, Matthias Fahn 01 May 2025
Gender
STEG Project Policy Brief

Gender and labour market transitions in a structurally changing economy: Empirical evidence from Ghana

Richmond Atta-Ankomah, Nana Amma Asante-Poku, Andrew Agyei-Holmes 17 April 2025
PhD 699 Photo
STEG Project Policy Brief

Paternalistic Discrimination

Nina Buchmann, Carl Meyer, Colin D. Sullivan 31 January 2024
PhD 699 Photo
STEG Working Paper Series

Paternalistic Discrimination

Nina Buchmann, Carl Meyer, Colin D. Sullivan 30 January 2024
Women working - sorting seeds
Pathfinding Paper

Home Production, Women’s Market Work, and Structural Transformation

Taryn Dinkelman, Rachel Ngai 07 April 2021
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STEG is a research initiative funded by the UK Government's Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office that aims to provide a better understanding of structural change, productivity, and growth in low- and middle-income countries. Our research will help developing country governments, NGOs, and the private sector to design and implement strategies that better facilitate growth.

STEG is coordinated by CEPR

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