Updated on 2023/03/31

写真a

 
MANGYO Eiji
 
Organization
Graduate School of Economics Economic Research Center Professor
Graduate School
Graduate School of Economics
Graduate School of International Development
Undergraduate School
School of Economics
Title
Professor
Contact information
メールアドレス

Degree 1

  1. Ph.D. in Economics ( 2005.12   University of Michigan, Ann Arbor ) 

Education 3

  1. University of Michigan, Ann Arbor   Graduate School, Division of Economics   Development Economics

    - 2005.5

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    Country: United States

  2. ミシガン大学   公共政策

    - 1998.5

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    Country: United States

  3. Hitotsubashi University   Faculty of Economics

    - 1992.3

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    Country: Japan

Professional Memberships 1

  1. American Economic Association (AEA)

 

Papers 5

  1. Relative Deprivation and Health: Which Reference Groups Matter? Reviewed

    Eiji Mangyo, Albert Park

    Journal of Human Resources   Vol. 46 ( 3 ) page: 459-481   2011

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    Authorship:Lead author   Language:English   Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)  

  2. Water Accessibility and Child Health: Use of the Leave-Out Strategy of Instruments Reviewed

    Dirga Kumar Lamichhane, Eiji Mangyo

    Journal of Health Economics   Vol. 30 ( 5 ) page: 1000-1010   2011

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    Authorship:Lead author   Language:English   Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)  

  3. Vulnerability of Households to Health Shocks: An Indonesian Study Reviewed

    Thi Nhu Nguyet, Eiji Mangyo

    Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies   Vol. 46 ( 2 ) page: 213-235   2010

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    Authorship:Lead author   Language:English   Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)  

  4. The Effect of Water Accessibility on Child Health in China Reviewed

    Eiji Mangyo

    Journal of Health Economics   Vol. 27 ( 5 ) page: 1343-1356   2008

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    Authorship:Lead author   Language:English   Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)  

  5. Who Benefits More from Higher Household Consumption? The Intra-household Allocation of Nutrients in China Reviewed

    Eiji Mangyo

    Journal of Development Economics   Vol. 86 ( 2 ) page: 296-312   2008

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    Authorship:Lead author   Language:English   Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)  

KAKENHI (Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research) 4

  1. Effects of daily nutrition intake during the in-utero period and in infancy on adult socioeconomic outcomes

    Grant number:22K01459  2022.4 - 2025.3

    Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research  Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (C)

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    Authorship:Principal investigator 

    Grant amount:\4160000 ( Direct Cost: \3200000 、 Indirect Cost:\960000 )

  2. A Study on Spatial Correlation of "Cross-Border Migration" within Greater Mekong Sub-region and Regional Safety Net Plan

    Grant number:21H00639  2021.4 - 2025.3

    Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research  Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (B)

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    Authorship:Coinvestigator(s) 

  3. SES differences in earthquake damages and their mechanisms

    Grant number:19K01625  2019.4 - 2022.3

    Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research  Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (C)

    Mangyo Eiji

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    Authorship:Principal investigator 

    Grant amount:\4290000 ( Direct Cost: \3300000 、 Indirect Cost:\990000 )

    We examined human and physical damages caused by the earthquake which struck Nepal in 2015 with a maximum seismic intensity of 8 or higher. Our contributions to the literature are twofold: (1) we did this analysis by socio-economic status (SES) group, and (2) as a mechanism for the difference in earthquake damage between SES groups, we studied difference in the robustness of residential houses between high and low SES groups. Main finding are as follows: 1. Differences in human and physical damages between high and low SES groups increased as the seismic intensity increased. 2. As the seismic intensity increased, the proportion of damages caused by differences in the robustness (building materials) of residential houses increased for both high and low SES groups. 3. The proportion of damages attributed to differences in the robustness (building materials) of residential houses is higher for low SES group than for high SES group at all seismic intensities.

  4. A mechanism through which SES affects health: a case of the arsenic mitigation campaign in Bangladesh

    Grant number:16K03619  2016.4 - 2019.3

    Mangyo Eiji

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    Authorship:Principal investigator 

    Grant amount:\4420000 ( Direct Cost: \3400000 、 Indirect Cost:\1020000 )

    We examine the impact of arsenic exposure on child health in Bangladesh. The
    geographic variation in groundwater arsenic level as well as the massive well testing and awareness campaign in the late 1990s offer a natural experiment inducing variation in child’s exposure to arsenic. Given the government’s efforts to encourage households to switch away from “unsafe” wells, areas with “unsafe” groundwater arsenic levels prior to the campaign had greater improvement in child height-for-age relative to areas with “safe” arsenic levels. Results are statistically significant for children from educated households but not for children from uneducated households.