Lakshmi Iyer
Professor of Economics & Global Affairs, University of Notre Dame
Lakshmi Iyer is a professor of economics and global affairs at the University of Notre Dame (Indiana, USA). Her research areas are development economics and political economy, with a strong focus on Asia. She has examined the development consequences of many institutional factors, including colonial rule, the role of bureaucrats, decentralization, gender quotas, women’s political participation and the social identity of leaders. Her new lines of research examine the interplay between governance, global health and natural resource management. Her work has been published in leading academic journals in economics and political science.
Recent work by Lakshmi Iyer
-
The long shadow of British rule: India's colonial legacy
Drawing on nearly 250 years of Indian colonial history, new research examines how direct British rule and landlord-based land tenure shaped access to schools, health centres, roads, and agricultural productivity across Indian districts. Updated analysis shows that targeted post-colonial policies have erased many of these gaps, but income and fertiliser-use differentials linked to the land system remain.
Published 01.04.26
-
How expanding voting rights shaped politics in India
Voting rights alone did not transform political participation or competition in India, but they did shift government priorities in favour of the newly enfranchised voters.
Published 12.08.25
-
Where are the Indian female politicians?
When women win elections, does it inspire other women to run for candidacy or does it convince men to close ranks before the next election?
Published 17.05.19