
Douglas Gollin
Professor of Development Economics, University of Oxford
Doug Gollin’s research focusses on economic development and growth, with particular interests in agriculture and structural transformation. His work brings a general equilibrium perspective to issues such as: sectoral differences in productivity; the impacts of agricultural technologies; the role of transport costs in shaping spatial patterns of development; the importance of small firms and self employment in poor countries; and the macroeconomic effects of disease.
Doug Gollin joined Oxford in October 2012 after spending 16 years on the faculty of Williams College in the United States, where he retains an affiliation. He is a visiting fellow at the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies. He chairs the Standing Panel on Impact Assessment of the CGIAR, a consortium of international agricultural research organisations. He also works with the International Growth Centre and a number of NGOs involved in policy-oriented research on development.
He is currently a Managing Editor of the Journal of African Economies and an Associate Editor for the Journal of Development Economics and Oxford Development Studies. Doug Gollin holds an AB degree from Harvard University and an MA from Yale University. He received his PhD in economics from the University of Minnesota in 1996.
Recent work by Douglas Gollin
-
Spatial frictions and high-frequency human mobility: Evidence from three African countries
Insights from a year of smartphone app data suggest high levels of spatial mobility
Articles : Macroeconomics & Growth
Paul Blanchard Douglas Gollin Martina Kirchberger
Published 31.10.22
-
The long-run development impacts of agricultural productivity gains: Evidence from irrigation canals in India
Evidence from canals in India shows that labour mobility is a key adjustment channel to agricultural growth
Sam Asher Alison Campion Douglas Gollin Paul Novosad
Published 21.10.22
-
When agriculture drives development: Lessons from the Green Revolution
Investments in agricultural technology have substantially improved living standards in the poorest places on our planet over the past half century
Douglas Gollin Casper Worm Hansen Asger Mose Wingender
Published 06.09.21
-
Measuring living standards in African cities and rural areas
It’s no wonder that people are moving to cities. Urban areas offer better amenities and, on average, pay higher wages than rural areas.
Articles : Labour Markets & Migration
Douglas Gollin Martina Kirchberger David Lagakos
Published 02.10.17
-
Urbanisation with and without industrialisation
Resource-exporting countries urbanise without acquiring the industrial sectors typically associated with development
Articles : Infrastructure & Urbanisation
Dietrich Vollrath Rémi Jedwab Douglas Gollin
Published 09.03.16