David Lam

University of Michigan, USA, and IZA@LISER, Luxembourg

World of Labour role

Author, Topic spokesperson

Expertise

Inequality in developing countries, Education, Youth unemployment, Demography, Brazil, South Africa

Country

United States

Languages

English - Native speaker

Media experience

Print, Digital, Radio

Email

davidl@umich.edu

Phone

1 7347633009

Current position

Professor in the Department of Economics and Research Professor in the Population Studies Center, University of Michigan, USA

Positions/functions as a policy advisor

Consultant or advisor to South African presidency, World Bank, United Nations High-Level Panel on Post-2015 Development Agenda, United Nations Population Division; Director, DFID/IZA Program on Growth and Labor Markets in Low-Income Countries

Past positions

Visiting Professor of Economics, University of Cape Town, 1997–1998, 2004–2006, and 2013–2014; Visiting Researcher, Institute for Applied Economic Research (IPEA), Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 1989–1990

Qualifications

PhD Economics, University of California, Berkeley, 1983

Selected publications

  • “How the world survived the population bomb: Lessons from fifty years of extraordinary demographic history.” Demography 48:4 (2011): 1231–1262. (Population Association of America Presidential Address).

  • “Schooling as a lottery: Racial differences in progress through school in urban South Africa.” Journal of Development Economics 95:2 (2011): 121–136 (with C. Ardington and M. Leibbrandt).

  • “Stages of the demographic transition from a child’s perspective: Family size, cohort size, and schooling.” Population and Development Review 34:2 (2008): 225–252 (with L. Marteleto).

  • “Effects of economic shocks on children’s employment and schooling in Brazil.” Journal of Development Economics 84:1 (2007): 188–214 (with S. Duryea and D. Levison).

  • “Effects of family background on earnings and returns to schooling: Evidence from Brazil.” Journal of Political Economy 101:4 (1993): 213–243 (with R. Schoeni).