1st Edition
Statistical Tragedy in Africa? Evaluating the Database for African Economic Development
Foreword Morten Jerven
Introduction: Statistical Tragedy in Africa? Evaluating the Data Base for African Economic Development Morten Jerven and Deborah Johnston
1. The Political Economy of Bad Data: Evidence from African Survey and Administrative Statistics Justin Sandefur and Amanda Glassman
2. From Tragedy to Renaissance: Improving Agricultural Data for Better Policies Calogero Carletto, Dean Jolliffe and Raka Banerjee
3. The Invisibility of Wage Employment in Statistics on the Informal Economy in Africa: Causes and Consequences Matteo Rizzo, Blandina Kilama and Marc Wuyts
4. Poverty in African Households: the Limits of Survey and Census Representations Sara Randall and Ernestina Coast
5. The Making of the Middle-Class in Africa: Evidence from DHS Data Abebe Shimeles and Mthuli Ncube
6. Random Growth in Africa? Lessons from an Evaluation of the Growth Evidence on Botswana, Kenya, Tanzania and Zambia, 1965-1995 Morten Jerven
7. GDP Revisions and Updating Statistical Systems in Sub-Saharan Africa: Reports from the Statistical Offices in Nigeria, Liberia and Zimbabwe Morten Jerven, Yemi Kale, Magnus Ebo Duncan and Moffat Nyoni
Biography
Morten Jerven is an Associate Professor in the School for International Studies at Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, Canada, and Associate Professor in Global Change and International Relations at Norwegian University of Life Sciences in Ås, Norway.
Deborah Johnston is a Reader in Development Economics at SOAS, University of London, UK. She has published widely on poverty, HIV, nutrition, and labour in African countries, and published a recent book, Economics and HIV: The Sickness of Economics (Routledge, 2013).






