Damian Clarke
Associate Professor
Economics
About me:
Damian Clarke is an Associate Professor in the Department of Economics at the University of Exeter, and the University of Chile. He is also a Research Fellow at IZA, and affilatied with the Millennium Institute for Research in Market Imperfections and Public Policy, the Essex Research Centre on Micro-Social Change, CAGE Warwick, the Instituto de Estudos para Políticas de Saúde Brazil, and the Centre for the Study of African Economies, Oxford
Damian's research is centred around maternal and child health, and family fertility decisions. In particular he studies the impact of public programs on maternal mortality and morbidity, early life health outcomes for children, and the determinants of parental investment in children. He is also interested in applied microeconometrics, and is an author of a number of open-source software routines for microeconometric methods.
Damian received his DPhil in Economics at the University of Oxford in 2016, and an MSc in Economics for Development at Oxford in 2012. He has provided policy inputs or background papers for a number of international organisations including the World Bank, UNESCO, UNU-WIDER, CAF Development Bank, and the Chilean Ministry of Education.
Interests:
- Labour economics
- Health, demographic and family economics
- Microeconometrics
Damian’s work on labour economics has covered themes such as human capital investment and labour supply, and been published in journal such as the Journal of the European Economics Association and the Review of Economics and Statistics. His work on health, demographic and family economics covers themes including early life health, maternal health and domestic violence, and has been published in journals such as The Economic Journal Demography, JEEA, and the Journal of Health Economics. He has a range of computational economics papers available in the Stata Journal and on open source platforms.
Current research interests include maternal and child health, domestic violence, health spending, contraceptive availability, and microeconometric methods.