2016 Citations 

Adjaye-Gbewonyo, K., Avendano, M., Subramanian, S. V. and Kawachi, I. (2016). Income inequality and depressive symptoms in South Africa: A longitudinal analysis of the National Income Dynamics Study. Health & place 42, 37-46.

Ambler, K. (2016). Bargaining with Grandma: The Impact of the South African Pension on Household Decision-Making. Journal of Human Resources 51(4), 900-932.

Ardington, C. and Little, M. (2016). The Impact of Maternal Death on Children’s Health and Education Outcomes. Cape Town: SALDRU, University of Cape Town. SALDRU Working Paper Number 184 /NIDS Discussion Paper 2016/11.

Bassier, I. (2016). Broadening the scope of inequality of opportunity: Intergenerational transmission and brute luck. (Honours Long Paper, University of Cape Town)

Bigsten, A. (2016). Determinants of the Evolution of Inequality in Africa. Journal of African Economies 27(1), 127-148.

Biyase, M. (2016). A simple analysis of the effect of the child support grant on school enrolment in South Africa. Public and Municipal Finance, 5(1), 14-17.

Biyase, M. and Zwane, T. (2016). The impact of the Child Support Grant on grade repetition and child hunger: evaluating the South African experience using propensity score matching. Studia Universitatis Babes-Bolyai 61(2), 67-78.

Biyase, M., & Tregenna, F. (2016). Determinants of remittances in South Africa. Cape Town: SALDRU, University of Cape Town. SALDRU Working Paper Number 176/ NIDS Discussion Paper 2016/3.

Branson, N. and Byker, T. (2016). Causes and Consequences of Teen Childbearing: Evidence from a Reproductive Health Intervention in South Africa. SALDRU Working Paper, no. 166.

Brey, Y. (2016). Determinants of South African Household Savings. (Honours Long Paper, University of Cape Town)

Bryer, M. (2016). Investigating the Determinants of High School Dropout: Revised Evidence in South Africa. (Honours Long Paper, University of Cape Town)

Burger, R. P., Klasen, S. and Zoch, A. (2016). Estimating income mobility when income is measured with error: The case of South Africa. ERSA Working Paper, no. 607.

Cassim, A., Lilenstein, K., Oosthuizen, M., and Steenkamp, F. (2016). Informality and inclusive growth in Sub-Saharan Africa. IDS Working Paper, no. 470.

Chinhema, M., Brophy, T., Brown, M., Leibbrandt, M., Mlatsheni, C., & Woolard, I., eds. (2016). National Income Dynamics Study Panel User Manual. National Income Dynamics Study, University of Cape Town.

Choonoo, S. (2016). Developments in the South African Credit Market and Analysis on Indebted Consumers using NIDS Data. (Master’s Thesis, University of Cape Town)

Coovadia, F. (2016). How does household resource deprivation affect grade repetition in South Africa? (Honours Long Paper, University of Cape Town)

d’Agostino, G. and Scarlato, M. (2016). Gender Inequality in South African Labour Market: the Impact of the Child Support Grant. MPRA Working Paper, no. 72523.

Dikgang, J. and Muchapondwa, E. (2016). The determination of park fees in support of benefit sharing in Southern Africa. Tourism Economics 23(6), 1165-1183

Ebrahim, A., Leibbrandt, M. and Woolard, I. (2016). Strategies of the Unemployed In South Africa: Does Moving Allow The Unemployed To Get Ahead? Africanus 46(1), 52-75.

Essers, D. (2016). South African Labour Market Transitions since the Global Financial and Economic Crisis: Evidence from two Longitudinal Datasets. Journal of African Economies 26(2), 192-222.

Eyal, K. (2016). Follow the Child: The Effect of an Unconditional Cash Transfer on Adolescent Human Capital and Mental Health. (Doctoral dissertation, University of Cape Town)

Eyal, K. and Njozela, L.  (2016). What difference does a year make?  The cumulative effect of missing cash transfers on schooling attainment. Cape Town: SALDRU, University of Cape Town. SALDRU Working Paper Number 186/ NIDS Discussion Paper 2016/13.

Finn, A. and Leibbrandt, M. (2016). The dynamics of poverty in South Africa. Cape Town: SALDRU, University of Cape Town. SALDRU Working Paper Number 174/ NIDS Discussion Paper 2016/1.

Finn, A., Leibbrandt, M., & Ranchhod, V. (2016). Patterns of persistence: Intergenerational mobility and education in South Africa. Cape Town: SALDRU, University of Cape Town. SALDRU Working Paper Number 175/NIDS Discussion Paper 2016/2.

Fitzhenry, N. (2016). Miles to Go: An Investigation into the Impact of School Accessibility on Educational Outcomes. (Honours Long Paper, University of Cape Town)

Flatø, M., Muttarak, R. and Pelser, A. (2016). Women, Weather, and Woes: The Triangular Dynamics of Female-Headed Households, Economic Vulnerability, and Climate Variability in South Africa. World Development 90, 41-62.

Garlick, J., Leibbrandt, M. and Levinsohn, J. (2016). Individual Migration and Household Incomes. No. w22326. National Bureau of Economic Research, 2016.

Grinspun, A. (2016). No small change: The multiple impacts of the Child Support Grant on child and adolescent well-being. In Delany, A., Jehoma, S. and Lake, L. (2016) South African Child Gauge 2016 (pp. 44-54) Cape Town: Children’s Institute, University of Cape Town

Gurney, S. (2016). The Intergenerational Transmission of Trust in South Africa. (Honours Long Paper, University of Cape Town)

Hall, K. (2016). Maternal and child migration in post-apartheid South Africa: Evidence from the NIDS panel study. Cape Town: SALDRU, University of Cape Town. SALDRU Working Paper Number 178/ NIDS Discussion Paper 2016/5.

Hall, K. and Budlender, D. (2016). Children’s contexts: Household living arrangements, poverty and care. In Delany, A., Jehoma, S. and Lake, L. (2016) South African Child Gauge 2016 (pp. 33-38) Cape Town: Children’s Institute, University of Cape Town.

Harji, K. and Jackson, E. T. (2016). Assessing Market-Based Solutions: Lessons from Evaluating a Youth Employment Initiative. New York, NY: Evaluation Office, Rockefeller Foundation.

Harris, T. (2016). Household electricity access and household dynamics: Insights into the links between electricity access and household dynamics in South Africa between 2008 and 2012. (Master’s Thesis, University of Cape Town)

Harris, T., Collinson, M. and Wittenberg, M. (2016). Aiming for a moving target: The dynamics of household electricity access in a developing context. SALDRU Working Paper, no. 195.

Hundenborn, J., Woolard, I. and Leibbrandt, M. (2016). Drivers of Inequality in South Africa. Cape Town: SALDRU, University of Cape Town. SALDRU Working Paper, no. 194/NIDS Discussion Paper 2016/16.

Idahosa, L. O. and Van Dijk, J. T. (2016). Twenty Years of Freedom: The Role of the Old Persons Grant in Addressing Unemployment and Inequality in a Young Democracy. Conference: 12th Development Dialogue, The Hague, 16-17 October, 2014.

Jehoma, S. and Guarnieri, E. (2016). Universalisation of the Child Support Grant. In Delany, A., Jehoma, S. and Lake, L. (2016) South African Child Gauge 2016 (pp. 80-83) Cape Town: Children’s Institute, University of Cape Town.

Kannemeyer, C. (2016). Subjective Well-Being Adult South Africans’ Life Satisfaction (2008-2014). Cape Town: SALDRU, University of Cape Town. SALDRU Working Paper Number 177/ NIDS Discussion Paper 2016/4.

Kgongwana, P. (2016). The Determinants of Obesity. (Honours Long Paper, University of Cape Town)

Kotzé, J. and van der Berg, S. (2016). Investigating cognitive performance differentials by socio-economic status: Comparing Sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America: Towards a new methodology. Third Lisbon Research Workshop on Economics, Statistics and Econometrics of Education. 2016.

Kollamparambil, U. (2016). Impact of internal in-migration on income inequality in receiving areas: A district level study of South Africa. ERSA Working Paper, no. 646.

Mackett, O. (2016). A gender-based investigation of the determinants of labour market outcomes in the South African labour market. (Master’s Thesis, University of Witwatersrand).

Maughan-Brown, B., Lloyd, N., Bor, J. and Venkataramani, A. S. (2016). Changes in self-reported HIV testing during South Africa’s 2010/2011 national testing campaign: gains and shortfalls. Journal of the International AIDS Society 19(1), 20658.

Mills, R. (2016). The distribution and severity of alcohol consumption in South Africa between 2008 and 2015. (Honours Long Paper, University of Cape Town)

Mokobane, M. (2016). Competing-Risks Analysis of Unemployment Duration amongst Youth in South Africa. (Honours Long Paper, University of Cape Town)

Moodley, J. (2016). Education on an Equal Basis: A Comparison of Persons with and without Disabilities in South Africa. International Journal of Disability, Development and Education 64(3), 283-293.
Moodley, J. and Slijper, S. F. (2016). The child support grant and young motherhood: exploring correlates of depressive symptomology. The Social Work Practitioner-Researcher 28(2), 108-120.

Muchiri, S. M. M. (2016). The Impact of Cash Transfers on Labour Force Participation and Household Consumption: Evidence from Post-Apartheid South Africa. (Doctoral dissertation, University of Kentucky)

Mukong A. K. (2016). Peer Networks and Tobacco Consumption in South Africa. ERSA Working Paper, no. 586.

Mulcahy, K. and Kollamparambil, U. (2016). The Impact of Rural-Urban Migration on Subjective Well-Being in South Africa. The Journal of Development Studies, 52(9), 1357-1371.

Ngidi, B. (2016). Food Price Inflation and the Poor. (Master’s Thesis, University of Witwatersrand

Norling, J. F. (2016). Essays on the Economics of Fertility. (Doctoral dissertation, University of Michigan).

Nwosu, C. O. (2016). The impact of health on the employment and earnings of young South Africans. ERSA Working Paper, no. 601.
Obi, A. and Tafa, S. (2016). The Determinants of Household Poverty in South Africa. Africa’s Public Service Delivery and Performance Review 4(4), 516-538.

Orthofer, A. (2016).Wealth inequality–striking new insights from tax data. (Econ3x3 Discussion Paper).

Pellicer, M. and Ranchod, V. (2016). Inequality Traps and Human Capital Accumulation in South Africa. In A. Black (Ed.), Towards Employment-Intensive Growth in South Africa. (pp. 126 - 154). Cape Town: UCT Press.

Posel, D., Casale, D. and Grapsa, E. (2016). Re-estimating gender differences in income in South Africa: The implications of equivalence scales. Development Southern Africa 33(4), 425-441.

Quast, B. (2016). Four Reproducible Contribution in Development Economics. (Doctoral dissertation, Universite de Geneve)

Quast, B. (2016). Making the ‘Next Billion’ Demand Access. Geneva: The Graduate Institute (2016).

Rekhviashvili, I. (2016). The Impact of Depression on High School Dropout in South Africa. (Honours Long Paper, University of Cape Town)

Rogan, M. (2016). Gender and Multidimensional Poverty in South Africa: Applying the Global Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI). Social Indicators Research 126(3), 987-1006.

Rorich, M. (2016). Exploring Inequality in South African Primary Schooling: the Role of Early Childhood Environment. (Honours Long Paper, University of Cape Town)

Salisbury, T. (2016). Education and inequality in South Africa: Returns to schooling in the post-apartheid era. International Journal of Educational Development 46, 43-52.

Sakela, V. (2016). Youth Unemployment and Depression in South Africa. (Honours Long Paper, University of Cape Town)

Schiel R., Leibbrandt M. and Lam D. (2016). Assessing the Impact of Social Grants on Inequality: A South African Case Study. Contemporary Issues in Development Economics. Palgrave Macmillan, London, 2016. 112-135.

Shen, E. (2016). Give a Man a Fish: A Narrative Approach to a Case Study of Soup Kitchens in the Wentworth Community. Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection. 2435.

Smith, A. M. (2016). Healthcare reform priorities for South Africa: Four essays on the financing, delivery and user acceptability of healthcare. (Doctoral dissertation, Stellenbosch University).

Thonton, A. J. (2016). Dietary Diversity and Food Security in South Africa: and application using NIDS Wave 1. (Master’s Thesis, University of Cape Town).

Tibesigwa, B. and Visser, M. (2016). Assessing Gender Inequality in Food Security among Small-holder Farm Households in urban and rural South Africa. World Development 88, 33-49.

Vellios, N. and van Walbeek, C. (2016). Determinants of regular smoking onset in South Africa using duration analysis. BMJ Open 2016; 6: e011076.

Von Fintel, D. and Posel, D. (2016). Errors in recalling childhood socio-economic status: the role of anchoring and household formation in South Africa. Social Indicators Research 126(1), 119-140.

von Loeper, W. J. (2016). Accessing South African food system value-chains: Constraints faced by smallholder farmers and conservation agriculture. (Master’s Thesis, Stellenbosch University).

Waidler, J. (2016). On the fungibility of public and private transfers: A mental accounting approach.  No. 060. United Nations University-Maastricht Economic and Social Research Institute on Innovation and Technology (MERIT), 2016.

Ware, L. J., Rennie, K. L., Gafane, L. F., Nell, T. M., Thompson, J. E., Van Rooyen, J. M., Schutte, R. and Schutte, A. E. (2016). Masked Hypertension in Low-Income South African Adults. The Journal of Clinical Hypertension 18(5), 396-404.

Weimann, A., Dai, D. and Oni, T. (2016). A cross-sectional and spatial analysis of the prevalence of multimorbidity and its association with socioeconomic disadvantage in South Africa: A comparison between 2008 and 2012. Social Science & Medicine 163, 144-156.

Weimann, A. (2016). The use and disaggregation of survey data to study the cross-sectional and spatial distribution of multimorbidity and its association with socioeconomic disadvantage in South Africa. (Masters dissertation, University of Cape Town).

Winter, K. (2016). The Effect of Aspirations on South African Employment. (Honours Long Paper, University of Cape Town).

Wright, G., Noble, M., Barnes, H., McLennan, D. and Mpike, M. (2016). SAMOD, a South African tax-benefit microsimulation model. WIDER Working Paper, no. 115.

Wright, G. C., Noble, M., Barnes, H., McLennan, D., & Mpike, M. (2016). Updating NAMOD: A Namibian tax-benefit microsimulation model. WIDER Working Paper, no. 143.

Zwane, T., Greyling, L. and Maleka, M. (2016). The Determinants of Household Savings in South Africa: A Panel Data Approach. The International Business & Economics Research Journal (Online) 15.4 (2016): 209.