Mohammad Abdul Malek
University of Tsukuba
19 Papers
50 Citations
Mohammad Abdul Malek is an academic researcher from University of Tsukuba. The author has contributed to research in topics: Productivity & Agriculture. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 19 publications. Previous affiliations of Mohammad Abdul Malek include University of Bonn & Kyoto University.
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Papers
Agricultural Microcredit for Tenant Farmers: Evidence from a Field Experiment in Bangladesh
TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied the impact of an agricultural micro-credit program on the livelihoods of small, marginal, and landless tenant farmers in Bangladesh based on a Randomized Control Trial (RCT).
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Determinants of Non-farm Income Diversification in Developed Villages of Bangladesh
TL;DR: In this article, the authors used income inequality Gini decomposition method for exploring the role of Non-Farm Incomes (NFIs) and censored Tobit regression for estimating determinants of NFI diversification.
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Can referral improve targeting? Evidence from an agricultural training experiment
TL;DR: This article found that referred trainees are 4.2% more likely to adopt than randomly selected trainees, and 3.4-3.8 % more likely than what can be predicted from observed characteristics of trainees.
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Do non-farm incomes really matter for poverty among small households in rural Bangladesh? A case of advanced villages
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the comprehensive effects of non-farm incomes on poverty reduction, namely, household production and consumption, and found that the overall nonfarm income significantly mattered for reducing income poverty but could be still low to be realized in reducing education poverty.
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Mapping marginality hotspots and agricultural potentials in Bangladesh
TL;DR: The marginality mapping presented in this article has attempted to identify areas with high prevalence of societal and spatial marginality based on proxies for marginality dimensions representing different spheres of life and high (un/der utilized) agricultural potentials.
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