
Achyuta Adhvaryu
· Tata Chancellor’s Professor of Economics; Director, 21st Century India CenterUniversity of California, San Diego · Political Science and International Affairs
Active 2009–2026
About
Achyuta Adhvaryu is a Tata Chancellor's Endowed Professor of Economics and Director of the 21st Century India Center at the University of California, San Diego. His research focuses on development, organizations, health, and applied microeconomics, with a particular interest in understanding the impact of policies and institutions on economic outcomes.
Research signals
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Research topics
- Computer Science
- Political Science
- Law
- Economics
- Library science
- Medicine
- Management
- Medical education
- World Wide Web
- Public relations
- Economic system
- Economic growth
- Development economics
Selected publications
Great Expectations: Responses to Current and Future Transfers for Low-Income Individuals
SSRN Electronic Journal · 2026-01-01
preprintOpen access1st authorCorrespondingHow Do You Identify a Good Manager?
The Quarterly Journal of Economics · 2026-01-20 · 1 citations
articleOpen accessAbstract We introduce and validate a novel approach to identifying good managers. In a preregistered lab experiment, we causally identify managerial contributions by randomly assigning managers to teams and controlling for individual skill. We find that manager contributions are crucial for team success, and that people who self-select into management roles perform worse than randomly assigned managers. Managerial performance is strongly predicted by economic decision-making skill but not by demographic characteristics. Two validation studies support our experimental results. Participants who succeed in the lab receive more real-world promotions and, in a separate study of retail store managers, skill measures strongly predict store sales. A one standard deviation increase in manager quality increases annual per store sales by US$4.1 million (25% increase). Selecting managers on skills rather than demographic characteristics or the desire to lead could substantially improve organizational performance.
Scandinavian Journal of Work Environment & Health · 2025-11-11
articleOpen accessOBJECTIVES: In low- and middle-income countries (LMIC), there is mixed evidence on the effectiveness of interventions in improving workplace conditions among hazardous industries. In Thailand, a particularly hazardous industry with high injuries is informal electronic waste (e-waste) recycling. We investigated whether developing an optimized tool to dismantle e-waste would reduce injuries. METHODS: We conducted a quasi-randomized control trial to determine the perceptions and efficacy of the optimized tool in reducing worker injuries over three months among 89 workers. The optimized tool for dismantling e-waste was designed following employee and business owner input using conjoint analysis. Workers were quasi-randomized into an intervention (ie, receiving the tool) or control (ie, not receiving) group from an auction. We conducted differences-in-differences Poisson regression to examine differences in self-reported injuries and near misses over three months follow-up between the intervention and control groups. RESULTS: Among 44 workers who received the tool, workers self-reported that the tool created a safer work environment and reduced near misses, hammer danger, hand vibrations and hand pain. Among 42 workers (21 treatments, 21 controls) with complete information, the intervention reduced self-reported injuries over three months [difference-in-differences: -58%, 95% confidence interval (CI) -19- -79%]. Similar reductions in near misses were observed but not statistically significant (-53%, 95% CI -92-173%). CONCLUSIONS: Our study suggests that meaningful reductions in injury risk for specific types of work can be achieved with co-designed tools optimized to consider inputs from multiple stakeholders. This approach can be especially useful in resource-constrained environments, including working conditions in LMIC.
Trials · 2025-03-28 · 1 citations
articleOpen accessBACKGROUND: Longitudinal observational studies have found an association between vision impairment and accelerated decline in cognition. However, no randomised trials have assessed the possible benefit of vision correction on cognitive change. We present the protocol for a three-year randomised controlled trial designed to assess the impact of spectacles for distance and/or near vision correction on cognitive change among community-dwelling elderly participants in India. METHODS: Cognitive Level Enhancement through Vision Exams and Refraction (CLEVER) is a single-centre, open-label, parallel-group, individually-randomised trial. Participants (760 total, 380 in each arm) aged ≥ 60 years with correctable vision impairment at distance and/or near (presenting visual acuity < 6/18 in the better-seeing eye and improving to > = 6/18 with spectacles and/or presenting near vision worse than N6 at 40 cm and improving to N6 with spectacles), normal hearing (able to repeat at least three out of six words whispered from a 50 cm distance in the better ear) and normal cognition (Hindi Mini-mental Status Examination score > 18/31) will be enrolled. After a comprehensive eye examination, intervention group participants will receive distance, near, or bifocal spectacles, while controls will receive a prescription and spectacles at the end of the trial. The primary outcome will be the three-year change in Longitudinal Aging Study in India-Diagnostic Assessment of Dementia (LASI DAD) global cognitive factor score, with and without adjustment for baseline score, age, gender, education and other potential confounders. CONCLUSION: CLEVER is designed to assess the effectiveness of spectacles as a low-cost intervention to prevent or delay cognitive decline. TRIAL REGISTRATION: This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT05458323, February 15, 2023.
How do you identify a good manager?
2025-09-23
report1st authorCorrespondingDigital Remittances for Female Migrant Workers in India: An Unfulfilled Promise
SSRN Electronic Journal · 2025-01-01
preprintOpen access1st authorCorrespondingSotto Voce: The Impacts of Technology to Enhance Worker Voice
The Economic Journal · 2025-07-29
article1st authorCorrespondingAbstract We conducted a randomised controlled trial in which we enabled workers to directly and anonymously communicate with human resources through mobile-phone-based technology. Treated workers were much more likely to know about the tool than controls, though usage was low: only 5% of treated workers reported ever using it. Despite this, turnover and absenteeism were 10% and 5% lower, respectively, for treated versus control workers. Together these findings suggest a substantial option value of enhancing worker voice, which can promote positive workplace behaviours even when workers do not directly avail themselves of the technology.
AEA Randomized Controlled Trials · 2024-01-03
dataset1st authorCorrespondingStudying the latent demand of female labour
AEA Randomized Controlled Trials · 2024-05-03
dataset1st authorCorrespondingAEA Randomized Controlled Trials · 2024-01-03
dataset1st authorCorresponding
Recent grants
The Intra-household Distribution of Food and Health Resources amongst Children
NIH · $652k · 2012–2018
Frequent coauthors
- 207 shared
Anant Nyshadham
University of Michigan–Ann Arbor
- 59 shared
James Fenske
- 53 shared
Namrata Kala
- 39 shared
Gaurav Khanna
- 35 shared
Teresa Molina
University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa
- 21 shared
Jorge Tamayo
- 15 shared
Steve Bednar
Elon University
- 9 shared
Siddharth Sharma
Education
- 2009
Ph.D., economics
Yale University
- 2004
B.A., math and economics
University of Pennsylvania
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