Kjetil Telle
- Degree
- Dr. Philos.
- Position
- Senior Research Fellow
- Mobile
- +47 98060779
- Kjetil.Telle@ssb.no
About Kjetil Telle
Kjetil Telle is associated research fellow at Statistics Norway working on health economics. His main position is at The Norwegian Institute of Pubilic Health. In 2015-2018 he acted as Statistics Norway's Director of Research, and from 2000 to 2015 he held various positions such as senior research fellow, Head of the Unit for social and demographic research and of the Unit for public economics and demographic models. Kjetil Telle has a PhD in economics from the University of Oslo and has been Professor II at the University of Stavanger. He has contributed to research and analyses in various fields, like labor economics, health economics, education economics, environmental economics, and tax and regulation economics; and he has been member of several government committees.
Selected publications
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Saving and Portfolio Allocation Before and After Job Loss. Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, 2016
- Authors
- Christoph C. Basten, Andreas Fagereng, Kjetil Telle
-
Pro-Cyclical Mortality Across Socioeconomic Groups and Health Status. Journal of Health Economics, 2015
- Authors
- Venke F. Haaland, Kjetil Telle
-
Cash-on-Hand and the Duration of Job Search: Quasi-Experimental Evidence from Norway. The Economic Journal, 2014
- Authors
- Christoph C. Basten, Andreas Fagereng, Kjetil Telle
-
Monitoring and Enforcement of Environmental Regulations. Lessons from a Natural Field Experiment in Norway. Journal of Public
Economics, 2013
- Authors
- Kjetil Telle
-
Parental Job Loss and Children's School Performance. Review of Economic Studies, 2011
- Authors
- Mari Rege, Kjetil Telle, Mark Votruba
Research field
Current projects
- Early Intervention and Social Mobility. Improving the Opportunities of Disadvantaged Children
- Hooks for change? Family and employment as pathways to social inclusion among crime-prone individuals
- GeoHealth - Hva betyr avstand til tjenester for bruk, kvalitet og utfall?
- Trapped in Treatment: Effects of Work Place Absence on Long Term Employment
- Geographic distribution of health care (GeoHealth) - Regional differences in demand and supply, costs and quality.