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Wardani, Amriza N.; Baryshnikova, Nadezhda V.; Jayawardana, Danusha – Education Economics, 2022
We investigate the effect of an educational cash transfer on schooling and working of the recipients and their non-recipient siblings in Indonesia, using a matched difference-in-differences strategy. We find that the cash transfer increases the probability of schooling for all recipients. Specifically, the likelihood of schooling for the senior…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Students, School Holding Power, Child Labor
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Kämpfen, Fabrice – Education Economics, 2021
This study provides new evidence on the long-term impact of education on welfare participation in the US. I exploit historical changes in child labor laws as an instrumental variable for education to estimate the causal effects of education on the probability of receiving social welfare benefits. I find large and statistically significant negative…
Descriptors: Welfare Services, Welfare Recipients, Outcomes of Education, Child Labor
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Kuépié, Mathias – Education Economics, 2018
In this paper, our main objective is to test the hypothesis that child labor can be a rational response to low returns to formal education in Mali. To this end, after a literature review, we build a flexible conceptual model that explicitly links the child labor supply to the comparison of the expected returns to education with child labor. The…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Child Labor, Outcomes of Education, Labor Market
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Asadi, Ghadir – Education Economics, 2020
While school enrollment at the primary level has been rising in developing countries rapidly, international measures of education quality do not exhibit a parallel improvement. Since parents' expenditure is an important determinant of children's school performance, we investigate parents' investments on quality measured by their spending on books…
Descriptors: Educational Quality, Expenditures, Academic Achievement, Parent Child Relationship
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Rammohan, Anu – Education Economics, 2014
In this paper, using the "2005-2006 National Family Health Survey" dataset from India, we study the likelihood of a school-age child working, combining work with schooling or being idle, rather than attending school full time. Our analysis finds that with the inclusion of household chores in the child labour definition, boys are…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Child Labor, Gender Differences, Economics
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Haile, Getinet; Haile, Beliyou – Education Economics, 2012
We examine work participation and schooling for children aged 7-15 using survey data from rural Ethiopia. Bivariate probit and age-adjusted educational attainment equations have been estimated. Male children are found to be more likely to attend school than their female counterparts. "Specialization" in child labour is also found, with…
Descriptors: Family Planning, Family Size, Educational Attainment, Foreign Countries
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Shafiq, M. Najeeb – Education Economics, 2007
This study estimates the returns to boys' education for rural Bangladeshi households by accounting for some conventionally neglected items: direct costs of education, foregone child labour earnings, and option value. The estimated returns are 13.5% for primary education, 7.8% for junior-secondary education, 12.9% for higher-secondary education,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Costs, Males, Family (Sociological Unit)