The Consequences of Child Labor: Evidence from Longitudinal Data in Rural Tanzania

K. Beegle, Rajeev Dehejia, R. Gatti, S. Krutikova
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引用次数: 74

Abstract

This paper exploits a unique longitudinal data set from Tanzania to examine the consequences of child labor on education, employment choices, and marital status over a 10-year horizon. Shocks to crop production and rainfall are used as instrumental variables for child labor. For boys, the findings show that a one-standard-deviation (5.7 hour) increase in child labor leads 10 years later to a loss of approximately one year of schooling and to a substantial increase in the likelihood of farming and of marrying at a younger age. Strikingly, there are no significant effects on education for girls, but there is a significant increase in the likelihood of marrying young. The findings also show that crop shocks lead to an increase in agricultural work for boys and instead lead to an increase in chore hours for girls. The results are consistent with education being a lower priority for girls and/or with chores causing less disruption for education than agricultural work. The increased chore hours could also account for the results on marriage for girls.
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童工的后果:来自坦桑尼亚农村纵向数据的证据
本文利用坦桑尼亚独特的纵向数据集来研究童工对教育、就业选择和婚姻状况的影响。对作物生产和降雨的冲击被用作童工的工具变量。对男孩而言,研究结果表明,童工时间每增加一个标准差(5.7小时),就会导致10年后失去大约一年的学校教育,并大大增加了从事农业和早婚的可能性。引人注目的是,这对女孩的教育没有显著影响,但早婚的可能性显著增加。研究结果还表明,农作物歉收导致男孩的农活增加,而女孩的家务劳动时间增加。这一结果与教育对女孩的重要性较低和/或家务劳动对教育的干扰比农业工作小一致。家务时间的增加也可以解释女孩结婚的结果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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