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? The answer to this question has important implications for public policy. If shocks reduce investments in children, they … aggregate economic shocks on child schooling and health. It shows that the expected effects are ambiguous, because of a tension … countries, like the United States, child health and education outcomes are counter-cyclical: they improve during recessions. In …
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Workers in developing countries are subject to frequent health shocks. Using 10 weeks of high-frequency labor market …
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Exploiting cross-birth cohort and cross-country variation from a pool of 188 household surveys from 111 countries, this paper measures how life expectancy at birth affects lifetime education and earnings. On average, individuals add one year of schooling for every 8.3 years of increased life...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012388740
, and over 80 percent do not have any friends of another caste. This paper examines the effect of a shock to friends … household; perceived social norms; and an outcome of household bargaining: investments in her children. The analysis instruments … impact of having a friend who received an empowerment shock on a woman who did not receive that shock. The results show …
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The study is a randomized controlled trial that investigates the impact of four demand-side interventions on health …
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