Essays on the causes and consequences of child labor

Type Thesis or Dissertation - Doctoral Dissertations
Title Essays on the causes and consequences of child labor
Author(s)
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2014
URL http://digitalcommons.uconn.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=6712&context=dissertations
Abstract
The purpose of this research is to examine the causes and consequences of child labor. The first chapter of this work examines the empirical relationship between working and educational expenditure budget shares for children ages 5-14 in Mexico. The results indicate that working increases school expenditure share for working children. In particular, on average, girls engaged in paid work have total annual education expenditure shares that are 49% higher than girls who do not work. This relationship varies significantly with characteristics of both the individual and the household, including the child’s gender and type of work performed, as well as the household’s income, location, and relative female bargaining power. The second chapter explores the differential impact of migration by male and female household members on household decision making and child outcomes. Using household and individual level data from four rounds of the Indonesian Family Life Survey and exploiting an instrumental variables approach, this paper shows that migration has the ability to causally impact child outcomes and that in some cases these impacts differ based on the gender of the migrants. Specifically, we find that as the total number of household migrants increases, both the probability that a child works and his actual work hours decline. On the other hand, the total number of migrants has no impact on school attendance, but children in households with only female migrants are less likely to attend school overall. The final chapter examines the impact of state level political reservation for two minority groups, namely Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes, on child labor in India. We estimate the effect of political reservation on child labor by exploiting the state variation in the share of seats reserved for the two groups in state legislative assemblies mandated by the Constitution of India. Using data from state and household level surveys on fifteen major Indian states, we find that at the household level, Schedule Tribe reservation decreases the incidence of child labor, while Scheduled Caste reservation increases the total number of children working.

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