Literature DB >> 18769511

Effects of Economic Shocks on Children's Employment and Schooling in Brazil.

Suzanne Duryea1, David Lam, Deborah Levison.   

Abstract

This paper uses longitudinal employment survey data to analyze the impact of household economic shocks on the schooling and employment transitions of young people in metropolitan Brazil. The paper uses data on over 100,000 children ages 10-16 from Brazil's Monthly Employment Survey (PME) from 1982 to 1999. Taking advantage of the rotating panels in the PME, we compare households in which the male household head becomes unemployed during a four-month period with households in which the head is continuously employed. Probit regressions indicate that an unemployment shock significantly increases the probability that a child enters the labor force, drops out of school, and fails to advance in school. The effects can be large, implying increases of as much as 50% in the probability of entering employment for 16-year-old girls. In contrast, shocks occurring after the school year do not have significant effects, suggesting that these results are not due to unobserved characteristics of households that experience unemployment shocks. The results suggest that some households are not able to absorb short-run economic shocks, with negative consequences for children.

Entities:  

Year:  2007        PMID: 18769511      PMCID: PMC2094529          DOI: 10.1016/j.jdeveco.2006.11.004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Dev Econ        ISSN: 0304-3878


  8 in total

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8.  Intergenerational transmission of lockdown consequences: prognosis of the longer-run persistence of COVID-19 in Latin America.

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  8 in total

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