Heterogeneous Effects of Women's Schooling on Fertility, Literacy and Work: Evidence from Burundi's Free Primary Education Policy

被引:0
|
作者
Wild, Frederik [1 ,2 ]
Stadelmann, David [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Bayreuth, Bayreuth, Germany
[2] Fac Law & Econ, Univ Str 30, D-95447 Bayreuth, Bavaria, Germany
关键词
female education; fertility; Sub-Saharan Africa; regression discontinuity design; UNIVERSAL PRIMARY-EDUCATION; REGRESSION DISCONTINUITY DESIGNS; FEMALE EDUCATION; CHILD HEALTH; CONTRACEPTIVE USE; UGANDA; MALAWI; IMPACT; IDENTIFICATION; MORTALITY;
D O I
10.1093/jae/ejad002
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
This article investigates the effect of women's schooling on fertility as well as on associated mechanisms by leveraging Burundi's free primary education policy (FPE) of 2005 as a natural experiment. Exogenous variation in schooling is identified through a fuzzy regression discontinuity design. Our results show that educational attainment was positively influenced by Burundi's FPE for women situated at all wealth levels. However, the relevant downstream effects of schooling-measured by fertility, literacy and work outcomes-reveal heterogenous treatment effects which are moderated by women's household wealth. While poor women profit in terms of increases in literacy (6.7 percentage-point increase for each year of policy-induced schooling), remunerated employment opportunities (5.7 percentage-point increase), as well as a reduction in desired and actual fertility outcomes (6.9 percentage-point reduction in teenage childbirth), none of these effects of additional education are observed for women from the wealthier households of our sample. The evidence of such a marked heterogeneity contributes to the growing literature examining the nexus between education and fertility in developing countries and helps to evaluate under which conditions the literature's findings may generalize.
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页码:67 / 91
页数:25
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