Short-Term Migration and Children’s School Attendance: Evidence from Rural India

被引:0
|
作者
Leena Bhattacharya
机构
[1] Indira Gandhi Institute of Development Research,
来源
关键词
Short-term migration; Education; Rural India; Children, RTE;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Every year, millions of individuals from rural India migrate internally for short periods in search of employment. Temporary migration of parents can affect school attendance of children from these families. This study uses data from National Sample Survey Organisation’s (NSSO) Situation Assessment Survey 2013 to examine whether having a short-term migrant member in the family affects school attendance of children aged 6–10 years in rural India. An estimate from logit regression suggests that controlling for individual and family characteristics, village, district controls and NSSO state-region fixed effects, being from a migrant family reduces the probability that a child aged 6–10 years attends school by 15%. A series of robustness checks are done to ascertain the reliability of our finding. First, we assess the extent of potential omitted variable bias and find that our results remain unchanged even after controlling for bias. Second, we use instrumental variable approach since short-term migration of parents and school attendance of children can be driven by unobserved factors. In this method, the presence of a short-term migrant in the family is instrumented by lagged proportion of short-term migrants and lagged proportion of construction workers in the district. Our results remain robust to various specifications.
引用
收藏
页码:659 / 691
页数:32
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Temperature shocks, short-term growth and poverty thresholds: Evidence from rural Tanzania
    Letta, Marco
    Montalbano, Pierluigi
    Tol, Richard S. J.
    [J]. WORLD DEVELOPMENT, 2018, 112 : 13 - 32
  • [22] The Impact of School Meals on School Participation: Evidence from Rural India
    Afridi, Farzana
    [J]. JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENT STUDIES, 2011, 47 (11): : 1636 - 1656
  • [23] Credit lines in microcredit: Short-term evidence from a randomized controlled trial in India
    Aragon, Fernando M.
    Karaivanov, Alexander
    Krishnaswamy, Karuna
    [J]. JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS, 2020, 146
  • [24] Credit lines in microcredit: Short-term evidence from a randomized controlled trial in India
    Aragon, Fernando M.
    Karaivanov, Alexander
    Krishnaswamy, Karuna
    [J]. JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS, 2020, 146
  • [25] Supporting School Mental Health Providers: Evidence from a Short-Term Telementoring Model
    Lyons, Michael D.
    Taylor, Julia, V
    Zeanah, Kathryn L.
    Downey, Sarah K.
    Zabek, Faith A.
    [J]. CHILD & YOUTH CARE FORUM, 2023, 52 (01) : 65 - 84
  • [26] Supporting School Mental Health Providers: Evidence from a Short-Term Telementoring Model
    Michael D. Lyons
    Julia V. Taylor
    Kathryn L. Zeanah
    Sarah K. Downey
    Faith A. Zabek
    [J]. Child & Youth Care Forum, 2023, 52 : 65 - 84
  • [27] AN ACCOUNTING OF PROGRESS AND ATTENDANCE OF RURAL SCHOOL CHILDREN IN DELAWARE
    Cooper, Hermann
    [J]. TEACHERS COLLEGE RECORD, 1931, 32 (05): : 470 - 471
  • [28] AN ACCOUNTING PROGRESS AND ATTENDANCE OF RURAL SCHOOL CHILDREN IN DELAWARE
    不详
    [J]. EDUCATION, 1931, 51 (07): : 444 - 444
  • [29] Effects of a free school breakfast programme on children's attendance, academic achievement and short-term hunger: results from a stepped-wedge, cluster randomised controlled trial
    Mhurchu, Cliona Ni
    Gorton, Delvina
    Turley, Maria
    Jiang, Yannan
    Michie, Jo
    Maddison, Ralph
    Hattie, John
    [J]. JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY AND COMMUNITY HEALTH, 2013, 67 (03) : 257 - 264
  • [30] An Accounting of Progress and Attendance of Rural School Children in Delaware
    Cram, Fred D.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH, 1932, 25 (02): : 132 - 132