Orphans and schooling in africa: a longitudinal analysis

Abstract


AIDS deaths could have a major impact on economic development by affecting the human capital accumulation of the next generation. We estimate the impact of parent death on primary school participation using an unusual five-year panel data set of over 20,000 Kenyan children. There is a substantial decrease in school participation following a parent death and a smaller drop before the death (presumably due to pre-death morbidity). Estimated impacts are smaller in specifications without individual fixed effects, suggesting that estimates based on cross-sectional data are biased toward zero. Effects are largest for children whose mothers died and, in a novel finding, for those with low baseline academic performance.



David K. Evans Edward Miguel | source: University of California 642 |
Categories: Health Education


Other articles

THE CONCEPT OF ORPHANS TREATMENT IN THE QUR’AN

The orphan is a child left behind by his father when he is immature. There are also left by his mother, then the child is…

Read more

Children's adjustment to parental death

Reviews the evidence regarding the effects of parental death on children's acute and long-term psychological adjustment,…

Read more

The Impact of Parental Suicide on Child and Adolescent Offspring

Child and adolescent survivors of parental suicide experience two stressful events simultaneously: (1) the loss of a primary…

Read more

Children and teenagers living in orphanages victims of violence: dilemmas and nursing perspectives

This article aimed to understand the nursing care provided to children/teenagers victims of violence living in orphanages…

Read more