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Income shocks and gender gaps in education: Evidence from Uganda
Resource type
            Journal Article
        Author/contributor
                    - Björkman-Nyqvist, Martina (Author)
 
Title
            Income shocks and gender gaps in education: Evidence from Uganda
        Abstract
            This paper uses exogenous variation in rainfall across districts in Uganda to estimate the causal effects of household income shocks on children's enrollment and academic performance conditional on gender. I find negative deviations in rainfall from the long-term mean to have negative and highly significant effects on female enrollment in primary schools and the effect grows stronger for older girls. I find no effect of rainfall variation on the enrollment of boys and young girls. Moreover, I find that when schooling is free of charge and both marginal boys and girls are enrolled, a negative income shock has an adverse effect on the test scores of female students while boys are not affected. The results imply that households respond to income shocks by varying the amount of schooling and resources provided to girls while boys are to a large extent sheltered — a finding consistent with a model where parents' values of child labor differ across sexes.
        Publication
            Journal of Development Economics
        Volume
            105
        Pages
            237-253
        Date
            November 1, 2013
        Journal Abbr
            Journal of Development Economics
        Language
            en
        ISSN
            0304-3878
        Short Title
            Income shocks and gender gaps in education
        Accessed
            04/03/2022, 14:22
        Library Catalogue
            ScienceDirect
        Citation
            Björkman-Nyqvist, M. (2013). Income shocks and gender gaps in education: Evidence from Uganda. Journal of Development Economics, 105, 237–253. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jdeveco.2013.07.013
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