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The Impact of Public School Enrolment on Child Labor inPunjab, Pakistan
Author(s) -
Hamna Ahmed
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
˜the œlahore journal of economics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1811-5446
pISSN - 1811-5438
DOI - 10.35536/lje.2012.v17.i2.a1
Subject(s) - ceteris paribus , receipt , instrumental variable , economics , demographic economics , sample (material) , simultaneity , population , labour economics , child labour , work (physics) , demography , sociology , econometrics , physics , engineering , chemistry , classical mechanics , accounting , chromatography , microeconomics , mechanical engineering
This paper investigates the causal impact of public school enrolment on child labor. Our main hypothesis is as follows: Is school enrolment a substitute for child labor? Recognizing that schooling and work choices are jointly determined by parents in a utility maximizing framework, the study applies an instrumental variable solution to the problem of simultaneity. This approach entails using the receipt of free textbooks and access to a public primary facility as instruments for public school enrolment. Using data from the Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey for 2007/08, our working sample consists of children between 5 and 14 years of age, which makes up 25 percent of the surveyed population. The results suggest that public school enrolment can be used as a substitute for child labor. On average, a 1 percentage point increase in a household’s enrolment ratio has the potential to reduce the number of hours of paid labor by almost 5 percentage points, ceteris paribus. This substitutability is highest among poor, urban, male children. Moreover, the incidence of child labor is higher among larger poor families.

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