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Gender of children, education and occupational choice in Nepal CMI research program 2010-2013 Magnus Hatlebakk
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Son preference From DHS data we know that people get more children if the first-born is a girl The gender of the first born is thus a (random) natural experiment – We do not find extensive sex-selective abortions in Nepal (1.04 boys per girl, which is normal) – We measure the consequences of a first born girl on economic decisions – As the gender of the first born gives exogenous variation in the number of children we can estimate the consequences of many children on economic decisions
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Gender of first born Number of children Dowry payments Economic decisions: - Female labor market participation - Education of children - Other investments - Occupations of children Caste Female empowerment
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Empirical strategy Implications of a first-born girl – Number of children – Education of children – Mother’s labor market participation – Childrens’ occupations as adults Implications of many children – Education of children – Mother’s labor market participation – Childrens’ occupations as adults The first category of estimation is a black box, we do not know why gender affects the decisions
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Empirical strategy-2 In the second category we need an underlying model where number of children is one of many economic decisions: – Optimal investment-occupation strategy (number of children, education, dowry, land, animals, physical capital) – Possible exogenous determinants: Gender of first-born Female empowerment Social identity (caste/ethnicity/religion) Land of parents
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Data NLSS1 (1995), NLSS2 (2003), NLSS3 (2010) + a smaller 1995-2003-2010(?) panel Main problem: No information on household members who have separated from the household – Can be minimized by focusing on young parents Only indirect information on dowry Only 8 years between the two rounds of the panel Solution: Tailor-made survey in Morang district
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Policy implications Son preference may be rational for the family – Sons have better chances in the labor market – Girls are costly (dowry, they leave the family) So is there any reason for government intervention? – Additional children implies a cost for other households in aggregate (pressure on land, government services) – In case of heterogeneous intra-household preferences the society may side with the (less powerful) woman So family planning and programs for female empowerment are relevant policies
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