Sibling Dependence, Uncertainty and Education: Findings from Tanzania

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Sibling Dependence, Uncertainty and Education : Findings from Tanzania. / Lilleør, Helene Bie.

Centre for Advanced Econometrics, Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen, 2008.

Research output: Working paperResearch

Harvard

Lilleør, HB 2008 'Sibling Dependence, Uncertainty and Education: Findings from Tanzania' Centre for Advanced Econometrics, Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen.

APA

Lilleør, H. B. (2008). Sibling Dependence, Uncertainty and Education: Findings from Tanzania. Centre for Advanced Econometrics, Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen.

Vancouver

Lilleør HB. Sibling Dependence, Uncertainty and Education: Findings from Tanzania. Centre for Advanced Econometrics, Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen. 2008.

Author

Lilleør, Helene Bie. / Sibling Dependence, Uncertainty and Education : Findings from Tanzania. Centre for Advanced Econometrics, Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen, 2008.

Bibtex

@techreport{decd6e2062c411dd8d9f000ea68e967b,
title = "Sibling Dependence, Uncertainty and Education: Findings from Tanzania",
abstract = "Primary school enrolment rates are continuously low in many developing countries. The main explanation in the economic literature on schooling is focused on credit constraints and child labour, implying that the indirect cost of schooling in terms of foregone earnings is too high. This paper investigates the effects of future income uncertainty on sibling dependence in the schooling decisions of rural households in developing countries. Schooling tends to direct skills towards future urban employment, whereas traditional rural education or on-farm learning-by-doing tends to direct skills towards future agricultural employment. Given this dichtomy, the question is then: Does future income uncertainty influence the joint educational choice made by parents on behalf of their children and is it possible to test this on simple cross-sectional data? I extend a simple human capital portfolio model to a three period setting. This allows me to explore the natural sequentiality in the schooling decision of older and younger siblings. The model can generate testable empirical implications, which can be taken to any standard cross-sectional data set. I find empirical evidence of negative sibling dependence in the educational decision, which is consistent with a human capital portfolio theory of risk diversification and which cannot be explained by sibling rivalry over scarce resources for credit constrained households. The paper thus provides a complementary explanation to why enrolment rates in developing countries are often continuously low.",
keywords = "Faculty of Social Sciences, Afrika, schooling, human capital investment, specific human capital, old-age security, risk and income source diversification, liquidity constraints, Africa",
author = "Lille{\o}r, {Helene Bie}",
note = "JEL classification: J13, J24, O15",
year = "2008",
language = "English",
publisher = "Centre for Advanced Econometrics, Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "Centre for Advanced Econometrics, Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Sibling Dependence, Uncertainty and Education

T2 - Findings from Tanzania

AU - Lilleør, Helene Bie

N1 - JEL classification: J13, J24, O15

PY - 2008

Y1 - 2008

N2 - Primary school enrolment rates are continuously low in many developing countries. The main explanation in the economic literature on schooling is focused on credit constraints and child labour, implying that the indirect cost of schooling in terms of foregone earnings is too high. This paper investigates the effects of future income uncertainty on sibling dependence in the schooling decisions of rural households in developing countries. Schooling tends to direct skills towards future urban employment, whereas traditional rural education or on-farm learning-by-doing tends to direct skills towards future agricultural employment. Given this dichtomy, the question is then: Does future income uncertainty influence the joint educational choice made by parents on behalf of their children and is it possible to test this on simple cross-sectional data? I extend a simple human capital portfolio model to a three period setting. This allows me to explore the natural sequentiality in the schooling decision of older and younger siblings. The model can generate testable empirical implications, which can be taken to any standard cross-sectional data set. I find empirical evidence of negative sibling dependence in the educational decision, which is consistent with a human capital portfolio theory of risk diversification and which cannot be explained by sibling rivalry over scarce resources for credit constrained households. The paper thus provides a complementary explanation to why enrolment rates in developing countries are often continuously low.

AB - Primary school enrolment rates are continuously low in many developing countries. The main explanation in the economic literature on schooling is focused on credit constraints and child labour, implying that the indirect cost of schooling in terms of foregone earnings is too high. This paper investigates the effects of future income uncertainty on sibling dependence in the schooling decisions of rural households in developing countries. Schooling tends to direct skills towards future urban employment, whereas traditional rural education or on-farm learning-by-doing tends to direct skills towards future agricultural employment. Given this dichtomy, the question is then: Does future income uncertainty influence the joint educational choice made by parents on behalf of their children and is it possible to test this on simple cross-sectional data? I extend a simple human capital portfolio model to a three period setting. This allows me to explore the natural sequentiality in the schooling decision of older and younger siblings. The model can generate testable empirical implications, which can be taken to any standard cross-sectional data set. I find empirical evidence of negative sibling dependence in the educational decision, which is consistent with a human capital portfolio theory of risk diversification and which cannot be explained by sibling rivalry over scarce resources for credit constrained households. The paper thus provides a complementary explanation to why enrolment rates in developing countries are often continuously low.

KW - Faculty of Social Sciences

KW - Afrika

KW - schooling

KW - human capital investment

KW - specific human capital

KW - old-age security

KW - risk and income source diversification

KW - liquidity constraints

KW - Africa

M3 - Working paper

BT - Sibling Dependence, Uncertainty and Education

PB - Centre for Advanced Econometrics, Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen

ER -

ID: 5362468