Poverty and child farm labour in Africa: wealth paradox or bad orthodox

The link between poverty and child labor has traditionally been regarded as well established but recent researches have questioned its validity, suggesting that child labor is more important in the richest households (wealth paradox). The present study revisits the link between poverty and farm chil...

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Autor principal: Nkamleu, G.B.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/99862
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author Nkamleu, G.B.
author_browse Nkamleu, G.B.
author_facet Nkamleu, G.B.
author_sort Nkamleu, G.B.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The link between poverty and child labor has traditionally been regarded as well established but recent researches have questioned its validity, suggesting that child labor is more important in the richest households (wealth paradox). The present study revisits the link between poverty and farm child labor in Africa and aims at testing the paradoxical wealth effect. Using different modeling techniques, the analysis focuses on family-controlled child labor taking place in the cocoa sector of Côte d'Ivoire. The results reveal that the effect of different commonly used wealth proxies have opposite effects on child labor participation and are sometimes sensitive to the modeling technique. This mixed result is the root of the apparent wealth paradox found in the literature. However, relevant and robust wealth proxies clearly indicate a positive relationship between poverty and child labor. The study therefore sustains that the apparent wealth paradox found in the literature is the end result of a bad orthodoxy.
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spelling CGSpace998622023-06-12T14:10:39Z Poverty and child farm labour in Africa: wealth paradox or bad orthodox Nkamleu, G.B. poverty techniques The link between poverty and child labor has traditionally been regarded as well established but recent researches have questioned its validity, suggesting that child labor is more important in the richest households (wealth paradox). The present study revisits the link between poverty and farm child labor in Africa and aims at testing the paradoxical wealth effect. Using different modeling techniques, the analysis focuses on family-controlled child labor taking place in the cocoa sector of Côte d'Ivoire. The results reveal that the effect of different commonly used wealth proxies have opposite effects on child labor participation and are sometimes sensitive to the modeling technique. This mixed result is the root of the apparent wealth paradox found in the literature. However, relevant and robust wealth proxies clearly indicate a positive relationship between poverty and child labor. The study therefore sustains that the apparent wealth paradox found in the literature is the end result of a bad orthodoxy. 2006 2019-03-03T05:53:40Z 2019-03-03T05:53:40Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/99862 en Limited Access Nkamleu, G.B. (2006). Poverty and child farm labour in Africa: wealth paradox or bad orthodox. African Journal of Economic Policy, 13(1), 1-24.
spellingShingle poverty
techniques
Nkamleu, G.B.
Poverty and child farm labour in Africa: wealth paradox or bad orthodox
title Poverty and child farm labour in Africa: wealth paradox or bad orthodox
title_full Poverty and child farm labour in Africa: wealth paradox or bad orthodox
title_fullStr Poverty and child farm labour in Africa: wealth paradox or bad orthodox
title_full_unstemmed Poverty and child farm labour in Africa: wealth paradox or bad orthodox
title_short Poverty and child farm labour in Africa: wealth paradox or bad orthodox
title_sort poverty and child farm labour in africa wealth paradox or bad orthodox
topic poverty
techniques
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/99862
work_keys_str_mv AT nkamleugb povertyandchildfarmlabourinafricawealthparadoxorbadorthodox