Early life economic shocks and child health outcomes

This paper examines the relationship between commodity price shocks experienced in the early period of life and child health outcomes. The study uses a nationally representative household survey data from the Demographic and Health Surveys in Kenya matched with a time series of real producer prices...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Kazibwe, Douglas
Formato: Second cycle, A2E
Lenguaje:sueco
Inglés
Publicado: 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/14346/
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author Kazibwe, Douglas
author_browse Kazibwe, Douglas
author_facet Kazibwe, Douglas
author_sort Kazibwe, Douglas
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description This paper examines the relationship between commodity price shocks experienced in the early period of life and child health outcomes. The study uses a nationally representative household survey data from the Demographic and Health Surveys in Kenya matched with a time series of real producer prices of tea in estimating the effect of price shock on child health outcomes. The identification strategy of the paper relies on exogenous variations in the real producer price of tea and timing of child birth. The findings show that household income shocks induced by variations in tea prices are key drivers of child health outcomes. A one percentage increase in tea price in the early life stage improves child nutrition with a 32.67 standard deviation increase in height-for-age Z scores and reduces under-five mortality rate by 1.74 percentage points among children born in tea producing zones relative to those born in non-tea growing zones in Kenya. These study findings have much policy relevance to African economies where a considerable share of the population depends on the agriculture sector as a source of livelihood, and directly suffers from export commodity price fluctuations. Changes in the commodity price of exports are a constraint that weigh on agricultural households’ ability to make necessary investment in children thus impacting health and human capital formation.
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spelling RepoSLU143462020-06-04T12:17:49Z https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/14346/ Early life economic shocks and child health outcomes Kazibwe, Douglas Rural sociology and social security This paper examines the relationship between commodity price shocks experienced in the early period of life and child health outcomes. The study uses a nationally representative household survey data from the Demographic and Health Surveys in Kenya matched with a time series of real producer prices of tea in estimating the effect of price shock on child health outcomes. The identification strategy of the paper relies on exogenous variations in the real producer price of tea and timing of child birth. The findings show that household income shocks induced by variations in tea prices are key drivers of child health outcomes. A one percentage increase in tea price in the early life stage improves child nutrition with a 32.67 standard deviation increase in height-for-age Z scores and reduces under-five mortality rate by 1.74 percentage points among children born in tea producing zones relative to those born in non-tea growing zones in Kenya. These study findings have much policy relevance to African economies where a considerable share of the population depends on the agriculture sector as a source of livelihood, and directly suffers from export commodity price fluctuations. Changes in the commodity price of exports are a constraint that weigh on agricultural households’ ability to make necessary investment in children thus impacting health and human capital formation. 2019-03-27 Second cycle, A2E NonPeerReviewed application/pdf sv https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/14346/1/kazibwe_d_190327.pdf Kazibwe, Douglas, 2019. Early life economic shocks and child health outcomes : evidence from Kenya. Second cycle, A2E. Uppsala: (NL, NJ) > Dept. of Economics <https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/view/divisions/OID-510.html> urn:nbn:se:slu:epsilon-s-10324 eng
spellingShingle Rural sociology and social security
Kazibwe, Douglas
Early life economic shocks and child health outcomes
title Early life economic shocks and child health outcomes
title_full Early life economic shocks and child health outcomes
title_fullStr Early life economic shocks and child health outcomes
title_full_unstemmed Early life economic shocks and child health outcomes
title_short Early life economic shocks and child health outcomes
title_sort early life economic shocks and child health outcomes
topic Rural sociology and social security
url https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/14346/
https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/14346/