Score contribution per author:
α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count
The effect of economic shocks on human capital is theoretically ambiguous due to opposing income and substitution effects. Using child-level information on schooling, child labor, and cognitive development, we investigate the effect of cocoa price fluctuations on human capital production in Ghana. We demonstrate that the timing of the price shock matters. For school-aged children, the substitution effect dominates: a price boom decreases schooling and increases child labor. An increase of 1 standard deviation in the current-year real producer price of cocoa significantly decreases current school attendance by 8.6 percentage points and the likelihood of being in the correct grade in the following year by 5.5 percentage points. For preschool-aged children, however, the income effect dominates: early-life and in utero booms in the real producer price of cocoa significantly increase Raven/IQ scores and grade attainment.