Health shocks and children's school attainments in rural China

B-Tier
Journal: Economics of Education Review
Year: 2010
Volume: 29
Issue: 3
Pages: 375-382

Authors (2)

Sun, Ang (not in RePEc) Yao, Yang (Peking University)

Score contribution per author:

1.005 = (α=2.01 / 2 authors) × 1.0x B-tier

α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count

Abstract

Using a long panel dataset of Chinese farm households covering the period of 1987-2002, this paper studies how major health shocks happening to household adults affect children's school attainments. We find that primary school-age children are the most vulnerable to health shocks, with their chances to enter middle school dropping by 9.9 percentage points when a prime-age adult in their families has a major illness. Our robustness regressions that try to take care of the composition bias in illness reports find larger effects with the upper bound being 16.1 percentage points. We also find that the effects of health shocks vary by gender and birth order. However, middle school-age children are not affected by family health shocks.

Technical Details

RePEc Handle
repec:eee:ecoedu:v:29:y:2010:i:3:p:375-382
Journal Field
Education
Author Count
2
Added to Database
2026-01-29