Score contribution per author:
α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count
Migration has been demonstrated by various studies to be closely linked to improvements in individual- and household-level outcomes. In this paper, rather than examining the effects of migration, we explore whether an economic shock in United States affected migrant households in rural Guatemala. Treating the Great Recession as a natural experiment affecting migrant and non-migrant households differently, we put the spotlight on the effect of the shock on child anthropometry, including longer-term indicators of height-for-age z-scores (HAZ). Panel data on children, and multiple children in households enable both double- and triple-difference estimation. In relative terms, migrant households fared much worse than non-migrant households over the period. Large advantages in child anthropometric status for the youngest children in migrant households in 2008, just prior to the crisis, were substantially diminished four years later. The findings underscore the possible fragility of the benefits of migration, particularly in the face of a substantial economic shock, and point to the potential importance of deepening social safety nets.