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Child labor and psychosocial wellbeing: Findings from India

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 15:45 authored by Simon FeenySimon Feeny, Alberto Posso, Ahmed Skali, Amalendu Jyotishi, Shyam Nath, P. Viswanathan
Mental health is a neglected health issue in developing countries. We test if mental health issues are particularly likely to occur among some of the most vulnerable children in developing countries: those that work. Despite falling in recent decades, child labor still engages 168 million children across the world. While the negative impacts of child labor on physical health are well documented, the effect of child labor on a child's psychosocial wellbeing has been neglected. We investigate this issue with a new dataset of 947 children aged 12–18 years from 750 households in 20 villages across five districts of Tamil Nadu, India. Our purpose‐built survey allows for a holistic approach to the analysis of child wellbeing by accounting for levels of happiness, hope, emotional wellbeing, self‐efficacy, fear and stress. We use a variety of econometric approaches, some of which utilize household‐level fixed effects and account for differences between working and nonworking siblings. We document a robust, large and negative association between child labor and most measures of psychosocial wellbeing. The results are robust to a battery of exercises, including tests for selection on unobservables, randomization inference, instrumental variable techniques, and falsification exercises.

History

Journal

Health Economics

Volume

30

Issue

4

Start page

876

End page

902

Total pages

27

Publisher

John Wiley & Sons

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2021 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Former Identifier

2006104926

Esploro creation date

2021-04-21

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