Climate shocks, coping responses and gender gap in human development

DOI

Replication data for chapter 2: This chapter examines the impact of drought on child health and schooling outcomes and investigates the contemporaneous relationship between these two main building blocks of human capital. We merge childlevel longitudinal data from the Ethiopia Rural Socioeconomic Survey (ERSS) with geo-referenced climate data. Our findings from within-child variation estimators reveal that drought has a detrimental impact on the highest grade completed of female children. We show that the negative eect of drought on a female child's completed years of formal schooling is channelled, albeit not entirely, through ill health.

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.34894/MT9BPY
Related Identifier https://doi.org/10.26481/dis.20200625hk
Metadata Access https://dataverse.nl/oai?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=oai_datacite&identifier=doi:10.34894/MT9BPY
Provenance
Creator Haile, Kaleab Kebede (ORCID: 0000-0002-7438-855X); Tirivayi, Nyasha; Nillesen, Eleonora
Publisher DataverseNL
Contributor Notten, Ad
Publication Year 2020
Rights CC0 Waiver; info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess; https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
OpenAccess false
Contact Notten, Ad (Maastricht University)
Representation
Resource Type Dataset
Format application/x-7z-compressed
Size 1399408
Version 1.2
Discipline Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Aquaculture; Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Aquaculture and Veterinary Medicine; Life Sciences; Social Sciences; Social and Behavioural Sciences; Soil Sciences