Volume 27 - Article 23 | Pages 681–704
Whose education affects a child’s nutritional status? From parents' to household's education
Abstract
Background: The paper engages in the ongoing debate regarding the determinants of child nutrition in developing countries and stresses the potential contribution of the education of household members other than the child’s parents.
Objective: The aim of the paper is threefold: (1) to verify whether there is evidence of the key role of parents’ education for children’s nutrition; (2) to explore the possible presence of the externalities generated by the literacy of household members different from the child’s parents; (3) to test whether there is difference in the influence of these variables on the two indicators of child nutrition, child height-for-age and weight-for-age.
Methods: The determinants of child nutrition were analyzed by estimating a series of econometric models through OLS regressions applied on data from the 2003 DHS survey in Mozambique. By means of seemingly unrelated regression together with formal testing we compared the impact of the covariates on the two outcomes.
Results: In line with previous studies, we find that one year of mother’s education increases their children’s height-for-age and weight-for-age z-scores by nearly 0.025 and 0.015. The presence of another literate household member has a significant, though limited, effect on child height while it has no influence on child weight. Lastly, there is no statistically significant difference in the effect of parents’ education on the two indicators while our measure of proximate literacy has a significantly larger impact on child height.
Conclusions: These findings should orient policy-makers toward income-augmenting and education-enhancing policies: the importance of non-parents’ literacy opens a further space for investment in education.
Author's Affiliation
- Francesco Burchi - Deutsches Institut für Entwicklungspolitik (DIE), Germany EMAIL
Most recent similar articles in Demographic Research
Is single parenthood increasingly an experience of less-educated mothers? A European comparison over five decades
Volume 51 - Article 34
| Keywords:
age,
children,
cross-national comparison,
education,
Europe,
family life course,
inequality,
single motherhood
Transitions to adulthood in men and women in rural Malawi in the 21st century using sequence analysis: Some evidence of delay
Volume 51 - Article 14
| Keywords:
Africa,
Health and Demographic Surveillance System,
longitudinal analysis,
Malawi,
sequence analysis,
transition to adulthood
A multidimensional global migration model for use in cohort-component population projections
Volume 51 - Article 11
| Keywords:
age dependency,
education,
international migration,
migration,
modelling,
population projection,
projections
Are highly educated partners really more gender egalitarian? A couple-level analysis of social class differentials in attitudes and behaviors
Volume 50 - Article 34
| Keywords:
attitudes,
couple analysis,
education,
educational level,
gender,
gender roles,
housework,
social class differentials
The importance of education for understanding variability of dementia onset in the United States
Volume 50 - Article 26
| Keywords:
dementia,
education,
lifespan variability,
modal age,
morbidity compression
Cited References: 37
Download to Citation Manager
PubMed
Google Scholar