首页|Detailed geographic information, conflict exposure, and health impacts

Detailed geographic information, conflict exposure, and health impacts

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? 2022We expand existing research by estimating the impact of exposure to conflict on children's health outcomes using geographic information on households’ distance from conflict sites—a more accurate measure of shock exposure than the traditional approach using regional-level information—and compare the impact of exposure in utero versus after birth. The identification strategy relies on exogenous variation in the conflict's geographic extent and timing. Using multiple waves of survey data from Ethiopia and Eritrea, we find that conflict-exposed children have significantly lower height-for-age. With GPS information that enables accounting for households’ distance from the conflict sites, negative impacts of conflict exposure are two to three times larger than if exposure is measured at the imprecise regional level. Results are robust to addressing potential exposure misclassification due to migration happening between the war and the survey collection date.

AfricaChild healthConflictFetal origins hypothesis

Akresh R.、Caruso G.D.、Thirumurthy H.

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University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Department of Economics

The World Bank Human Capital Project

University of Pennsylvania Division of Health Policy

2022

World Development

World Development

SSCI
ISSN:0305-750X
年,卷(期):2022.155
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