Ali Fatma Romeh M, Elsayed Mahmoud A A
Department of Economics, Faculty of Economics and Political Science, Cairo University, Giza, Egypt.
Department of Public Management and Policy, Andrew Young School of Policy Studies, Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Health Econ. 2018 Apr;27(4):649-662. doi: 10.1002/hec.3622. Epub 2017 Dec 13.
This paper examines the impact of parental education on child health using a reduction in the length of primary schooling in Egypt. We use a fuzzy regression discontinuity design to compare the health outcomes of children whose parents were exposed to different schooling requirements because they were born either side of a threshold date. Using data from the Demographic and Health Survey (1992-2014), we find no effect of maternal education on child mortality or nutritional status. There is some evidence, although not entirely robust, that father's education reduces the likelihood of child stunting. We find, however, that father's education has no impact on child mortality or other measures of nutritional status. We provide suggestive evidence that, given the low levels of parental education in Egypt accompanied with the inferior quality of primary schooling, education has little effect on intermediate outcomes-literacy and utilization of antenatal care-that may improve the health of offspring.
本文利用埃及小学学制缩短这一情况,研究了父母教育程度对儿童健康的影响。我们采用模糊回归断点设计,比较父母因出生在临界日期前后而面临不同入学要求的儿童的健康状况。利用人口与健康调查(1992 - 2014年)的数据,我们发现母亲的教育程度对儿童死亡率或营养状况没有影响。有一些证据表明,父亲的教育程度虽不完全稳健,但会降低儿童发育迟缓的可能性。然而,我们发现父亲的教育程度对儿童死亡率或其他营养状况指标没有影响。我们提供了具有启发性的证据,鉴于埃及父母教育程度较低且小学教育质量较差,教育对可能改善后代健康的中间结果——识字率和产前护理利用率——几乎没有影响。