Department of Economics and Finance, Eastern Connecticut State University, Windham, CT, USA.
Demography. 2021 Aug 1;58(4):1401-1421. doi: 10.1215/00703370-9357498.
Several countries in sub-Saharan Africa, including Kenya, have introduced free/subsidized secondary education. This paper examines the role of these free/subsidized education policies on teenage motherhood. To identify the causal effect, I exploit the timing of a national reform in Kenya that eliminated/subsidized secondary school fees using a difference-in-difference estimation design. Using the 2014 Kenya Demographic and Health Survey (DHS), I estimate that the likelihood of teenage motherhood decreased by approximately 5 percentage points after the policy's implementation. This study reiterates that the teenage period is crucial in terms of developing human capital through formal schooling. In most developing countries, parents often determine and fund human capital, which makes household wealth/income a critical factor in human capital accumulation and its intergenerational process. I also highlight positive externalities from educational-centered policies, such as long-term economic growth, poverty reduction, and reduction of social welfare dependency.
撒哈拉以南非洲的一些国家,包括肯尼亚在内,已经实行了免费/补贴性的中等教育。本文探讨了这些免费/补贴性教育政策对少女妈妈现象的影响。为了确定其因果效应,我利用肯尼亚国内一项取消/补贴中学学费的全国性改革的时机,采用双重差分估计设计进行研究。利用 2014 年肯尼亚人口与健康调查(DHS)的数据,我估计在政策实施后,少女妈妈的可能性降低了大约 5 个百分点。本研究再次强调,在通过正规学校教育发展人力资本方面,青少年时期至关重要。在大多数发展中国家,父母通常决定和资助人力资本,这使得家庭财富/收入成为人力资本积累及其代际过程中的一个关键因素。我还强调了以教育为中心的政策的积极外部性,例如长期经济增长、减贫和减少对社会福利的依赖。