Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, National University of Singapore, 469c Bukit Timah Road, 259772, Singapore.
Soc Sci Med. 2022 Nov;312:115366. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2022.115366. Epub 2022 Sep 13.
This study investigates the impact of women's political representation on children's health outcomes from 1990 to 2020 using a global dataset comprising 162 countries. The child health outcomes studied are infant and neonatal mortality rates and vaccination coverage for measles and diphtheria, pertussis, and tetanus (DPT). We apply an event study and panel data instrumental-variable fixed-effects regression analysis for data analysis. The timing of the introduction of a gender quota in a country is used as an instrument to address endogeneity bias commonly associated with women's political participation. We find evidence of a positive impact of increasing women's representation in national legislatures on all child health outcomes studied. In particular, our study reports a significant negative effect of women's political participation on neonatal mortality which was not reported by any previous research. We also find evidence to support hypotheses related to several potential pathways that connect women's political representation with child health outcomes, including health expenditure, female labor force participation, skilled birth attendance, and adolescent fertility rate. Also novel in our findings is a heterogeneity analysis which reveals that reserved seat quota boosted child health outcomes more than candidate quota, with strong geographical variation in the relationship. Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia benefited the most in terms of child health outcomes due to an increase in women's political representation among all regions. Our findings reinforce the significance of women's greater political empowerment for child health-a crucial development outcome-particularly in regions characterized by the poor quality of early childhood health conditions and survival rates.
本研究利用包含 162 个国家的全球数据集,调查了 1990 年至 2020 年期间妇女政治代表权对儿童健康结果的影响。研究的儿童健康结果包括婴儿和新生儿死亡率以及麻疹、白喉、百日咳和破伤风(DPT)疫苗的覆盖率。我们应用事件研究和面板数据工具变量固定效应回归分析进行数据分析。使用一国引入性别配额的时间作为工具,以解决与妇女政治参与相关的常见内生性偏差。我们有证据表明,增加国家立法机构中妇女代表人数对所有研究的儿童健康结果都有积极影响。特别是,我们的研究报告了妇女政治参与对新生儿死亡率的显著负面影响,这是以前的研究没有报告的。我们还发现证据支持与妇女政治代表权与儿童健康结果之间的几个潜在途径相关的假设,包括卫生支出、女性劳动力参与率、熟练接生和青少年生育率。我们的研究结果还具有新颖性,因为一项异质性分析表明,保留席位配额比候选人配额更能促进儿童健康结果,而且这种关系在地理上存在很大差异。撒哈拉以南非洲和南亚由于所有地区妇女政治代表人数的增加,在儿童健康结果方面受益最大。我们的研究结果强调了妇女更大程度的政治赋权对儿童健康的重要性,特别是在那些儿童早期健康状况和生存率较差的地区。