cover image: Effect of the Jamaica Early Childhood Stimulation Intervention on Labor Market Outcomes at Age 31 (English)

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Effect of the Jamaica Early Childhood Stimulation Intervention on Labor Market Outcomes at Age 31 (English)

30 Sep 2021

This paper reports the labor market effects of the Jamaica Early Childhood Stimulation intervention at age 31. The study is a small-sample randomized early childhood education stimulation intervention targeting stunted children living in the poor neighborhoods of Kingston, Jamaica. Implemented in 1987-89, treatment consisted of a two-year, home-based intervention designed to improve nutrition and the quality of mother-child interactions to foster cognitive, language, and psycho-social skills. The original sample was 127 stunted children between ages 9 and 24 months. The study was able to track and interview 75 percent of the original sample 30 years after the intervention, both still living in Jamaica and migrated abroad. The findings reveal large and statistically significant effects on income and schooling; the treatment group had 43 percent higher hourly wages and 37 percent higher earnings than the control group. This is a substantial increase over the treatment effect estimated for age 22, when a 25 percent increase in earnings was observed.
labor force participation early childhood education rural development industry early childhood early childhood development standard deviation labor markets average treatment effect children at risk mother and child early childhood intervention cumulative distribution function educational sciences health care services industry nutrition and population social protections and labor social protections & assistance health and nutrition center for health labor market outcome living in poverty nutrition intervention less developed country effect on employment department of economics early child development causal effect early childhood stimulation highly skilled labor small sample disadvantaged child treatment effect early childhood program stunted child strategic impact evaluation fund hypothesis testing home visit program nutritional supplementation primary health-care distribution of migrants higher education diploma equality of distribution research on children curriculum for child

Authors

Gertler,Paul J., Heckman,James J., Pinto,Rodrigo Ribeiro Antunes, Chang-Lopez,Susan M., Grantham-Mcgregor,Sally, Vermeersch,Christel M. J., Walker,Susan, Wright,Amika S.

Disclosure Date
2021/09/30
Disclosure Status
Disclosed
Doc Name
Effect of the Jamaica Early Childhood Stimulation Intervention on Labor Market Outcomes at Age 31
Originating Unit
Health Nutrition &Population ECA (HECHN)
Published in
United States of America
Series Name
Policy Research working paper; no. WPS 9787;
Total Volume(s)
1
Unit Owning
Off of Sr VP Dev Econ/Chief Econ (DECVP)
Version Type
Final
Volume No
1

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