Long-term implications of under-nutrition on psychosocial competencies: evidence from four developing countries

<p>Both cognitive and non-cognitive skills matter to understand a child’s opportunities and outcomes in adulthood. However, it is unclear how non-cognitive skills are produced and what the role played by household investments is in this process. Motivated by suggestions from the medical litera...

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Main Authors: Dercon, S, Sanchez, A
Format: Working paper
Language:English
Published: Young Lives 2011
Subjects:
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author Dercon, S
Sanchez, A
author_facet Dercon, S
Sanchez, A
author_sort Dercon, S
collection OXFORD
description <p>Both cognitive and non-cognitive skills matter to understand a child’s opportunities and outcomes in adulthood. However, it is unclear how non-cognitive skills are produced and what the role played by household investments is in this process. Motivated by suggestions from the medical literature and by the skills formation model proposed by Cunha and Heckman (2007, 2008), in this paper we use longitudinal data from children growing up in developing country contexts to study the role of early nutritional history in shaping these skills. To do this, we link height-for-age at the age of 7 to 8 to a set of psychosocial competencies measured at the age of 11 to 12 that are known to be correlated with earnings during adulthood: self-efficacy, self-esteem and educational aspirations. The estimation procedure is OLS with community fixed effects, controlling for a wide array of factors that can be deemed as determinants of parental investments – including an extended set of household wealth controls. We find that height-for-age predicts the three observed psychosocial measures. Auxiliary estimations suggest that the nutrition effect found is unlikely to be mediated by the effect that under-nutrition can have on cognitive skills.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:e6aa9f9f-18d6-4733-9124-4f71d95120e12022-03-27T10:32:49ZLong-term implications of under-nutrition on psychosocial competencies: evidence from four developing countriesWorking paperhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_8042uuid:e6aa9f9f-18d6-4733-9124-4f71d95120e1Children and youthHealth and health policyFamilies,children and childcareEthnic minorities and ethnicityEnglishOxford University Research Archive - ValetYoung Lives2011Dercon, SSanchez, A<p>Both cognitive and non-cognitive skills matter to understand a child’s opportunities and outcomes in adulthood. However, it is unclear how non-cognitive skills are produced and what the role played by household investments is in this process. Motivated by suggestions from the medical literature and by the skills formation model proposed by Cunha and Heckman (2007, 2008), in this paper we use longitudinal data from children growing up in developing country contexts to study the role of early nutritional history in shaping these skills. To do this, we link height-for-age at the age of 7 to 8 to a set of psychosocial competencies measured at the age of 11 to 12 that are known to be correlated with earnings during adulthood: self-efficacy, self-esteem and educational aspirations. The estimation procedure is OLS with community fixed effects, controlling for a wide array of factors that can be deemed as determinants of parental investments – including an extended set of household wealth controls. We find that height-for-age predicts the three observed psychosocial measures. Auxiliary estimations suggest that the nutrition effect found is unlikely to be mediated by the effect that under-nutrition can have on cognitive skills.</p>
spellingShingle Children and youth
Health and health policy
Families,children and childcare
Ethnic minorities and ethnicity
Dercon, S
Sanchez, A
Long-term implications of under-nutrition on psychosocial competencies: evidence from four developing countries
title Long-term implications of under-nutrition on psychosocial competencies: evidence from four developing countries
title_full Long-term implications of under-nutrition on psychosocial competencies: evidence from four developing countries
title_fullStr Long-term implications of under-nutrition on psychosocial competencies: evidence from four developing countries
title_full_unstemmed Long-term implications of under-nutrition on psychosocial competencies: evidence from four developing countries
title_short Long-term implications of under-nutrition on psychosocial competencies: evidence from four developing countries
title_sort long term implications of under nutrition on psychosocial competencies evidence from four developing countries
topic Children and youth
Health and health policy
Families,children and childcare
Ethnic minorities and ethnicity
work_keys_str_mv AT dercons longtermimplicationsofundernutritiononpsychosocialcompetenciesevidencefromfourdevelopingcountries
AT sancheza longtermimplicationsofundernutritiononpsychosocialcompetenciesevidencefromfourdevelopingcountries