Does it Matter Where You Grow up? Childhood Exposure Effects in Latin America and the Caribbean

Working papers in socioeconomic research

Does it Matter Where You Grow up? Childhood Exposure Effects in Latin America and the Caribbean

Publication date: 2021-12-15

Authors: Muñoz, Ercio

I study whether the observed differences in intergenerational educational mobility across regions in Latin America and the Caribbean are due to the sorting of families or the effect of grow ing up in these different places. I exploit differences in the age of children at the time their families move across locations to isolate regional childhood exposure effects from sorting. I find a convergence rate of 3.5% per year of exposure between age 1 to 11, implying that children who move at the age of 1 would pick up 35% of the observed differences in mobility between origin and destination. These results are robust to using a speci fication that identifies the effect of place within households, the use of only anomalously high migration outflows, instrument ing the choice of destination with historical migration, and a combination of both approaches.

Available languages

Currently we only have the publication in one language.

Technical sheet

Language: en

Country / Region: Latin America

Format: pdf

Cite publication

Muñoz, Ercio. (2021). Does it Matter Where You Grow up? Childhood Exposure Effects in Latin America and the Caribbean. Caracas: CAF

Authors

Muñoz, Ercio

No. of publications 1

Recommended reading