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Child marriage and infant mortality: causal evidence from Ethiopia

Jorge García Hombrados

2021Journal of Population Economics26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract This study assesses the causal effect of child marriage on infant mortality. Using age discontinuities in exposure to a law that raised the legal age of marriage for women in Ethiopia, the study estimates that a 1-year delay in a woman’s age at cohabitation during her teenage years reduces the probability of her first-born child dying during infancy by 3.8 percentage points. This impact is closely linked to the effect of delaying cohabitation on women’s age at first birth.

Topics & Concepts

CohabitationDemographySocial policyInfant mortalityChild mortalityPopulationSociologyPolitical scienceLawGlobal Maternal and Child HealthDemographic Trends and Gender PreferencesGender, Labor, and Family Dynamics
Child marriage and infant mortality: causal evidence from Ethiopia | Litcius