Litcius/Paper detail

Maternal human capital and infants’ health outcomes: Evidence from minimum dropout age policies in the US

Hamid Noghanibehambari, Mahmoud Salari, Nahid Tavassoli

2022SSM - Population Health12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The purpose of this cross-sectional study is to examine the causal relationship of maternal education and infants' health outcomes. Using birth certificate data over the years 1970-2004 and exploiting the space-time variation in Minimum Dropout Age laws to solve the endogeneity of education, we find a sizeable effect of mothers' education on their birth outcomes. An additional year of maternal education is associated with a reduction in incidences of low birth weight and preterm birth by 15.2 and 12.7 percent, respectively. The estimates are robust across various specifications and even when allowing mothers' cohort-of-birth to vary across regions. The results suggest that the candidate mechanisms of impact include improvements in timing, quantity, and quality of prenatal care, lower negative health behavior during pregnancy such as smoking and drinking, and higher spousal education.

Topics & Concepts

Birth certificateDropout (neural networks)Low birth weightEndogeneityHuman capitalMedicinePregnancyDemographyCohortPrenatal careBirth weightEnvironmental healthEconomicsPopulationEconomic growthEconometricsBiologyComputer scienceSociologyMachine learningInternal medicineGeneticsGlobal Health Care IssuesHealth disparities and outcomesBirth, Development, and Health
Maternal human capital and infants’ health outcomes: Evidence from minimum dropout age policies in the US | Litcius