Can Benefits from Malaria Eradication Be Increased? Evidence from Costa Rica

被引:0
作者
Mora-Garcia, Claudio A. [1 ]
机构
[1] Pontificia Univ Javeriana, Bogota, Colombia
关键词
EXPOSURE; IMPACT; CHILDHOOD; EDUCATION; DISEASE; GENDER; HEALTH; LABOR;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
K9 [地理];
学科分类号
0705 ;
摘要
The estimated benefits of malaria eradication have been very different in terms of human capital accumulation. This paper quantifies the impact of malaria eradication in Costa Rica and explores whether precampaign regional characteristics can improve or damage the benefits of a health campaign. There are several results. First, using difference in differences I find that years of education of men and women increased in response to the eradication campaign but that only wages of males increased. Results are robust. Second, worse conditions in the school system and more child employment displaced schooling. Hence, health benefits may not translate into educational gains when the school system characteristics are bad or when the child labor market provides a better investment opportunity than schooling. Third, combining empirical evidence with a simple model, the increase in schooling cannot solely explain the increase in the income of men; however, health improvements explain most of the increase. Finally, the point estimates show that human capital gains were almost completely eliminated when a shortage of funding for eradication led to a resurgence of malaria; this emphasizes the fragility of the estimated benefits.
引用
收藏
页码:585 / 628
页数:44
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] The Network Management Model for Comprehensive Early Childhood Care in Costa Rica: A View From its Actors
    Hernandez-Vargas, Dora
    Chacon-Ortiz, Manuel
    REVISTA ELECTRONICA EDUCARE, 2021, 25 (03):
  • [22] Characterization of Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis Inhibiting Bacteria from Amphibian Populations in Costa Rica
    Madison, Joseph D.
    Berg, Elizabeth A.
    Abarca, Juan G.
    Whitfield, Steven M.
    Gorbatenko, Oxana
    Pinto, Adrian
    Kerby, Jacob L.
    FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY, 2017, 8
  • [23] Ideas for Teaching about the Nature of the Social Work: an Experience from Costa Rica
    Esquivel Corella, Freddy
    TRABAJO SOCIAL, 2008, (10) : 187 - 199
  • [24] Comparative Study on Mathematical Anxiety Among Students From Costa Rica and Spain
    Delgado-Monge, Islande
    Castro-Martinez, Enrique
    Perez-Tyteca, Patricia
    REVISTA ELECTRONICA EDUCARE, 2020, 24 (02):
  • [25] MANAGEMENT COMMITMENTS AND PRIMARY CARE: ANOTHER LESSON FROM COSTA RICA FOR THE WORLD?
    Soors, Werner
    De Paepe, Pierre
    Unger, Jean-Pierre
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HEALTH SERVICES, 2014, 44 (02): : 337 - 353
  • [26] Total and resistant starch from foodstuff for animal and human consumption in Costa Rica
    Artavia, Graciela
    Cortes-Herrera, Carolina
    Granados-Chinchilla, Fabio
    CURRENT RESEARCH IN FOOD SCIENCE, 2020, 3 : 275 - 283
  • [27] Malaria, Race, and Inequality: Evidence from the Early 1900s US South
    Battaglia, Emily
    Kisat, Faizaan
    JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC HISTORY, 2021, 81 (04) : 1173 - 1222
  • [28] Malaria and Education: Evidence from Mali
    Thuilliez, Josselin
    d'Albis, Hippolyte
    Niangaly, Hamidou
    Doumbo, Ogobara
    JOURNAL OF AFRICAN ECONOMIES, 2017, 26 (04) : 443 - 469
  • [29] Shifts in the diversity of an amphibian community from a premontane forest of San Ramon, Costa Rica
    Acosta-Chaves, Victor J.
    Madrigal-Elizondo, Victor
    Chaves, Gerardo
    Morera-Chacon, Brayan
    Garcia-Rodriguez, Adrian
    Bolanos, Federico
    REVISTA DE BIOLOGIA TROPICAL, 2019, 67 (02) : 259 - 273
  • [30] The salt content of products from popular fast-food chains in Costa Rica
    Heredia-Blonval, Katrina
    Blanco-Metzler, Adriana
    Montero-Campos, Marielos
    Dunford, Elizabeth K.
    APPETITE, 2014, 83 : 173 - 177