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Child labor, school attendance, and indigenous households : evidence from Mexico

Abstract

The authors use panel data for Mexico for 1997 to 1999 to test several assumptions regarding the impact of a conditional cash transfer program on child labor, emphasizing the differential impact on indigenous households. Using data from the conditional cash transfer program in Mexico PROGRESA (OPORTUNIDADES) they investigate the interaction between child labor and indigenous households. While indigenous children had a greater probability of working in 1997, this probability is reversed after treatment in the program. Indigenous children also had lower school attainment compared with Spanish-speaking or bilingual children. After the program, school attainment among indigenous children increased, reducing the gap.Street Children,Children and Youth,Labor Policies,Environmental Economics&Policies,Public Health Promotion,Street Children,Youth and Governance,Environmental Economics&Policies,Children and Youth,Child Labor

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