Volume 21, Number 4, 877-902, DOI: 10.1007/s00148-006-0123-6

Understanding the effects of siblings on child mortality: evidence from India

Gerald Makepeace and Sarmistha Pal

View Related Documents

Abstract

Given the intrinsically sequential nature of childbirth, timing of a child’s birth has consequences not only for itself but also for its older and younger siblings. The paper argues that prior spacing and posterior spacing between consecutive siblings are thus important measures of intensity of sibling competition for limited parental resources. While the available estimates of child mortality tend to ignore the endogeneity of sibling composition, we use a correlated recursive model of prior and posterior spacing and child mortality to correct it. There is evidence that uncorrected estimates under-estimate the effects of prior and posterior spacing on child mortality.

Keywords  Sibling rivalry - Birth spacing - Endogeneity bias

JEL Classification  D13 - I12 - O15


Responsible editor: Junsen Zhang

Fulltext Preview

Image of the first page of the fulltext document