“Household crowding and childhood educational outcomes: evidence from the young lives longitudinal study”
Professor Advisor
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Puentes Encina, Esteban
Author
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Farfán Romero, Ivo
Admission date
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2025-12-23T15:42:10Z
Available date
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2025-12-23T15:42:10Z
Publication date
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2025
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/208116
Abstract
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This study aims to examine the relationship between overcrowding and the educational development of children in low to middle income countries. Using the Young
Lives survey, a longitudinal study that investigates child poverty in Ethiopia, India,
Peru, and Vietnam over a span of 15 years, we employ an identification strategy consisting of a household and time fixed effects model, with the objectives of analyzing
whether there is a relationship between overcrowding and academic outcomes and
whether this relationship is causal. Our findings reveal a statistically significant negative effect of increasing one person per room on math and vocabulary test scores,
ranging from -0.023 to -0.037 standard deviations, for India and Vietnam using fixed
effects. For Peru negative effects observed using the OLS model dissipate using fixed
effects. In contrast, Ethiopia shows positive and statistically significant results for
PPVT using fixed effects. These results highlight the complex and context-dependent
nature of overcrowding’s impact on children’s educational outcomes.
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Lenguage
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en
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Publisher
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Universidad de Chile
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Type of license
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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States