How to Deal with Covert Child Labor and Give Children an Effective Education, in a Poor Developing Country
Alessandro Cigno
The World Bank Economic Review, 2012, vol. 26, issue 1, 61-77
Abstract:
Because credit and insurance markets are imperfect and intrafamily transfers and how children use their time outside school hours are private information, the second-best policy makes school enrollment compulsory, forces overt child labor below its efficient level (if positive), and uses a combination of need- and merit-based grants, financed by earmarked taxes, to relax credit constraints, redistribute, and insure. Existing conditional cash transfer schemes can be made to approximate the second-best policy by incorporating these principles in some measure. Copyright 2012, Oxford University Press.
Date: 2012
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Working Paper: How to Deal with Covert Child Labour, and Give Children an Effective Education, in a Poor Developing Country (2011) 
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