Piped Water Access, Child Health and the Complementary Role of Education: Panel Data Evidence from South Africa
Korstiaan Wapenaar and
Umakrishnan Kollamparambil
Journal of Development Studies, 2019, vol. 55, issue 6, 1182-1200
Abstract:
This study establishes the causal impact of piped water access on child health in rural South Africa (2008–2015) through the use of a panel dataset and a quasi-experimental sample space. By employing an ordinal measure of child health as the dependent variable within linear fixed effects, logit, ordinal probit, and propensity-score matched linear as well as non-linear Difference-in-Difference, it is demonstrated that positive health benefits for children with access to piped water are observed if and only if the minimum level of educational attainment of the primary-caregiver is equal to or greater than seven years. This finding of complementarity is demonstrated to be a function of an individual’s (in)capacity to evaluate water quality: people below this threshold suffer from a piped water bias, place insufficient weight on the observable characteristics of water when determining water quality, and are subsequently less likely to treat piped water preceding consumption.
Date: 2019
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:taf:jdevst:v:55:y:2019:i:6:p:1182-1200
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DOI: 10.1080/00220388.2018.1487056
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