Effects of Public Policy on Child Labor
Many policy instruments can be used to address or affect child labor, even if they are implemented to achieve other objectives. From a theoretical point of view, however, the impact of these policies on child labor is undetermined. This paper discusses the evidence generated by rigorous evaluations on the impact on child labor of labor market programs, conditional and unconditional transfers, and microcredit, among other social programs and interventions. The study finds that although transfer programs generally tend to reduce child labor, other policies risk increasing child labor, especially if they affect households' productive opportunities. The findings also point to knowledge gaps that should be addressed in future evaluations. While progress has been made over the past decade, there is still much to learn about the effects of public policy on the labor participation of many children in developing countries.
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Format: | Working Paper biblioteca |
Language: | English en_US |
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World Bank, Washington, DC
2017-03
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Subjects: | child labor, education, international labor standards, human capital, public policy, transfers, labor policies, |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/108841488913017526/Effects-of-public-policy-on-child-labor-current-knowledge-gaps-and-implications-for-program-design https://hdl.handle.net/10986/26249 |
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dig-okr-10986262492024-08-09T09:07:29Z Effects of Public Policy on Child Labor Current Knowledge, Gaps, and Implications for Program Design Dammert, Ana C. de Hoop, Jacobus Mvukiyehe, Eric Rosati, Furio C. child labor education international labor standards human capital public policy transfers labor policies Many policy instruments can be used to address or affect child labor, even if they are implemented to achieve other objectives. From a theoretical point of view, however, the impact of these policies on child labor is undetermined. This paper discusses the evidence generated by rigorous evaluations on the impact on child labor of labor market programs, conditional and unconditional transfers, and microcredit, among other social programs and interventions. The study finds that although transfer programs generally tend to reduce child labor, other policies risk increasing child labor, especially if they affect households' productive opportunities. The findings also point to knowledge gaps that should be addressed in future evaluations. While progress has been made over the past decade, there is still much to learn about the effects of public policy on the labor participation of many children in developing countries. 2017-03-08T22:02:17Z 2017-03-08T22:02:17Z 2017-03 Working Paper Document de travail Documento de trabajo http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/108841488913017526/Effects-of-public-policy-on-child-labor-current-knowledge-gaps-and-implications-for-program-design https://hdl.handle.net/10986/26249 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper;No. 7999 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank application/pdf World Bank, Washington, DC |
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child labor education international labor standards human capital public policy transfers labor policies child labor education international labor standards human capital public policy transfers labor policies |
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child labor education international labor standards human capital public policy transfers labor policies child labor education international labor standards human capital public policy transfers labor policies Dammert, Ana C. de Hoop, Jacobus Mvukiyehe, Eric Rosati, Furio C. Effects of Public Policy on Child Labor |
description |
Many policy instruments can be used to
address or affect child labor, even if they are implemented
to achieve other objectives. From a theoretical point of
view, however, the impact of these policies on child labor
is undetermined. This paper discusses the evidence generated
by rigorous evaluations on the impact on child labor of
labor market programs, conditional and unconditional
transfers, and microcredit, among other social programs and
interventions. The study finds that although transfer
programs generally tend to reduce child labor, other
policies risk increasing child labor, especially if they
affect households' productive opportunities. The
findings also point to knowledge gaps that should be
addressed in future evaluations. While progress has been
made over the past decade, there is still much to learn
about the effects of public policy on the labor
participation of many children in developing countries. |
format |
Working Paper |
topic_facet |
child labor education international labor standards human capital public policy transfers labor policies |
author |
Dammert, Ana C. de Hoop, Jacobus Mvukiyehe, Eric Rosati, Furio C. |
author_facet |
Dammert, Ana C. de Hoop, Jacobus Mvukiyehe, Eric Rosati, Furio C. |
author_sort |
Dammert, Ana C. |
title |
Effects of Public Policy on Child Labor |
title_short |
Effects of Public Policy on Child Labor |
title_full |
Effects of Public Policy on Child Labor |
title_fullStr |
Effects of Public Policy on Child Labor |
title_full_unstemmed |
Effects of Public Policy on Child Labor |
title_sort |
effects of public policy on child labor |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2017-03 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/108841488913017526/Effects-of-public-policy-on-child-labor-current-knowledge-gaps-and-implications-for-program-design https://hdl.handle.net/10986/26249 |
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1807156049957879808 |