Child Labor Standards in Regional Trade Agreements

This paper studies the impact of child labor standards in regional trade agreements on a variety of child labor market outcomes, including employment, education, and household inequality. It develops a stylized general equilibrium model of child labor in an economy open to international trade and considers the impact of regional trade agreements with and without child labor bans. The paper empirically investigates the effects of these clauses in trade agreements in a broad international panel of 101 developing countries, using harmonized survey microdata. Exploiting quasi-experimental methods to obtain plausibly causal estimates, the analysis finds that regional trade agreements without child-labor bans lead to reductions in child employment and increases in school enrollment, particularly for older children aged 14–17 years. Child labor bans in regional trade agreements perversely increase employment of children aged 14–17 years and decrease school enrollment for both young and older children. These effects appear to decrease inter-household income inequality through increased child earnings. The findings are consistent with the theoretical predictions from the model and the literature on child labor bans.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Abman, Ryan, Lundberg, Clark, Mclaren, John, Ruta, Michele
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2023-03-01T21:40:10Z
Subjects:LABOR MARKETS, CHILD LABOR BAN MICRODATA, CHILD LABOR, REGIONAL TRACE AGREEMENTS, TRADE LIBERALIZATION,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099936202282351628/IDU03cd56b1b0fad904bda0ac8a03363b9ea0b98
https://worldbank7-prod.atmire.com/handle/10986/39488
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spelling dig-okr-10986394882023-03-06T16:44:42Z Child Labor Standards in Regional Trade Agreements Theory and Evidence Abman, Ryan Lundberg, Clark Mclaren, John Ruta, Michele LABOR MARKETS CHILD LABOR BAN MICRODATA CHILD LABOR REGIONAL TRACE AGREEMENTS TRADE LIBERALIZATION This paper studies the impact of child labor standards in regional trade agreements on a variety of child labor market outcomes, including employment, education, and household inequality. It develops a stylized general equilibrium model of child labor in an economy open to international trade and considers the impact of regional trade agreements with and without child labor bans. The paper empirically investigates the effects of these clauses in trade agreements in a broad international panel of 101 developing countries, using harmonized survey microdata. Exploiting quasi-experimental methods to obtain plausibly causal estimates, the analysis finds that regional trade agreements without child-labor bans lead to reductions in child employment and increases in school enrollment, particularly for older children aged 14–17 years. Child labor bans in regional trade agreements perversely increase employment of children aged 14–17 years and decrease school enrollment for both young and older children. These effects appear to decrease inter-household income inequality through increased child earnings. The findings are consistent with the theoretical predictions from the model and the literature on child labor bans. 2023-03-01T21:40:10Z 2023-03-06T16:44:41Z 2023-03-01T21:40:10Z 2023-03-06T16:44:41Z 2023-02 Working Paper Document de travail Documento de trabajo http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099936202282351628/IDU03cd56b1b0fad904bda0ac8a03363b9ea0b98 https://worldbank7-prod.atmire.com/handle/10986/39488 English en Policy Research Working Papers;10331 CC BY 3.0 IGO World Bank http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo application/pdf text/plain World Bank, Washington, DC
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
English
topic LABOR MARKETS
CHILD LABOR BAN MICRODATA
CHILD LABOR
REGIONAL TRACE AGREEMENTS
TRADE LIBERALIZATION
LABOR MARKETS
CHILD LABOR BAN MICRODATA
CHILD LABOR
REGIONAL TRACE AGREEMENTS
TRADE LIBERALIZATION
spellingShingle LABOR MARKETS
CHILD LABOR BAN MICRODATA
CHILD LABOR
REGIONAL TRACE AGREEMENTS
TRADE LIBERALIZATION
LABOR MARKETS
CHILD LABOR BAN MICRODATA
CHILD LABOR
REGIONAL TRACE AGREEMENTS
TRADE LIBERALIZATION
Abman, Ryan
Lundberg, Clark
Mclaren, John
Ruta, Michele
Child Labor Standards in Regional Trade Agreements
description This paper studies the impact of child labor standards in regional trade agreements on a variety of child labor market outcomes, including employment, education, and household inequality. It develops a stylized general equilibrium model of child labor in an economy open to international trade and considers the impact of regional trade agreements with and without child labor bans. The paper empirically investigates the effects of these clauses in trade agreements in a broad international panel of 101 developing countries, using harmonized survey microdata. Exploiting quasi-experimental methods to obtain plausibly causal estimates, the analysis finds that regional trade agreements without child-labor bans lead to reductions in child employment and increases in school enrollment, particularly for older children aged 14–17 years. Child labor bans in regional trade agreements perversely increase employment of children aged 14–17 years and decrease school enrollment for both young and older children. These effects appear to decrease inter-household income inequality through increased child earnings. The findings are consistent with the theoretical predictions from the model and the literature on child labor bans.
format Working Paper
topic_facet LABOR MARKETS
CHILD LABOR BAN MICRODATA
CHILD LABOR
REGIONAL TRACE AGREEMENTS
TRADE LIBERALIZATION
author Abman, Ryan
Lundberg, Clark
Mclaren, John
Ruta, Michele
author_facet Abman, Ryan
Lundberg, Clark
Mclaren, John
Ruta, Michele
author_sort Abman, Ryan
title Child Labor Standards in Regional Trade Agreements
title_short Child Labor Standards in Regional Trade Agreements
title_full Child Labor Standards in Regional Trade Agreements
title_fullStr Child Labor Standards in Regional Trade Agreements
title_full_unstemmed Child Labor Standards in Regional Trade Agreements
title_sort child labor standards in regional trade agreements
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2023-03-01T21:40:10Z
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099936202282351628/IDU03cd56b1b0fad904bda0ac8a03363b9ea0b98
https://worldbank7-prod.atmire.com/handle/10986/39488
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AT abmanryan theoryandevidence
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