Minimum Age Regulation and Child Labor: New Evidence from Brazil

This study presents new evidence on the effects of minimum age regulations obtained from a natural experiment. In 1998, a constitutional reform in Brazil changed the minimum working age from 14 to 16. The reform was the legislative counterpart of a broad set of measures taken by a government strongly committed to eliminating child labor. This article investigates the role of the minimum working age in this context. The setting allows for improvements upon past approaches based on comparing employment rates of children at different ages. A discontinuity in treatment is exploited, namely the fact that only children who turned 14 after the enactment date (mid-December 1998) are banned from work. According to regression discontinuity and difference-in-discontinuity designs, the null hypothesis of no overall effect of the ban cannot be rejected. Throughout the methods and specifications, an employment effect in a confidence interval of [−0.06,0.03] (in percentage points) is found. A detailed heterogeneity analysis is performed and provides suggestive evidence of diminishing child labor trends in regions characterized by higher labor inspection intensity, which is interpreted as a trace of there being a law. However, contrary to what has been claimed in recent studies, the law seems not to have produced sizeable effects overall, at least in the short run. Power calculations and extensive sensitivity checks support these conclusions.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bargain, Olivier, Boutin, Delphine
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:en_US
Published: Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the World Bank 2019-12-19
Subjects:CHILD LABOR, BAN, MINIMUM WORKING AGE, REGRESSION DISCONTINUITY,
Online Access:https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/40293
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spelling dig-okr-10986402932024-01-10T14:27:35Z Minimum Age Regulation and Child Labor: New Evidence from Brazil Bargain, Olivier Boutin, Delphine CHILD LABOR BAN MINIMUM WORKING AGE REGRESSION DISCONTINUITY This study presents new evidence on the effects of minimum age regulations obtained from a natural experiment. In 1998, a constitutional reform in Brazil changed the minimum working age from 14 to 16. The reform was the legislative counterpart of a broad set of measures taken by a government strongly committed to eliminating child labor. This article investigates the role of the minimum working age in this context. The setting allows for improvements upon past approaches based on comparing employment rates of children at different ages. A discontinuity in treatment is exploited, namely the fact that only children who turned 14 after the enactment date (mid-December 1998) are banned from work. According to regression discontinuity and difference-in-discontinuity designs, the null hypothesis of no overall effect of the ban cannot be rejected. Throughout the methods and specifications, an employment effect in a confidence interval of [−0.06,0.03] (in percentage points) is found. A detailed heterogeneity analysis is performed and provides suggestive evidence of diminishing child labor trends in regions characterized by higher labor inspection intensity, which is interpreted as a trace of there being a law. However, contrary to what has been claimed in recent studies, the law seems not to have produced sizeable effects overall, at least in the short run. Power calculations and extensive sensitivity checks support these conclusions. 2023-08-29T19:25:02Z 2023-08-29T19:25:02Z 2019-12-19 Journal Article The World Bank Economic Review 0258-6770 (print) 1564-698X (online) https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/40293 en_US World Bank Economic Review CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/igo World Bank application/pdf Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the World Bank
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 en_US
topic CHILD LABOR
BAN
MINIMUM WORKING AGE
REGRESSION DISCONTINUITY
CHILD LABOR
BAN
MINIMUM WORKING AGE
REGRESSION DISCONTINUITY
spellingShingle CHILD LABOR
BAN
MINIMUM WORKING AGE
REGRESSION DISCONTINUITY
CHILD LABOR
BAN
MINIMUM WORKING AGE
REGRESSION DISCONTINUITY
Bargain, Olivier
Boutin, Delphine
Minimum Age Regulation and Child Labor: New Evidence from Brazil
description This study presents new evidence on the effects of minimum age regulations obtained from a natural experiment. In 1998, a constitutional reform in Brazil changed the minimum working age from 14 to 16. The reform was the legislative counterpart of a broad set of measures taken by a government strongly committed to eliminating child labor. This article investigates the role of the minimum working age in this context. The setting allows for improvements upon past approaches based on comparing employment rates of children at different ages. A discontinuity in treatment is exploited, namely the fact that only children who turned 14 after the enactment date (mid-December 1998) are banned from work. According to regression discontinuity and difference-in-discontinuity designs, the null hypothesis of no overall effect of the ban cannot be rejected. Throughout the methods and specifications, an employment effect in a confidence interval of [−0.06,0.03] (in percentage points) is found. A detailed heterogeneity analysis is performed and provides suggestive evidence of diminishing child labor trends in regions characterized by higher labor inspection intensity, which is interpreted as a trace of there being a law. However, contrary to what has been claimed in recent studies, the law seems not to have produced sizeable effects overall, at least in the short run. Power calculations and extensive sensitivity checks support these conclusions.
format Journal Article
topic_facet CHILD LABOR
BAN
MINIMUM WORKING AGE
REGRESSION DISCONTINUITY
author Bargain, Olivier
Boutin, Delphine
author_facet Bargain, Olivier
Boutin, Delphine
author_sort Bargain, Olivier
title Minimum Age Regulation and Child Labor: New Evidence from Brazil
title_short Minimum Age Regulation and Child Labor: New Evidence from Brazil
title_full Minimum Age Regulation and Child Labor: New Evidence from Brazil
title_fullStr Minimum Age Regulation and Child Labor: New Evidence from Brazil
title_full_unstemmed Minimum Age Regulation and Child Labor: New Evidence from Brazil
title_sort minimum age regulation and child labor: new evidence from brazil
publisher Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the World Bank
publishDate 2019-12-19
url https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/40293
work_keys_str_mv AT bargainolivier minimumageregulationandchildlabornewevidencefrombrazil
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