The Effect of Childhood Migration on Human Capital Accumulation: Evidence from Rural-Urban Migrants in Indonesia

Budy Resosudarmo, Daniel Suryadarma

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contributionpeer-review

Abstract

Developing countries are experiencing unprecedented levels of urbanization. Although most of these movements are motivated by economic reasons, they could affect the human capital accumulation of the children who follow their parents to the cities. This paper estimates the causal effect of permanently migrating as a child from a rural area to an urban area on human capital outcomes. To our knowledge, this paper is one of only several papers, especially in the context of a developing country, which is able to estimate the causal effect of migration. We utilize a recent survey of urban-rural migrants in Indonesia and merge it with a nationally representative survey to create a dataset that contains migrants in urban areas and non-migrants in rural areas who were born in the same rural districts. We then employ a measure of district-level propensity to migrate, calculated from the Indonesian intercensal survey, as an instrument. We find that childhood migration to urban areas increase education attainment by about 4.5 years by the time these individuals are adults. In addition, the childhood migrants face a lower probability to be underweight by about 15 percentage points as adults. However, we find no statistically significant effect on height, which is a measure of long-term nutritional intake, and we only find a weak effect on the probability to be obese. Therefore, our results suggest a permanent, positive, and large effect of childhood migration on education attainment and some health measures. In addition, our results can rule out any negative effect on health.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationProceedings of Australian Conference of Economists 2011
Place of PublicationAustralia
PublisherEconomic Society of Australia
Pages17
EditionPeer Reviewed
Publication statusPublished - 2011
EventAustralian Conference of Economists 2011 - Canberra Australia, Australia
Duration: 1 Jan 2011 → …

Conference

ConferenceAustralian Conference of Economists 2011
Country/TerritoryAustralia
Period1/01/11 → …
OtherJuly 11-14 2011

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'The Effect of Childhood Migration on Human Capital Accumulation: Evidence from Rural-Urban Migrants in Indonesia'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this