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References for Can cash transfers reduce child labor?
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Further reading
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Key references
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De Hoop, J., Rosati, F. C. The Complex
Effects of Public Policies on Child Labour UCW Working
Paper, 2013. Key reference: [1]
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Cigno, A., Rosati, F. C. The Economics of
Child Labour. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005. Key reference: [2]
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Pellerano, L., Porreca, E., Rosati, F. C. "Income elasticity
of child labor: Do cash transfers have an impact on the poorest
children?" IZA Journal of
Development and Migration 11:1 (2020). Key reference: [3]
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De Hoop, J., Rosati, F. C. "Cash transfers and
child labor" World Bank
Research Observer 29:1 (2014): 202–234. Key reference: [4]
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Gertler, P. J., Martinez, S. W., Rubio-Codina, M. "Investing cash
transfers to raise long-term living standards" American Economic
Journal: Applied Economics 4:1 (2012): 164–192. Key reference: [5]
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Ravallion, M., Chen, S. "Hidden impact?
Household saving in response to a poor-area development
project" Journal of Public
Economics 89:11–12 (2005): 2183–2204. Key reference: [6]
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Sadoulet, E., de Janvry, A., Davis, B. "Cash transfer
programs with income multipliers: PROCAMPO in Mexico" World
Development 29:6 (2001): 1043–1056. Key reference: [7]
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Covarrubias, K., Davis, B., Winters, P. "From protection to
production: Productive impacts of the Malawi social cash
transfer scheme" Journal of
Development Effectiveness 4:1 (2012): 50–77. Key reference: [8]
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Chong, A., Yáñez-Pagans, M. "Not so fast! Cash
transfers can increase child labor: Evidence for Bolivia" Economics
Letters 179 (2019): 57–61. Key reference: [9]
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Augsburg, B., de Haas, R., Harmgart, H., Meghir, C. The Impacts of
Microcredit: Evidence from Bosnia and Herzegovina NBER Working
Paper No.18538, 2012. Key reference: [10]
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Nelson, L. K. From Loans to
Labor: Access to Credit, Entrepreneurship and Child
Labor University of
California, San Diego Working Paper, 2011. Key reference: [11]
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Islam, A., Choe, C. "Child labor and
schooling responses to access to microcredit in rural
Bangladesh" Economic
Inquiry 51:1 (2013): 46–61. Key reference: [12]
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Schady, N. R., Araujo, M. C. Cash Transfers,
Conditions, School Enrollment, and Child Work: Evidence from a
Randomized Cash Transfer Experiment in Ecuador World Bank Policy
Research Working Paper No.3930, 2006. Key reference: [13]
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Edmonds, E. V., Schady, N. "Poverty
alleviation and child labor" American Economic
Journal: Economic Policy 4:4 (2012): 100–124. Key reference: [14]
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Benhassine, N., Devoto, F., Duflo, E., Dupas, P., Pouliquen, V. "Turning a shove
into a nudge? A ‘labeled cash transfer’ for education" American Economic
Journal: Economic Policy 7:3 (2015): 86–125. Key reference: [15]
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De Hoop, J., Rosati, F. C. The Complex
Effects of Public Policies on Child Labour UCW Working
Paper, 2013.
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Additional References
- Basu, K., Van, P. H. "The economics of child labor" The American Economic Review 88:3 (1998): 412–427.
- De Hoop, J., Rosati, F. C. "Does promoting school attendance reduce child labor? Evidence from Burkina Faso's BRIGHT project" Economics of Education Review 39:C (2014): 78–96.
- Emerson, P. M., Ponczek, V., Souza, A. P. Child Labor and Learning World Bank Policy Research Working Paper No.6904, 2014.
- Guarcello, L., Mealli, F., Rosati, F. C. "Household vulnerability and child labor: The effect of shocks, credit rationing, and insurance" Journal of Population Economics 23:1 (2010): 169–198.
- ILO World Report on Child Labour: Economic Vulnerability, Social Protection and the Fight against Child Labour. Geneva: ILO, 2013.
- ILO Marking Progress Against Child Labour: Global Estimates and Trends 2000–2012. Geneva: ILO, 2013.