早期降雨冲击对基础认知技能的长期影响:来自秘鲁的证据

Long-term effects of early life rainfall shocks on foundational cognitive skills: Evidence from Peru

Economics & Human Biology · 2024
被引 10 · 同刊同年前 9%
人大 A-ABS 2

中文导读

研究秘鲁儿童早期遭遇降雨冲击对执行功能等基础认知技能的长期负面影响,尤其损害工作记忆,并发现家庭人力资本投资减少是潜在机制。

Abstract

Global warming is changing precipitation patterns, particularly harming communities in low-and-middle income countries (LMICs). Whilst the long-term effects of being exposed to rainfall shocks early in life on school-achievement tests are well-established, there is little population-based evidence from LMICs on the mechanisms through which these shocks operate. Executive functions (EFs) are key for children's learning abilities. This paper analyses the effects of early exposure to rainfall shocks on four foundational cognitive skills (FCSs), including EFs that have been found to be key predictors of educational success. These skills were measured via a series of tablet-based tasks administered in Peru as part of the Young Lives longitudinal study (YLS). We combine the YLS data with gridded data on monthly precipitation to generate monthly, community-level rainfall shock estimates. The key identification strategy relies on temporary climatic shocks being uncorrelated with other latent determinants of FCSs development. Our results show significant negative effects of early life exposure to rainfall shocks on EFs-especially, on working memory-measured in later childhood. We also find evidence of rainfall shocks decreasing households' abilities to invest in human capital, which may affect both FCSs and domain-specific test scores. Finally, there is suggestive, but not conclusive, evidence that a conditional-cash-transfer program providing poor households with additional financial resources might partially offset the effects of the rainfall shocks.

早期降雨冲击执行功能认知技能人力资本投资秘鲁