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Research ArticleArticles

No Place Like Home

Long-Run Impacts of Early Child Health and Family Planning on Labor and Migration Outcomes*

Tania Barham, Randall Kuhn and Patrick S. Turner
Published online before print December 11, 2023, 0322-12209R2; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/jhr.0322-12209R2
Tania Barham
†Tania Barham is an Associate Professor in the Department of Economics and the Institute of Behavioral Sciences at the University of Colorado Boulder and can be reached at .
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  • For correspondence: [email protected]
Randall Kuhn
‡Randall Kuhn is a Professor of Community Health Sciences at the University of California Los Angeles Fielding School of Public Health.
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Patrick S. Turner
§Patrick S. Turner is an Assistant Research Professor in the Wilson Sheehan Lab for Economic Opportunities and the Department of Economics at the University of Notre Dame.
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Abstract

This paper examines the long-term effects of early childhood health interventions, such as vaccination, and family planning, on adult labor market and migration outcomes in Bangladesh. ITT effects demonstrate men born when both intensive child health services and family planning were available were more educated and had better quality and more entrepreneurial occupations that required academic skills, but migrated less domestically leaving average annual income unaffected. Similarly aged women also engaged more in entrepreneurial paid work. An older cohort of men born prior to the introduction of intensive child health interventions migrated less internationally leading to lower annual earning.

JEL Codes:
  • I15
  • O15
  • I18
Key Words:
  • Child Health
  • Labor
  • Migration
  • Bangladesh
  • Vaccination
  • Family Planning

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Journal of Human Resources: 60 (3)
Journal of Human Resources
Vol. 60, Issue 3
1 May 2025
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No Place Like Home
Tania Barham, Randall Kuhn, Patrick S. Turner
Journal of Human Resources Dec 2023, 0322-12209R2; DOI: 10.3368/jhr.0322-12209R2

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No Place Like Home
Tania Barham, Randall Kuhn, Patrick S. Turner
Journal of Human Resources Dec 2023, 0322-12209R2; DOI: 10.3368/jhr.0322-12209R2
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Keywords

  • I15
  • O15
  • I18
  • child health
  • Labor
  • Migration
  • Bangladesh
  • Vaccination
  • Family planning
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