Mitigating Long-run Health Effects of Drought: Evidence from South Africa

55 Pages Posted: 20 Dec 2013 Last revised: 26 Jun 2026

See all articles by Taryn Dinkelman

Taryn Dinkelman

Dartmouth College - Department of Economics

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Date Written: December 2013

Abstract

Drought is Africa's primary natural disaster and a pervasive source of income risk for poor households. This paper documents the long-run health effects of early life exposure to drought and investigates an important source of heterogeneity in these effects. Combining birth cohort variation in South African Census data with cross-sectional and temporal drought variation, I estimate long-run health impacts of drought exposure among Africans confined to homelands during apartheid. Drought exposure in early childhood significantly raises later life male disability rates by 4% and reduces cohort size. Among a subset of homelands - the TBVC areas - disability effects are double and negative cohort effects are significantly larger. I show that differences in spatial mobility restrictions that influence the extent of migrant networks across TBVC and non-TBVC areas contribute to this heterogeneity. Placebo checks show no differential disability impacts of drought exposure across TBVC and non-TBVC areas after the repeal of migration restrictions. The results show that although drought has significant long-run effects on health human capital, migrant networks in poor economies provide one channel through which families mitigate these negative impacts of local environmental shock.

Suggested Citation

Dinkelman, Taryn, Mitigating Long-run Health Effects of Drought: Evidence from South Africa (December 2013). NBER Working Paper No. w19756, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2370212

Taryn Dinkelman (Contact Author)

Dartmouth College - Department of Economics ( email )

Hanover, NH 03755
United States

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