Lasting impact of early life interventions: evidence from India’s Integrated Child Development Services
Journal of Development Studies, Forthcoming, 2020. https://doi.org/10.1080/00220388.2020.1762861
73 Pages Posted: 1 Nov 2017 Last revised: 29 Apr 2020
Date Written: April 26, 2020
Abstract
In the year 1975, the Indian government initiated the Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS), the largest national program in the world targeting long-term nutrition and holistic development of children, to be implemented through the Anganwadi Centers (AWC). Combining differences across villages in the year of AWC construction with birth-year of children, we capture the variation in ‘exposure’ to the program, to estimate the impact of the ICDS exposure through access to AWCs on later life health outcomes of children. Our findings suggest that a 10-13 year old cohort fully exposed to the scheme during first three years of life has higher height (by 2.3 cm) and weight (by 1 kg) as compared to the same cohort, not exposed to the services in initial three years. The Z score of height-for-age (ZHFA) and Z score of weight-for-age ZWFA, although not statistically significant, seem to increase as well. The average impacts seem to be as high as 0.74 cm and 0.33 kg for an extra year of exposure, for measures of height and weight respectively. Our findings are robust to changing age cohorts and several specifications. The effects seem to be larger among girls and in poor households.
Keywords: ICDS, Child Health, Morbidity, Early life conditions, Height, Weight, India
JEL Classification: H51, I12, I14, I15, J13
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