Labor Effects of Adult Mortality in Tanzanian Households
43 Pages Posted: 20 Apr 2016
Date Written: May 2003
Abstract
Because of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, Sub-Saharan African populations are challenged with increasing adult mortality rates that have potentially profound economic implications. Yet, little is known about the impact of adult deaths in African households. Using panel data from Tanzania, Beegle explores how prime-age adult mortality affects the time allocation of surviving household members and the portfolio of household farming activities. The author analyzes farm and chore hours across demographic groups and finds small and insignificant changes in labor supply of individuals in households experiencing a prime-age adult death. While some farm activities are temporarily scaled back and wage employment falls after a male death, households did not shift cultivation toward subsistence food farming and did not appear to have reduced their diversification over income sources more than six months after a death.
This paper - a product of the Poverty Team, Development Research Group - is part of a larger effort in the group to better measure and understand the economic impact of HIV/AIDS.
Keywords: HIV/AIDS, adult death, time use, Tanzania
JEL Classification: J22, O12, Q12
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
The Gift of the Dying: The Tragedy of Aids and the Welfare of Future African Generations
By Alwyn Young
-
The Long-Run Economic Costs of Aids: Theory and an Application to South Africa
By Clive Bell, Shantayanan Devarajan, ...
-
Does the Aids Epidemic Really Threaten Economic Growth?
By David E. Bloom and Ajay S. Mahal
-
By Anne Case, Christina H. Paxson, ...
-
Mothers and Others: Who Invests in Children's Health?
By Anne Case and Christina H. Paxson
-
The Effect of Health on Economic Growth: Theory and Evidence
By David E. Bloom, David Canning, ...
-
Sexually Transmitted Infections, Behavior Change and the Hiv/Aids Epidemic
-
Child Labor and the Education of a Society
By Clive Bell and Hans Gersbach