Risk, Network Quality, and Family Structure: Child Fostering Decisions in Burkina Faso

45 Pages Posted: 24 Jan 2005 Last revised: 6 May 2025

See all articles by Richard Akresh

Richard Akresh

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; IZA Institute of Labor Economics

Abstract

Researchers often assume household structure is exogenous, but child fostering, the institution in which parents send their biological children to live with another family, is widespread in sub-Saharan Africa and provides evidence against this assumption. Using data I collected in Burkina Faso, I analyze a household's decision to adjust its size and composition through fostering. A household fosters children as a risk-coping mechanism in response to exogenous income shocks, if it has a good social network, and to satisfy labor demands within the household. Increases of one standard deviation in a household's agricultural shock, percentage of good network members, or number of older girls increase the probability of sending a child above the current fostering level by 29.1, 30.0, and 34.5 percent, respectively. Testing whether factors influencing the sending decision have an opposite impact on the receiving decision leads to a rejection of the symmetric, theoretical model for child fostering.

Keywords: social networks, risk-coping, child fostering, household structure

JEL Classification: O15, J12, D10

Suggested Citation

Akresh, Richard, Risk, Network Quality, and Family Structure: Child Fostering Decisions in Burkina Faso. IZA Discussion Paper No. 1471, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=643163

Richard Akresh (Contact Author)

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign ( email )

601 E John St
Champaign, IL Champaign 61820
United States

IZA Institute of Labor Economics

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Germany

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