Published March 31, 2021 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Twenty-year economic impacts of deworming

  • 1. University of Oklahoma
  • 2. University of California, Berkeley
  • 3. University of Chicago
  • 4. George Washington University

Description

Estimating the impact of child health investments on adult living standards entails multiple methodological challenges, including the lack of experimental variation in health status, an inability to track individuals over time, and accurately measuring living standards and productivity in low-income settings. This study exploits a randomized school health intervention that provided deworming treatment to Kenyan children, and uses longitudinal data to estimate impacts on economic outcomes up to 20 y later. The effective respondent tracking rate was 84%. Individuals who received two to three additional years of childhood deworming experienced a 14% gain in consumption expenditures and 13% increase in hourly earnings. There are also shifts in sectors of residence and employment: treatment group individuals are 9% more likely to live in urban areas, and experience a 9% increase in nonagricultural work hours. Most effects are concentrated among males and older individuals. The observed consumption and earnings benefits, together with deworming's low cost when distributed at scale, imply that a conservative estimate of its annualized social internal rate of return is 37%, a high return by any standard.

Data availability

Anonymized survey data and code have been deposited in Harvard Dataverse (https://dataverse.harvard.edu/dataverse/KLPS).

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1073/pnas.2023185118
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:9667

Funding

Dioraphte Foundation
Givewell
NIH
R01-TW05612
NIH
R01-HD044475
NIH
R01-HD090118
NIH
R03-HD064888
NSF
SES-0418110
NSF
SES-0962614
University of California, Berkeley
Berkeley Population Center

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Social Sciences Division
Department(s)
Kenneth C. Griffin Department of Economics