Economic Research Forum (ERF)

Mothers’ education and children’s health

1634
Educational reforms in Turkey 20 years ago led to a significant improvement in the attainment of young men and women. This column reports research indicating that the children of women who were required to extend their time at school from five to eight years are healthier at birth and less likely to die by the age of five.

In a nutshell

Raising the number of years of mandatory schooling in developing countries not only boosts the resources devoted to educating girls, but it can also have a big impact in improving children’s health.

Women in Turkey who benefited from extended schooling gave birth to healthier children.

These mothers have also made changes in their behaviour that may improve their children’s health.

In 1997, the Turkish government enacted an educational reform that raised the number of years of required schooling from five to eight. The mandate of the law caused a large jump in educational attainment for those who were affected by it. A distinguishing feature of the reform was that it mainly increased the schooling of boys and girls from families with considerable reservations about children’s education, especially that of girls.

Achieving universal primary schooling has not only been strongly advocated but also prescribed as a remedy to improve public health in developing societies, such as reducing low birth weight and child mortality. Yet our understanding of the causal link between maternal mandatory education and children’s wellbeing in developing countries is limited. The scarcity of suitable natural experiments and data limitations are the key reasons behind the current state of research evidence.

To address this shortcoming, our research explores the relationship between maternal education and children’s health using two large data sets from Turkey. The 1997 education reform enables us to tease out the causal link from maternal education to children’s outcomes by allowing us to compare the outcomes of children born to mothers with similar characteristics but contrasting educational experiences.

We compare slightly older women who were not affected by the reform with those born a few years later who were affected by it. After accounting for trends in the outcomes of mothers specific to the two birth cohorts (such as their children’s health), the difference in educational attainment seems to be the only systematic difference between the two groups.

We find that women who experienced at least eight years of schooling (as opposed to at least five years) give birth to healthier children. Specifically, our estimates imply that an increase of at least one year in maternal education lowers the likelihood of very low birth weight (under 1500 grams), low birth weight (under 2500 grams) and premature birth (gestation of under 37 weeks) by about 0.53, 0.83 and 0.6 percentage points, respectively.

Consistent with this finding, women whose schooling was extended by at least a year are 0.6 percentage points less likely to have had a child who died by the age of five.

Further analysis reveals that mothers with extended schooling also made changes in their behaviour that may improve their children’s health. For example, mothers who earned at least a middle school diploma are less likely to smoke and more likely to deliver their babies via normal birth.

These findings have straightforward implications. In addition to increasing the resources devoted to the education of girls in developing countries, effective implementation of the laws on mandatory schooling may have a big impact in improving children’s health.

Further reading

Dursun, Bahadir, Resul Cesur and Inas Rashad Kelly (2017) ‘The Value of Mandating Maternal Education in a Developing Country’, National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) Working Paper No. w23492.

Most read

Sanctions and the shrinking size of Iran’s middle class

International sanctions imposed on Iran from 2012 have reduced the size of the country’s middle class, according to new research summarised in this column. The findings highlight the profound social consequences of economic pressure, not least given the crucial role of that segment of society for national innovation, growth and stability. The study underscores the need for policies to safeguard the civilian population in countries targeted by sanctions.

Artificial intelligence and the renewable energy transition in MENA

Artificial intelligence has the potential to bridge the gap between abundant natural resources and the pressing need for reliable, sustainable power in the Middle East and North Africa. This column outlines the constraints and proposes policies that can address the challenges of variability of renewable resources and stress on power grids, and support the transformation of ‘sunlight’ to ‘smart power’.

Green jobs for MENA in the age of AI: crafting a sustainable labour market

Arab economies face a dual transformation: the decarbonisation imperative driven by climate change; and the rapid digitalisation brought by artificial intelligence. This column argues that by strategically managing the green-AI nexus, policy-makers in the region can position their countries not merely as followers adapting to global mandates but as leaders in sustainable innovation.

Egypt’s forgotten democratisation: a challenge to modern myths about MENA

A widely held narrative asserts that countries in the Middle East are inevitably authoritarian. This column reports new research that tracks Egyptian parliamentarians since 1824 to reveal that the region’s struggle with democracy is not in fact about cultural incompatibility: it’s about colonialism disrupting home-grown democratic movements and elite conflicts being resolved through disenfranchisement rather than power-sharing.

MENA integration into global value chains and sustainable development

Despite the geopolitical advantages, abundant natural resources and young populations of many countries in the Middle East and North Africa, they remain on the periphery of global value chains, the international networks of production and service activities that now dominate the world economy. This column explains the positive impact of integration into GVCs on exports and employment; its role in technology transfer and capacity upgrading; and the structural barriers that constrain the region’s involvement. Greater GVC participation can help to deliver structural transformation and sustainable development.

Arab youth and the future of work

The Arab region’s labour markets are undergoing a triple transformation: demographic, digital and green. As this column explains, whether these forces evolve into engines of opportunity or drivers of exclusion for young people will hinge on how swiftly and coherently policy-makers can align education, technology and employment systems to foster adaptive skills, inclusive institutions and innovation-led pathways to decent work.

Wrong finance in a broken multilateral system: red flags from COP30-Belém

With the latest global summit on climate action recently wrapped up, ambitious COP pledges and initiatives continue to miss delivery due to inadequate commitments, weak operationalisation and unclear reporting systems. As this column reports, flows of climate finance remain skewed: loans over grants; climate mitigation more than climate adaptation; and weak accountability across mechanisms. Without grant-based finance, debt relief, climate-adjusted lending and predictable multilateral flows, implementation of promises will fail.

Why political connections are driving business confidence in MENA

This column reports the findings of a new study of how the political ties of firms in the Middle East and North Africa boost business confidence. The research suggests that this optimism is primarily driven by networked access to credit and lobbying, underscoring the need for greater transparency and institutional reform in corporate governance.

Digitalising governance in MENA: opportunities for social justice

Can digital governance promote social justice in MENA – or does it risk deepening inequality and exclusion? This column examines the evolution of digital governance in three sub-regions – Egypt, Jordan and the countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council – highlighting how data practices, transparency mechanisms and citizen trust shape the social outcomes of technological reform.