Mothers' Social Status and Children's Health: Evidence From Joint Households in Rural India

Author:

Coffey Diane1,Khera Reetika2,Spears Dean3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Sociology and Population Research Center, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA; r.i.c.e.

2. Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi, India

3. Department of Economics and Population Research Center, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA; IZA, Bonn, Germany; r.i.c.e.

Abstract

Abstract The premise that a woman's social status has intergenerational effects on her children's health has featured prominently in population science research and in development policy. This study focuses on an important case in which social hierarchy has such an effect. In joint patrilocal households in rural India, women married to the younger brother are assigned lower social rank than women married to the older brother in the same household. Almost 8% of rural Indian children under 5 years old—more than 6 million children—live in such households. We show that children of lower-ranking mothers are less likely to survive and have worse health outcomes, reflected in higher neonatal mortality and shorter height, compared with children of higher-ranking mothers in the same household. That the variation in mothers' social status that we study is not subject to reporting bias is an advantage relative to studies using self-reported measures. We present evidence that one mechanism for this effect is maternal nutrition: although they are not shorter, lower-ranking mothers weigh less than higher-ranking mothers. These results suggest that programs that merely make transfers to households without attention to intrahousehold distribution may not improve child outcomes.

Publisher

Duke University Press

Subject

Demography

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