Negotiating a Better Future: How Interpersonal Skills Facilitate Intergenerational Investment*

Author:

Ashraf Nava1,Bau Natalie2,Low Corinne3,McGinn Kathleen4

Affiliation:

1. London School of Economics, Centre for Economic Policy Research, and Bureau for Research and Economic Analysis of Development

2. University of California, Los Angeles, Centre for Economic Policy Research, and Canadian Institute for Advanced Research

3. Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania

4. Harvard Business School

Abstract

Abstract Using a randomized controlled trial, we study whether a negotiation skills training can improve girls’ educational outcomes in a low-resource environment. We find that a negotiation training given to eighth-grade Zambian girls significantly improved educational outcomes over the next three years, and these effects did not fade out. To better understand mechanisms, we estimate the effects of two alternative treatments. Negotiation had much stronger effects than an informational treatment, which had no effect. A treatment designed to have more traditional girls’ empowerment effects had directionally positive but insignificant educational effects. Relative to this treatment, negotiation increased enrollment in higher-quality schooling and had larger effects for high-ability girls. These findings are consistent with a model in which negotiation allows girls to resolve incomplete contracting problems with their parents, yielding increased educational investment for those who experience sufficiently high returns. We provide evidence for this channel through a lab-in-the-field game and follow-up survey with girls and their guardians.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Economics and Econometrics

Reference59 articles.

1. “Ever Failed, Try Again, Succeed Better: Results from a Randomized Educational Intervention on Grit”;Alan;Quarterly Journal of Economics,2019

2. “Spousal Control and Intra-household Decision Making: An Experimental Study in the Philippines”;Ashraf;American Economic Review,2009

3. “Replication Data for ‘Negotiating a Better Future: How Interpersonal Skills Facilitate Intergenerational Investment’,”;Ashraf,2019

4. “Bride Price and the Returns to Education for Women,”;Ashraf;Journal of Political Economy

5. “Recursive Partitioning for Heterogeneous Causal Effects”;Athey;Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,2016

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