2017
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.3044485
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Wealth Disparities for Early Childhood Anthropometrics and Skills: Evidence from Chilean Longitudinal Data

Abstract: We study wealth disparities in the formation of anthropometrics, cognitive skills and socio-emotional skills. We use a sample of preschool and early school children in Chile. We extend the previous literature by using longitudinal data, which allow us to study the dynamics of child growth and skills formation. Also, we include information on mother's and father's schooling attainment and mother's cognitive ability. We find that there are no significant anthropometric differences favoring the better-off at birt… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Based on a few influential studies, improved parenting developed through home visits or small mothers' groups and then subsequently preschool appear to be important factors in early life cognitive skills development, particularly for children from poorer family backgrounds (Engle et al, 2011;Cueto et al, 2016;Richter et al, 2017;Andrew et al, 2020;Grantham-McGregor et al, 2020). Despite the apparent potential for increasing human capital and absolute social mobility for children from poorer families through such programs, fairly strong socioeconomic gradients in preschool child cognitive skills by parental wealth, income, and schooling attainment begin at early ages and persist and in some cases enlarge by school-initiation ages (Fernald et al, 2011;Lopez-Boo, 2013;Schady et al, 2015;Reynolds et al, 2017a;Behrman et al, Forthcoming). Note that these studies generally do not use measures of parental cognitive skills to represent this dimension of parental human capital, but instead use an imperfect proxy in the form of one input into the production of cognitive skills, schooling attainment.…”
Section: Cognitive Skillsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Based on a few influential studies, improved parenting developed through home visits or small mothers' groups and then subsequently preschool appear to be important factors in early life cognitive skills development, particularly for children from poorer family backgrounds (Engle et al, 2011;Cueto et al, 2016;Richter et al, 2017;Andrew et al, 2020;Grantham-McGregor et al, 2020). Despite the apparent potential for increasing human capital and absolute social mobility for children from poorer families through such programs, fairly strong socioeconomic gradients in preschool child cognitive skills by parental wealth, income, and schooling attainment begin at early ages and persist and in some cases enlarge by school-initiation ages (Fernald et al, 2011;Lopez-Boo, 2013;Schady et al, 2015;Reynolds et al, 2017a;Behrman et al, Forthcoming). Note that these studies generally do not use measures of parental cognitive skills to represent this dimension of parental human capital, but instead use an imperfect proxy in the form of one input into the production of cognitive skills, schooling attainment.…”
Section: Cognitive Skillsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They mainly have focused on the socioeconomic impact on the development of early childhood. For instance, Behrman, Palma, and Puentes (2017) analyzed data of children´s differences on anthropometrics measures, and they showed that there were no significant differences between low- and high-income families. At birth, there is a slight difference favoring the poorest in height, but it disappears over time.…”
Section: The Encuesta Longitudinal De La Primera Infancia [Longitudinmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Data from Chile, where the current study is focused, also has significant wealth gaps in child development. Even though there are no differences in anthropometrics by SES as birth, differences in height-for-age z-scores emerge by 30 months suggesting that disadvantaged children have a weaker base of physical development supporting cognitive development (Behrman et al, 2017). Additionally, disparities in cognitive and socio-emotional skills emerge during the preschool years, although these decrease as children enter elementary school.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 96%