Selection into Worst Forms of Child Labor: Child Domestics, Porters and Ragpickers in Nepal
Published By: Dartmouth,IZA,NBER on eSS | Published Date: April, 20 , 2007A large literature considers why children work, but little is known about why children
participate in activities that are labeled worst forms of child labor. The principal international
convention on worst forms of child labor has signatory governments define what activities are
worst forms of child labor. Are these government defined worst forms of child labor different
from other types of jobs from the perspective of agents making decisions about child time
allocation? Existing evidence on the determinants of participation in worst forms largely comes
from surveys of children engaged in those activities. This study emphasizes that such evidence
alone cannot be informative about the determinants of why children participate in worst forms.
Case-control approaches common in medicine are adapted to consider the correlates of
participation in worst forms in the context of three activities that the Nepali government has
labeled as among the worst forms of child labor in Nepal: child domestic service, portering, and
ragpicking. The data are consistent with the view that there are negative amenities associated
with these jobs that are partially compensated. However, intrinsic and easily remedied problems
in the way data on children in worst forms are collected limit the present analysis, and the
considerable limitations of the present study illustrates how current survey efforts aimed at
children in worst forms can be improved.
Author(s): Eric Edmonds | Posted on: Jun 19, 2007 | Views(2818) | Download (665)