The Impact of Economic Migration on Children's Cognitive Development: Evidence from the Mexican Family Life Survey

Type Working Paper - IDB WP SERIES
Title The Impact of Economic Migration on Children's Cognitive Development: Evidence from the Mexican Family Life Survey
Author(s)
Issue IDB-WP-246
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2011
URL https://publications.iadb.org/bitstream/handle/11319/3104/The Impact of Economic Migration on​Children¿s Cognitive Development: Evidence from the Mexican Family Life Survey.pdf?sequence=1
Abstract
This paper uses data from the Mexican Family Life Survey to estimate the impact of a household member’s migration to the United States on the cognitive development of children remaining in Mexico. While there is no developmental effect of a child’s sibling migrating to the United States, there is an adverse effect when another household member—typically the child’s parent—migrates. This is particularly true for pre-school to early-school-age children with older siblings, for whom the effect of parental migration is comparable to speaking an indigenous language at home or having a mother with very low educational attainment. Additionally, household-member migration to the United States affects how children spend their time in ways that may influence and/or be influenced by cognitive development.

Related studies

»