Forced Displacement and Human Capital: Evidence from Separated Siblings
We examine the impact of conflict-driven displacement on human capital looking at the Mozambican civil war (1977-1992), during which more than four million civilians fled to the countryside, to cities, and to refugee camps and settlements in neighbouring countries. First, we present descriptive patterns linking education and sectoral employment to the various displacement trajectories using the full population census. Second, we compare siblings separated during the war, using those who stayed behind as a counterfactual to one’s displacement path. Displacement is associated with increased educational investments, with the largest effects experienced by rural-born children escaping to urban areas. Third, we jointly estimate place-based and uprootedness effects. Both are present, but place-based effects dominate. Fourth, we conduct a survey in Mozambique’s largest Northern city, whose population doubled during the civil war. Those displaced to the city have significantly higher education than their siblings who remained in the countryside and they converged to the levels of schooling of non-mover urban born individuals. However, those displaced exhibit significantly lower social/civic capital and have worse mental health, even three decades after the war ended. These findings reveal that displacement shocks can trigger human capital investments, breaking links with subsistence agriculture, but at the cost of long-lasting, social, and psychological traumas.
Date: 14 June 2022, 16:00 (Tuesday, 8th week, Trinity 2022)
Venue: Manor Road Building, Manor Road OX1 3UQ
Venue Details: Seminar Room A or Register for online
Speaker: Sandra Sequeira (London School of Economics)
Organising department: Department of Economics
Part of: Applied Microeconomics Seminar
Booking required?: Recommended
Booking url: https://zoom.us/meeting/register/tJIqcumgpzoqE9AQ1xMlKGOvJzZlrcWXM38F
Audience: Public
Editor: Emma Heritage