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Mark Martin Pitt - Womens Schooling, the Selectivity of Fertility, and Child Mortality in Sub-Saharan Africa (Lsms Working Paper) (No. 119)

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title Womens Schooling the Selectivity of Fertility and Child Mortality - photo 1

title:Women's Schooling, the Selectivity of Fertility, and Child Mortality in Sub-Saharan Africa LSMS Working Paper, 0253-4517 ; No. 119
author:Pitt, Mark Martin.
publisher:World Bank
isbn10 | asin:0821333321
print isbn13:9780821333327
ebook isbn13:9780585236445
language:English
subjectChildren--Africa, Sub-Saharan--Mortality--Statistical methods, Fertility, Human--Africa, Sub-Saharan--Statistical methods, Mothers--Education--Africa, Sub-Saharan.
publication date:1995
lcc:HB1323.C5P57 1995eb
ddc:304.6/32/0967
subject:Children--Africa, Sub-Saharan--Mortality--Statistical methods, Fertility, Human--Africa, Sub-Saharan--Statistical methods, Mothers--Education--Africa, Sub-Saharan.
LSMS Working Papers
No. 47 Glewwe and de Tray, The Poor during Adjustment: A Case Study of Cte d'Ivoire
No. 48 Glewwe and van der Gaag, Confronting Poverty in Developing Countries: Definitions, Information, and Policies
No. 49 Scott and Amenuvegbe, Sample Designs for the Living Standards Surveys in Ghana and Mauritania/Plans de sondage pour les enqutes sur le niveau de vie au Ghana et en Mauritanie
No. 50 Laraki, Food Subsidies: A Case Study of Price Reform in Morocco (also in French, 50F)
No. 51 Strauss and Mehra, Child Anthropometry in Cte d'Ivoire: Estimates from Two Surveys, 1985 and 1986
No. 52 van der Gaag, Stelcner, and Vijverberg, Public-Private Sector Wage Comparisons and Moonlighting in Developing Countries: Evidence from Cte d'Ivoire and Peru
No. 53 Ainsworth, Socioeconomic Determinants of Fertility in Cte d'Ivoire
No. 54 Gertler and Glewwe, The Willingness to Pay for Education in Developing Countries: Evidence from Rural Peru
No. 55 Levy and Newman, Rigidit des salaires: Donnes microconomiques et macroconomiques sur l'ajustement du march du travail dans le secteur moderne (in French only)
No. 56 Glewwe and de Tray, The Poor in Latin America during Adjustment: A Case Study of Peru
No. 57 Alderman and Gertler, The Substitutability of Public and Private Health Care for the Treatment of Children in Pakistan
No. 58 Rosenhouse, Identifying the Poor: Is "Headship" a Useful Concept?
No. 59 Vijverberg, Labor Market Performance as a Determinant of Migration
No. 60 Jimenez and Cox, The Relative Effectiveness of Private and Public Schools: Evidence from Two Developing Countries
No. 61 Kakwani, Large Sample Distribution of Several Inequality Measures: With Application to Cte d'Ivoire
No. 62 Kakwani, Testing for Significance of Poverty Differences: With Application to Cte d'Ivoire
No.63 Kakwani, Poverty and Economic Growth: With Application to Cte d'Ivoire
No.64 Moock, Musgrove, and Stelcner, Education and Earnings in Peru's Informal Nonfarm Family Enterprises
No.65 Alderman and Kozel, Formal and Informal Sector Wage Determination in Urban Low-Income Neighborhoods in Pakistan
No.66 Vijverberg and van der Gaag, Testing for Labor Market Duality: The Private Wage Sector in Cte d'Ivoire
No.67 King, Does Education Pay in the Labor Market? The Labor Force Participation, Occupation, and Earnings of Peruvian Women
No.68 Kozel, The Composition and Distribution of Income in Cte d'Ivoire
No.69 Deaton, Price Elasticities from Survey Data: Extensions and Indonesian Results
No.70 Glewwe, Efficient Allocation of Transfers to the Poor: The Problem of Unobserved Household Income
No.71 Glewwe, Investigating the Determinants of Household Welfare in Cte d'Ivoire
No.72 Pitt and Rosenzweig, The Selectivity of Fertility and the Determinants of Human Capital Investments: Parametric and Semiparametric Estimates
No.73 Jacoby, Shadow Wages and Peasant Family Labor Supply: An Econometric Application to the Peruvian Sierra
No.74 Behrman, The Action of Human Resources and Poverty on One Another: What We Have Yet to Learn
No.75 Glewwe and Twum-Baah, The Distribution of Welfare in Ghana, 198788
No.76 Glewwe, Schooling, Skills, and the Returns to Government Investment in Education: An Exploration Using Data from Ghana
No.77 Newman, Jorgensen, and Pradhan, Workers' Benefits from Bolivia's Emergency Social Fund
No.78 Vijverberg, Dual Selection Criteria with Multiple Alternatives: Migration, Work Status, and Wages
No.79 Thomas, Gender Differences in Household Resource Allocations
No.80 Grosh, The Household Survey as a Tool for Policy Change: Lessons from the Jamaican Survey of Living Conditions
(List continues on the inside back cover)
Page i
Women's Schooling, the Selectivity of Fertility, and Child Mortality in Sub-Saharan Africa
Page ii
The Living Standards Measurement Study
The Living Standards Measurement Study (LSMS) was established by the World Bank in 1980 to explore ways of improving the type and quality of household data collected by statistical offices in developing countries. Its goal is to foster increased use of household data as a basis for policy decisionmaking. Specifically, the LSMS is working to develop new methods to monitor progress in raising levels of living, to identify the consequences for households of past and proposed government policies, and to improve communications between survey statisticians, analysts, and policymakers.
The LSMS Working Paper series was started to disseminate intermediate products from the LSMS. Publications in the series include critical surveys covering different aspects of the LSMS data collection program and reports on improved methodologies for using Living Standards Survey (LSS) data. More recent publications recommend specific survey, questionnaire, and data processing designs and demonstrate the breadth of policy analysis that can be carried out using LSS data.
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