This paper estimates the causal effects of civil war on
years of education in the context of a school-going age
cohort that is exposed to armed conflict in Côte d’Ivoire.
Using year and department of birth to identify an
individual’s exposure to war, the difference-in-difference
outcomes indicate that the average years of education for
a school-going age cohort is .94 years fewer compared
with an older cohort in war-affected regions. To minimize
the potential bias in the estimated outcome, the authors
use a set of victimization indicators to identify the true
effect of war. The propensity score matching estimates do
not alter the main findings. In addition, the outcomes of
double-robust models minimize the specification errors
in the model. Moreover, the paper finds the outcomes are
robust across alternative matching methods, estimation
by using subsamples, and other education outcome
variables. Overall, the findings across different models
suggest a drop in average years of education by a range of
.2 to .9 fewer years. Read more
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