The Inter-Generational Transmission of Cognitive Abilities in Guatemala
Date issued
May 2011
Subject
Youth and Children;
Early Childhood Education;
Poverty;
Child Development
JEL code
J12 - Marriage • Marital Dissolution • Family Structure • Domestic Abuse;
J24 - Human Capital • Skills • Occupational Choice • Labor Productivity;
N36 - Latin America • Caribbean
Country
Guatemala
Category
Working Papers
This paper examines early childhood development (ECD) outcomes and their association with family characteristics, investments, and environmental factors, with particular emphasis on the inter- generational transmission of cognitive abilities. The paper examines the causal relationship between parental cognitive abilities and ECD outcomes of their offspring using a rich data set from rural Guatemala that can account for such unobservable factors. A 10 percent increase in maternal Raven's scores increase children's Raven's scores by 7.8 percent. A 10 percent increase in maternal reading and vocabulary skills increases children's score on a standard vocabulary test by 5 percent. Effects are larger for older children, and the impact of maternal cognitive skills is larger than for paternal skills.
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