Education and HIV incidence among young women: causation or selection?
Abstract
Several studies report that schooling protects against HIV infection in Sub-Saharan Africa. This
study examines the effect of secondary school attendance on the probability of HIV incidence
among young women aged 15-24, using panel data from rural KwaZulu-Natal in South Africa.
Three approaches are used to distinguish causation from selection: instrumentation to identify the causal effect, a fixed effects model to control for constant unobserved factors and assessments of the bias from selection on unobserved variables. Although there is a strong negative association between secondary school attendance and HIV incidence, we are not able to find support for a causal effect. Thus, there is no evidence that interventions that increase secondary school attendance in KwaZulu-Natal would mechanically reduce HIV risk for young women. Our focus on school attendance, in contrast to studies that analyze school attainment, might explain the negative finding.
Other description
JEL: I12, I29, O12
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2015-11Author
Durevall, Dick
Lindskog, Annika
George, Gavin
Keywords
HIV/AIDS
Education
Schooling
South Africa
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
638
Language
eng