Intergenerational consequences of spousal violence: effect on nutritional status of children
Article Type
Research Article
Publication Title
Review of Economics of the Household
Abstract
In this paper, we empirically estimate the causal impact of spousal violence experienced by mothers on the nutritional status of her children aged below five years. Using detailed dataset from the fourth round of the National Family Health Survey, we find evidence that violence experienced by mothers at the hands of their husbands significantly increases the likelihood of their children being malnourished. When we focus on identifying the pathways through which spousal violence affect child health outcomes, we find that while spousal violence primarily affects child health via deterioration in maternal health, neglect of children in terms of inadequate provision of essential child-care also seem to matter. The results from the heterogeneity analysis finally suggest that the detrimental effect of such violence is significantly less pronounced for children born to mothers who are currently working and are thus empowered.
First Page
67
Last Page
94
DOI
10.1007/s11150-023-09678-2
Publication Date
3-1-2024
Recommended Citation
Pakrashi, Debayan and Saha, Sarani, "Intergenerational consequences of spousal violence: effect on nutritional status of children" (2024). Journal Articles. 4855.
https://digitalcommons.isical.ac.in/journal-articles/4855