Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP18284
Authors: Olivier Dagnelie; Anna Maria Mayda; Jean Francois Maystadt
Abstract: By combining newly available geo-referenced data on refugee camps from 2000 to 2016 with 84 Demographic and Health Surveys from 34 countries, we investigate the impact of refugee inflows in Africa on anthropometrics of children who live in local communities. We estimate a robust negative effect on height-for-age and weight-for-age scores of the under 5-year-old children. We interpret our results as causal on the basis of an extensive set of tests and robustness checks. We identify malaria as playing an important role, against alternative explanations. By accounting for the composition by country of origin of refugee camps, we show that the negative effect is driven by refugees coming from countries that are highly affected by malaria to areas where malaria is less prevalent. Importantly, the negative impact of refugees from malaria countries is greatly attenuated in locations where bednets are used.
Keywords: refugees; malaria; anthropometric measures; children's health
JEL Codes: I15
Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.
Cause | Effect |
---|---|
refugee inflows (F22) | height-for-age scores (I00) |
refugee inflows (F22) | weight-for-age scores (I32) |
refugee inflows (F22) | malaria transmission (F24) |
malaria transmission (F24) | height-for-age scores (I00) |
malaria transmission (F24) | weight-for-age scores (I32) |
bednet use (H60) | height-for-age scores (I00) |
bednet use (H60) | weight-for-age scores (I32) |