The (Non-)Effect of Violence on Education : Evidence from the War on Drugs in Mexico

This paper studies the sharp increase in violence experienced in Mexico after 2006, known as The War on Drugs, and its effects on human capital accumulation. The upsurge in violence is expected to have direct effects on individuals schooling decisi...

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Main Authors: Márquez-Padilla, Fernanda, Pérez-Arce, Francisco, Rodriguez Castelan, Carlos
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
en_US
Published: 2015
Subjects:
GUN
WAR
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/04/24261204/non--effect-violence-education-evidence-war-drugs-mexico
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/21844
id okr-10986-21844
recordtype oai_dc
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic EMPLOYMENT
CIVIL CONFLICT
COLLEGE
WORKFORCE
ECONOMIC GROWTH
BASIC EDUCATION
TEACHERS
EDUCATION ENROLLMENTS
LOCAL ECONOMY
BRIBERY
ABUSE
MALE LABOR FORCE
DEATHS
CRIMINAL
PUBLIC EDUCATION
TERRORIST
ASSAULT
IMPACT OF VIOLENCE
LABOR FORCE
POPULATION GROUPS
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
HUMAN CAPITAL FORMATION
PROPERTY CRIMES
DRUGS
HEALTH CARE
DEATH
PAPERS
DROPOUT
SECONDARY SCHOOL LEVEL
POLICY DISCUSSIONS
CRIME
NATIONAL LEVEL
RURAL POPULATION
DISSERTATION
NUMBER OF PEOPLE
POPULATION SIZE
CRIME-RIDDEN AREAS
HOMICIDES
HOMICIDE RATE
PUBLIC HEALTH
THEFT
NATIONAL POPULATION
OPEN ACCESS
KNOWLEDGE
DRUG TRADE
ARMED CONFLICT
LABOR MARKET
STUDENT INFORMATION
SOCIAL SCIENTISTS
VIOLENT CRIME
QUALITY OF EDUCATION
TRAINING
DRUG TRAFFICKING
GUNS
EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT
PRIVATE SCHOOLS
SECONDARY SCHOOLS
ECONOMICS OF EDUCATION
ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT
SECONDARY SCHOOL
FERTILITY RATE
MIGRATION
VIOLENCE
CHILD ABUSE
NUMBER OF HOUSEHOLDS
GANGS
HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS
LEARNING
RESEARCH
GUN
SCHOOL STUDENTS
PRIMARY SCHOOL
MIGRANTS
SCHOOL LEVELS
INJURY
RETENTION RATE
PROGRESS
HOMICIDE
UNEMPLOYMENT
HOUSEHOLD LEVEL
SCHOOL YEAR
HUMAN CAPITAL
YOUNG MEN
SOCIAL SPENDING
DROPOUT RATES
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE
YOUNG ADULTS
WORKERS
FRAUD
ENROLLMENT RATES
POLICIES
SCIENCE
UNIVERSITY LEVEL
SOCIAL SERVICES
STUDENT
SCHOOLS
UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT
POLICY RESEARCH WORKING PAPER
ECONOMIC STATUS
CRIMES
LEARNING OUTCOMES
EXPOSURE TO VIOLENCE
LABOUR MARKET
PUBLIC EXPENDITURES
EXPENDITURES
LITERATURE
EARLY CHILDHOOD
KIDS
SCHOOL CHILDREN
POPULATIONS
SECURITY POLICY
POLICY
HOMICIDE RATES
WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION
SPILLOVER
GOVERNMENT POLICIES
FEMALE STUDENTS
CRIMINALS
LABOUR MARKET OUTCOMES
SCIENTISTS
STATE GOVERNMENTS
SECURITY
RACKETEERING
WAR
CRIME RATES
HUMAN RESOURCES
CENSUSES
RURAL AREAS
POVERTY
NUMBER OF CHILDREN
FEMALE LABOR FORCE
YOUNG WOMEN
IMMIGRATION
VITAL STATISTICS
NATIONAL COUNCIL
DRUG
POPULATION
UNIVERSITY
STUDENTS
SCHOOL-AGE CHILDREN
POLICY RESEARCH
TRAFFICKING
CIVIL WAR
FERTILITY
WOMEN
HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS
POLICY ANALYSIS
YOUTH VIOLENCE
ORGANIZED CRIME
SCHOOL
SECONDARY EDUCATION
IMPORTANCE OF EDUCATION
PEACE
CRIMINAL ACTIVITIES
ARMED CONFLICTS
DRUG TRAFFIC
SCHOOL AGE
DEVELOPMENT POLICY
spellingShingle EMPLOYMENT
CIVIL CONFLICT
COLLEGE
WORKFORCE
ECONOMIC GROWTH
BASIC EDUCATION
TEACHERS
EDUCATION ENROLLMENTS
LOCAL ECONOMY
BRIBERY
ABUSE
MALE LABOR FORCE
DEATHS
CRIMINAL
PUBLIC EDUCATION
TERRORIST
ASSAULT
IMPACT OF VIOLENCE
LABOR FORCE
POPULATION GROUPS
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
HUMAN CAPITAL FORMATION
PROPERTY CRIMES
DRUGS
HEALTH CARE
DEATH
PAPERS
DROPOUT
SECONDARY SCHOOL LEVEL
POLICY DISCUSSIONS
CRIME
NATIONAL LEVEL
RURAL POPULATION
DISSERTATION
NUMBER OF PEOPLE
POPULATION SIZE
CRIME-RIDDEN AREAS
HOMICIDES
HOMICIDE RATE
PUBLIC HEALTH
THEFT
NATIONAL POPULATION
OPEN ACCESS
KNOWLEDGE
DRUG TRADE
ARMED CONFLICT
LABOR MARKET
STUDENT INFORMATION
SOCIAL SCIENTISTS
VIOLENT CRIME
QUALITY OF EDUCATION
TRAINING
DRUG TRAFFICKING
GUNS
EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT
PRIVATE SCHOOLS
SECONDARY SCHOOLS
ECONOMICS OF EDUCATION
ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT
SECONDARY SCHOOL
FERTILITY RATE
MIGRATION
VIOLENCE
CHILD ABUSE
NUMBER OF HOUSEHOLDS
GANGS
HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS
LEARNING
RESEARCH
GUN
SCHOOL STUDENTS
PRIMARY SCHOOL
MIGRANTS
SCHOOL LEVELS
INJURY
RETENTION RATE
PROGRESS
HOMICIDE
UNEMPLOYMENT
HOUSEHOLD LEVEL
SCHOOL YEAR
HUMAN CAPITAL
YOUNG MEN
SOCIAL SPENDING
DROPOUT RATES
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE
YOUNG ADULTS
WORKERS
FRAUD
ENROLLMENT RATES
POLICIES
SCIENCE
UNIVERSITY LEVEL
SOCIAL SERVICES
STUDENT
SCHOOLS
UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT
POLICY RESEARCH WORKING PAPER
ECONOMIC STATUS
CRIMES
LEARNING OUTCOMES
EXPOSURE TO VIOLENCE
LABOUR MARKET
PUBLIC EXPENDITURES
EXPENDITURES
LITERATURE
EARLY CHILDHOOD
KIDS
SCHOOL CHILDREN
POPULATIONS
SECURITY POLICY
POLICY
HOMICIDE RATES
WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION
SPILLOVER
GOVERNMENT POLICIES
FEMALE STUDENTS
CRIMINALS
LABOUR MARKET OUTCOMES
SCIENTISTS
STATE GOVERNMENTS
SECURITY
RACKETEERING
WAR
CRIME RATES
HUMAN RESOURCES
CENSUSES
RURAL AREAS
POVERTY
NUMBER OF CHILDREN
FEMALE LABOR FORCE
YOUNG WOMEN
IMMIGRATION
VITAL STATISTICS
NATIONAL COUNCIL
DRUG
POPULATION
UNIVERSITY
STUDENTS
SCHOOL-AGE CHILDREN
POLICY RESEARCH
TRAFFICKING
CIVIL WAR
FERTILITY
WOMEN
HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS
POLICY ANALYSIS
YOUTH VIOLENCE
ORGANIZED CRIME
SCHOOL
SECONDARY EDUCATION
IMPORTANCE OF EDUCATION
PEACE
CRIMINAL ACTIVITIES
ARMED CONFLICTS
DRUG TRAFFIC
SCHOOL AGE
DEVELOPMENT POLICY
Márquez-Padilla, Fernanda
Pérez-Arce, Francisco
Rodriguez Castelan, Carlos
The (Non-)Effect of Violence on Education : Evidence from the War on Drugs in Mexico
geographic_facet Mexico
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No. 7230
description This paper studies the sharp increase in violence experienced in Mexico after 2006, known as The War on Drugs, and its effects on human capital accumulation. The upsurge in violence is expected to have direct effects on individuals schooling decisions, but not indirect effects, because there was no severe destruction of infrastructure. The fact that the marked increases in violence were concentrated in some municipalities (and not in others) allows for implementation of a fixed-effects methodology to study the effects of violence on educational outcomes. Different from several recent studies that have found significant negative effects of violence on economic outcomes in Mexico, the paper finds evidence that this is not the case, at least for human capital accumulation. The paper uses several sources of data on homicides and educational outcomes and shows that, at most, there are very small effects on total enrollment. These small effects may be driven by some students being displaced from high-violence municipalities to low-violence municipalities; but the education decisions of individuals do not seem to be highly impacted. The analysis discards the possibility that the effects on enrollment of young adults appear small because of a counteracting effect from ex-workers returning to school. The results stand in contrast with recent evidence of the negative effects of violence on short-term economic growth, since minimal to 0 effects on human capital accumulation today should have little to no adverse effects on long-term growth outcomes in Mexico.
format Working Paper
author Márquez-Padilla, Fernanda
Pérez-Arce, Francisco
Rodriguez Castelan, Carlos
author_facet Márquez-Padilla, Fernanda
Pérez-Arce, Francisco
Rodriguez Castelan, Carlos
author_sort Márquez-Padilla, Fernanda
title The (Non-)Effect of Violence on Education : Evidence from the War on Drugs in Mexico
title_short The (Non-)Effect of Violence on Education : Evidence from the War on Drugs in Mexico
title_full The (Non-)Effect of Violence on Education : Evidence from the War on Drugs in Mexico
title_fullStr The (Non-)Effect of Violence on Education : Evidence from the War on Drugs in Mexico
title_full_unstemmed The (Non-)Effect of Violence on Education : Evidence from the War on Drugs in Mexico
title_sort (non-)effect of violence on education : evidence from the war on drugs in mexico
publishDate 2015
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/04/24261204/non--effect-violence-education-evidence-war-drugs-mexico
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/21844
_version_ 1764449414797066240
spelling okr-10986-218442021-04-23T14:04:05Z The (Non-)Effect of Violence on Education : Evidence from the War on Drugs in Mexico Márquez-Padilla, Fernanda Pérez-Arce, Francisco Rodriguez Castelan, Carlos EMPLOYMENT CIVIL CONFLICT COLLEGE WORKFORCE ECONOMIC GROWTH BASIC EDUCATION TEACHERS EDUCATION ENROLLMENTS LOCAL ECONOMY BRIBERY ABUSE MALE LABOR FORCE DEATHS CRIMINAL PUBLIC EDUCATION TERRORIST ASSAULT IMPACT OF VIOLENCE LABOR FORCE POPULATION GROUPS DEVELOPING COUNTRIES HUMAN CAPITAL FORMATION PROPERTY CRIMES DRUGS HEALTH CARE DEATH PAPERS DROPOUT SECONDARY SCHOOL LEVEL POLICY DISCUSSIONS CRIME NATIONAL LEVEL RURAL POPULATION DISSERTATION NUMBER OF PEOPLE POPULATION SIZE CRIME-RIDDEN AREAS HOMICIDES HOMICIDE RATE PUBLIC HEALTH THEFT NATIONAL POPULATION OPEN ACCESS KNOWLEDGE DRUG TRADE ARMED CONFLICT LABOR MARKET STUDENT INFORMATION SOCIAL SCIENTISTS VIOLENT CRIME QUALITY OF EDUCATION TRAINING DRUG TRAFFICKING GUNS EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT PRIVATE SCHOOLS SECONDARY SCHOOLS ECONOMICS OF EDUCATION ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT SECONDARY SCHOOL FERTILITY RATE MIGRATION VIOLENCE CHILD ABUSE NUMBER OF HOUSEHOLDS GANGS HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS LEARNING RESEARCH GUN SCHOOL STUDENTS PRIMARY SCHOOL MIGRANTS SCHOOL LEVELS INJURY RETENTION RATE PROGRESS HOMICIDE UNEMPLOYMENT HOUSEHOLD LEVEL SCHOOL YEAR HUMAN CAPITAL YOUNG MEN SOCIAL SPENDING DROPOUT RATES DOMESTIC VIOLENCE ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE YOUNG ADULTS WORKERS FRAUD ENROLLMENT RATES POLICIES SCIENCE UNIVERSITY LEVEL SOCIAL SERVICES STUDENT SCHOOLS UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT POLICY RESEARCH WORKING PAPER ECONOMIC STATUS CRIMES LEARNING OUTCOMES EXPOSURE TO VIOLENCE LABOUR MARKET PUBLIC EXPENDITURES EXPENDITURES LITERATURE EARLY CHILDHOOD KIDS SCHOOL CHILDREN POPULATIONS SECURITY POLICY POLICY HOMICIDE RATES WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION SPILLOVER GOVERNMENT POLICIES FEMALE STUDENTS CRIMINALS LABOUR MARKET OUTCOMES SCIENTISTS STATE GOVERNMENTS SECURITY RACKETEERING WAR CRIME RATES HUMAN RESOURCES CENSUSES RURAL AREAS POVERTY NUMBER OF CHILDREN FEMALE LABOR FORCE YOUNG WOMEN IMMIGRATION VITAL STATISTICS NATIONAL COUNCIL DRUG POPULATION UNIVERSITY STUDENTS SCHOOL-AGE CHILDREN POLICY RESEARCH TRAFFICKING CIVIL WAR FERTILITY WOMEN HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS POLICY ANALYSIS YOUTH VIOLENCE ORGANIZED CRIME SCHOOL SECONDARY EDUCATION IMPORTANCE OF EDUCATION PEACE CRIMINAL ACTIVITIES ARMED CONFLICTS DRUG TRAFFIC SCHOOL AGE DEVELOPMENT POLICY This paper studies the sharp increase in violence experienced in Mexico after 2006, known as The War on Drugs, and its effects on human capital accumulation. The upsurge in violence is expected to have direct effects on individuals schooling decisions, but not indirect effects, because there was no severe destruction of infrastructure. The fact that the marked increases in violence were concentrated in some municipalities (and not in others) allows for implementation of a fixed-effects methodology to study the effects of violence on educational outcomes. Different from several recent studies that have found significant negative effects of violence on economic outcomes in Mexico, the paper finds evidence that this is not the case, at least for human capital accumulation. The paper uses several sources of data on homicides and educational outcomes and shows that, at most, there are very small effects on total enrollment. These small effects may be driven by some students being displaced from high-violence municipalities to low-violence municipalities; but the education decisions of individuals do not seem to be highly impacted. The analysis discards the possibility that the effects on enrollment of young adults appear small because of a counteracting effect from ex-workers returning to school. The results stand in contrast with recent evidence of the negative effects of violence on short-term economic growth, since minimal to 0 effects on human capital accumulation today should have little to no adverse effects on long-term growth outcomes in Mexico. 2015-05-04T15:56:28Z 2015-05-04T15:56:28Z 2015-04 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/04/24261204/non--effect-violence-education-evidence-war-drugs-mexico http://hdl.handle.net/10986/21844 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper;No. 7230 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Mexico