Résumé
Violence affects households’ preferences, perceptions and constraints regarding fertility choices. What happens when violence ends? Using administrative data from Colombia, we find that the end of a long internal conflict differentially increased fertility by 2.6 percent in areas exposed to violence. The effect is present across all reproductive ages and larger in municipalities with higher levels of violence exposure at baseline. It is not driven by heath supply indicators, by the mortality of newborns and infants or by differential migration. We interpret this evidence as consistent with an increased optimism to raise children in a better and safer environment.
Mots-clés
fertility; pregnancy; mortality; armed conflict; violence;
Référence
María Elvira Guerra-Cújar, Mounu Prem, Paul Rodríguez-Lesmes et Juan F. Vargas, « A Peace Baby Boom? Evidence from Colombia’s Peace Agreement », IAST working paper, n° 22-135, mars 2022.
Voir aussi
Publié dans
IAST working paper, n° 22-135, mars 2022
