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Causal effects of HIV on employment status in low-income settings
Authors: Jessica Ochalek, Paul Revill, and Bernard van den Berg
Source: Economics and Human Biology, 27(Pt A): 248-260; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ehb.2017.09.001
Topic(s): Employment
HIV/AIDS
Country: Africa
  Uganda
Published: NOV 2017
Abstract: This paper estimates the causal impact of being HIV positive on individual employment status using a recursive bivariate probit with male circumcision as the instrument to overcome the endogeneity arising from simultaneity bias. The results show that being HIV positive reduces the probability of being employed by 5 percentage points among males in Uganda. The effect is greater for individuals employed in manual labor than non-manual labor. When limiting the sample to mainly individuals employed in subsistence agriculture, we find a 4 percentage point reduction in the likelihood of employment, suggesting that the effect occurs primarily through reductions in labor supply as opposed to demand. This is supported by additional analysis using univariate probit regressions to assess the association between different levels of HIV illness (as measured by CD4 cell count) and the likelihood of employment. The magnitude of the association increases as CD4 cell count decreases. Having a CD4 cell count of 200 per mm3 or below is associated with a 9 percentage point reduction in employment compared to individuals with CD4 cell counts above 200 per mm3.
Web: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Bernard_Berg/publication/319614016_Causal_effects_of_HIV_on_employment_status_in_low-income_settings/links/5af2786a458515c28379729c/Causal-effects-of-HIV-on-employ