Abstract

Theoretical evidence relating to children’s economic effect suggests that mothers work fewer hours with large number of young children and more hours when children are adults. The majority of empirical studies find results consistent with this expectation, but there are some studies which fail to confirm this theoretical prediction for the developing countries. Using data from a household sample survey of rural and urban married women with at least two live children, this study employs Two-Stage Least Squares model to document the maternal hours of work affected by the number of children. We find that children have positive effects both for the rural and urban mothers’ hours of work when all households are considered, but not for urban mothers when households are categorized by the age groups of their children. Generally, our results contradict traditional theory and show that Ethiopian mothers with large numbers of young children work longer.

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