A DYNAMIC STUDY OF CHILD LABOR MARKET AND ITS DETERMINANTS IN PAKISTAN: A Time Series Analysis

This paper aims to investigate the long-run and short-run dynamics of important determinants of child labor at macroeconomic level in the case of Pakistan. The import distinction of this paper is that it is the first attempt to investigate the long-run and short-impacts of determinants of child labo...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inPakistan journal of applied economics Vol. 30 No.1; no. Summer 2020; pp. 27 - 42
Main Authors Usman AZHAR, Samina KHALIL
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Applied Economics Research Centre, University of Karachi 01.06.2020
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Summary:This paper aims to investigate the long-run and short-run dynamics of important determinants of child labor at macroeconomic level in the case of Pakistan. The import distinction of this paper is that it is the first attempt to investigate the long-run and short-impacts of determinants of child labor by using time series estimation technique of Autoregressive Distributive Lags Model (ARDL). The long-run findings suggest that an increase in GDP per capita and gross primary school enrollment leads toward the reduction of incidence of child labor. Despite the fact that engagement of children in any kind of economic activities is legally banned but due to lack of enforcement of laws and poor institutional support child labor is common in Pakistan. Similarly, an improvement in the quality of existing institutions can potentially contribute in the reduction of child labor. However, the positive and significant sign of the coefficient of young dependency (YD) suggests that higher dependency of young children is increasing the incidence of child labor in Pakistan. The overall findings suggest that in short-run the determinants, such as GDP, School enrolment, dependency, and institutional quality have similar impact on child labor, the impact of growth in per capita income is apparent in the reduction of child labor. The findings of this paper is suggesting that merely economic growth is not sufficient enough to reduce the extent of child labor in Pakistan, we have to align such efforts with policies aiming to achieve demographic and gender empowerment.
ISSN:0254-9204
2519-0431