The effects of improved nutrition, sanitation, and water quality on child health in high-mortality populations
Open Access
- 1 March 1997
- journal article
- Published by Elsevier in Journal of Econometrics
- Vol. 77 (1) , 209-235
- https://doi.org/10.1016/s0304-4076(96)01813-1
Abstract
No abstract availableKeywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Semiparametric maximum likelihood estimation of polychotomous and sequential choice modelsJournal of Econometrics, 1995
- Estimating the Intrahousehold Incidence of Illness: Child Health and Gender-Inequality in the Allocation of TimeInternational Economic Review, 1990
- Sustained Effects of the 1974–5 Famine on Infant and Child Mortality in a Rural Area of BangladeshPopulation Studies, 1990
- Root-N-Consistent Semiparametric RegressionEconometrica, 1988
- The Sensitivity of an Empirical Model of Married Women's Hours of Work to Economic and Statistical AssumptionsEconometrica, 1987
- Estimating a Household Production Function: Heterogeneity, the Demand for Health Inputs, and Their Effects on Birth WeightJournal of Political Economy, 1983
- The Impact of Exogenous Child Mortality on Fertility: A Waiting Time Regression with Dynamic RegressorsEconometrica, 1983
- Sufficient Conditions for the Consistency of Maximum Likelihood Estimation Despite Misspecification of Distribution in Multinomial Discrete Choice ModelsEconometrica, 1983
- Asymptotic Covariance Matrices of Two-Stage Probit and Two-Stage Tobit Methods for Simultaneous Equations Models with SelectivityEconometrica, 1980
- Sample Selection Bias as a Specification ErrorEconometrica, 1979