References
- Asadullah, M. N., & Chaudhury, N. (2011). Poisoning the mind: Arsenic contamination of drinking water wells and children’s educational achievement in rural Bangladesh. Economics of Education Review, 30(5), 873–888.
- Assaad, R., Levison, D., & Zibani, N. (2010). The effect of domestic work on girls’ schooling: evidence from Egypt. Feminist Economics, 16(1), 79–128.
- Basu, K. (1999). Child labor: Cause, consequence, and cure, with remarks on international labor standards. Journal of Economic Literature, 37(3), 1083–1119.
- Bleakley, H., & Lange, F. (2009). Chronic disease burden and the interaction of education, fertility, and growth. Review of Economics and Statistics, 91(1), 52–65.
- Case, A., Fertig, A., & Paxson, C. (2005). The lasting impact of childhood health and circumstance. Journal of Health Economics, 24(2), 365–389.
- Case, A., & Paxson, C. (2010). Causes and consequences of early-life health. Demography, 47(Suppl 1), S65–S85.
- Devoto, F., Duflo, E., Dupas, P., Parienté, W., & Pons, V. (2012). Happiness on tap: Piped water adoption in urban morocco. American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, 4(4), 68–99.
- Dhital, R. P., Ito, T., Kaneko, S., Komatsu, S., & Yoshida, Y. (2018). Household Access to Water and Education for Girls: The Case of Mountain Villages in Nepal. (IDEC Discussion Paper Series 7-5.) Hiroshima University. https://ir.lib.hiroshimau.ac.jp/files/public/4/45545/20180419113159626739/IDEC-DP2_07-5.pdf
- Galiani, S., Gertler, P., & Schargrodsky, E. (2005). Water for life: The impact of the privatization of water services on child mortality. Journal of Political Economy, 113(1), 83–120.
- Gamper-Rabindran, S., Khan, S., & Timmins, C. (2010). The impact of piped water provision on infant mortality in Brazil: A quantile panel data approach. Journal of Development Economics, 92(2), 188–200.
- GoN (Government of Nepal), New ERA, UNICEF, EU, USAID, & CDC. (2018). Nepal national micronutrient status survey, 2016. Kathmandu, Nepal: Ministry of Health and Population, GoN. https://www.unicef.org/nepal/sites/unicef.org.nepal/files/2018-08/NNMSS%20Report%202016.pdf
- Imbens, G. W., & Rubin, D. B. (2015). Causal inference in statistics, social, and biomedical sciences. New York: Cambridge University Press.
- Ito, T., & Tanaka, S. (2018). Abolishing user fees, fertility choice, and educational attainment. Journal of Development Economics, 130, 33–44.
- Jalan, J., & Ravallion, M. (2003). Does piped water reduce diarrhea for children in rural India? Journal of Econometrics, 112(1), 153–173.
- Koolwal, G., & van de Walle, D. (2013). Access to water, women’s work, and child outcomes. Economic Development and Cultural Change, 61(2), 369–405.
- Kremer, M., Leino, J., Miguel, E., & Zwane, A. P. (2011). Spring cleaning: Rural water impacts, valuation, and property rights institutions. The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 126(1), 145–205.
- Levison, D., & Moe, K. S. (1998). Household work as a deterrent to schooling: an analysis of adolescent girls in Peru. Journal of Developing Areas, 32(3), 339–356.
- Levison, D., Moe, K. S., & Knaul, F. (2001). Youth education and work in Mexico. World Development, 29(1), 167–188.
- Lokshin, M., & Yemtsov, R. (2005). Has rural infrastructure rehabilitation in georgia helped the poor? World Bank Economic Review, 19(2), 311–333.
- Mangyo, E. (2008). The effect of water accessibility on child health in China. Journal of Health Economics, 27(5), 1343–1356.
- Manski, C. F. (1993). Identification of endogenous social effects: The reflection problem. Review of Economic Studies, 60(3), 531–542.
- Merrick, T. W. (1985). The effect of piped water on early childhood mortality in Urban Brazil, 1970 to 1976. Demography, 22(1), 1–24.
- Nankhuni, F. J., & Findeis, J. L. (2004). Natural resource-collection work and children’s schooling in Malawi. Agricultural Economics, 31(2–3), 123–134.
- Nauges, C., & Strand, J. (2017). Water hauling and girls’ school attendance: Some new evidence from Ghana. Environmental and Resource Economics, 66(1), 65–88.
- Oster, E. (2019). Unobservable Selection and Coefficient Stability: Theory and Evidence. Journal of Business and Economic Statistics, 37(2), 187–204.
- Thomas, D., & Strauss, J. (1992). Prices, infrastructure, household characteristics and child height. Journal of Development Economics, 39(2), 301–331.
- UNDP. (2018). Human development indices and indicators: 2018 statistical update. New York: United Nations. http://hdr.undp.org/sites/default/files/2018_human_development_statistical_update.pdf
- UNICEF. (2020). Gender and education. New York: United Nations. https://data.unicef.org/topic/gender/gender-disparities-in-education
- WHO/UNICEF. (2015). JMP 2015 Annual Report: WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply and Sanitation. New York: United Nations. https://www.washdata.org/sites/default/files/documents/reports/2017-07/JMP-2015-Annual-Report.pdf
- Zhang, J. (2012). The impact of water quality on health: Evidence from the drinking water infrastructure program in Rural China. Journal of Health Economics, 31(1), 122–134.
- Zhang, J., & Xu, L. C. (2016). The long-run effects of treated water on education: The rural drinking water program in China. Journal of Development Economics, 122, 1–15.
- Zimmermann, K. F. (2016). Health shocks and well-being. Indian Journal of Labour Economics, 59(1), 155–164.