Elsevier

World Development

Volume 149, January 2022, 105687
World Development

Time use of youth during a pandemic: Evidence from Mexico

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.worlddev.2021.105687Get rights and content

Highlights

  • After a year of closed schools in Mexico, youth aged 12 to 18 are spending overall 30 percent less time on their studies than pre pandemic.

  • Reduction of 14 percentage points in the probability of studying during previous week, potentially a predictor of more permanent dropout.

  • Effects of the pandemic on reducing time on studies are seen nationwide and occur for girls, boys, and youth in more urban and less urban areas.

  • General decrease in the probability of working outside the home with the pandemic but some small increases in work inside the home.

  • This is concerning as evidence shows the longer the time out of school the larger the reduction on learning.

Abstract

Studying how the pandemic affects the education and work of adolescents is a critical question with long lasting implications for well-being of the next generation, particularly in the developing world. The Covid-19 pandemic by mid-March 2020 had led to the closing of most educational institutions in Latin America and the Caribbean, and the region has been one of the worst hit by the pandemic (Sanmarchi et al., 2021). This paper uses the Mexican National Occupation and Employment Survey (ENOE) to provide evidence on the pandemic’s effects on school and work of youth. We measure changes in the time use of adolescents comparing patterns just before the pandemic (January to March 2020) with those at the beginning of the following school year (September 2020), controlling for pre pandemic trends and potential seasonality.

Our study finds a sharp reduction in the probability of being engaged in studies during the previous week for youth age 12 to 18 during the pandemic, as well as a reduction of about 30 percent in total hours spent on studies for those who report spending at least one hour on studies in the previous week. Time in work in general shows fewer changes than in time dedicated to studies, with some reductions in the probability of working outside the home for older youth, and a small increase in the number of hours dedicated to work inside the household. Our results overall are suggestive of an important decrease in youth who are engaged with school, who may be at particular risk for abandoning school permanently. It also suggests that even for those who remain engaged, there is a reduction on time spent studying likely to lead to a decrease in learning. Policies to combat potential dropout and negative effects on learning of the pandemic are urgently needed.

JEL Classification

I20
J13
J22

Keyword

COVID-19
Mexico
Education
Time use
Youth

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