Browsing by Author "Lam, David"
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- ItemMetadata onlyChanges in education, employment and earnings in South Africa: A cohort analysis(2015-05-28) Branson, Nicola; Ardington, Cally; Lam, David; Leibbrandt, Murray
- ItemMetadata onlyCredit constraints and the racial gap in post-secondary education in South Africa(Southern Africa Labour and Development Research Unit, 2015-05-28) Lam, David; Ardington, Cally; Branson, Nicola; Leibbrandt, Murray
- ItemMetadata onlyEducation and inequality: The South African case(Southern Africa Labour and Development Research Unit, 2015-05-28) Branson, Nicola; Garlick, Julia; Lam, David; Leibbrandt, Murray
- ItemMetadata onlyEducation and youth unemployment in South Africa(Southern Africa Labour and Development Research Unit, 2015-05-28) Lam, David; Leibbrandt, Murray; Mlatsheni, Cecil
- ItemMetadata onlyEducational expenditure in South Africa: Evidence from the National Income Dynamics Study(2015-05-28) Branson, Nicola; Kekana, Dineo; Lam, David
- ItemMetadata onlyEstimating the effect of adolescent fertility on educational attainment in Cape Town using a propensity score weighted regression(Southern Africa Labour and Development Research Unit, 2015-05-28) Ranchhod, Vimal; Lam, David; Leibbrandt, Murray; Marteleto, Letitia
- ItemMetadata onlyFertility and mother's labour market behaviour: Evidence from the 2011 South African Census(2017-06-06) Ardington, Cally; Lam, David; Leibbrandt, Murray; Menendez, Alicia
- ItemMetadata onlyLabour force withdrawal of the elderly in South Africa(CSSR and SALDRU, 2015-05-28) Lam, David; Leibbrandt, Murray; Ranchhod, Vimal
- ItemOpen AccessLinking poverty and income shocks to risky sexual behaviour: evidence from a panel study of young adults in Cape Town(2008) Dinkelman, Taryn; Lam, David; Leibbrandt, MurrayIs there a link between household income and income stress, and risky sexual behaviour of young people? Anecdotal and qualitative evidence suggests this may be the case, but there is little quantitative research measuring this relationship. We use two waves of new data from the Cape Area Panel Study to investigate this link for 2,993 African and coloured youths aged 14 to 22 in 2002. In the process, we discuss one type of research design that could allow for a causal interpretation of the effect of income poverty on HIV risk. This design plausibly separates out the effect of income stress from the effect of living in a poor household by comparing behaviours across households with and without negative economic shocks, conditional on baseline income. Our results indicate that females in poorer households are more likely to be sexually active in 2002 and more likely to sexually debut by 2005. In addition, girls in households experiencing negative economic shocks are more likely to reduce condom use between 2002 and 2005. However, they are less likely to have multiple partners in 2002 or have transitioned to multiple partners by 2005. Males who experienced a negative shock are more likely to have multiple partners. Despite the tight research design for assessing shocks, the findings on the impacts of shocks do not generate clear recommendations for policy. There appears to be no systematic difference in condom use at last sex by household income levels or income shocks.
- ItemMetadata onlyMore financial aid is not the best way to close the racial gap in tertiary education(Econ3x3.org, 2015-05-28) Lam, David; Ardington, Cally; Branson, Nicola; Leibbrandt, Murray
- ItemMetadata onlyProgress through school and the determinants of school dropout in South AfricaBranson, Nicola; Hofmeyr, Clare; Lam, David
- ItemMetadata onlyProgress through school and the determinants of school dropout in South Africa(Development Southern Africa, 2015-05-28) Branson, Nicola; Hofmeyr, Clare; Lam, David
- ItemMetadata onlyRevisiting the ‘crisis’ in teen births: What is the impact of teen births on young mothers and their children?(Southern Africa Labour and Development Research Unit, 2015-05-28) Menendez, Alicia; Branson, Nicola; Lam, David; Ardington, Cally; Leibbrandt, Murray
- ItemMetadata onlySavings, Insurance and Debt over the Post-Apartheid Period: A Review of Recent Research(CSSR and SALDRU, 2015-05-28) Ardington, Cally; Lam, David; Leibbrandt, Murray; Levinsohn, James
- ItemMetadata onlySchooling as a lottery: Racial differences in school advancement in urban South Africa(Journal of Development Economics, 2015-05-28) Lam, David; Ardington, Cally; Leibbrandt, Murray
- ItemMetadata onlySchooling as a lottery: Racial differences in school advancement in urban South Africa(Southern Africa Labour and Development Research Unit, 2015-05-28) Lam, David; Ardington, Cally; Leibbrandt, Murray
- ItemMetadata onlySuggestions for the Education Module of the South Africa National Income Dynamics Study(2017-06-06) Ardington, Cally; Lam, David
- ItemMetadata onlyThe impact of AIDS on intergenerational support in South Africa: Evidence from the Cape Area Panel Study(Southern Africa Labour and Development Research Unit, 2015-05-28) Ardington, Cally; Case, Anne; Islam, Mahnaz; Lam, David; Leibbrandt, Murray; Menendez, Alicia; Olgiati, Anna
- ItemMetadata onlyThe influence of older classmates on adolescent sexual behavior in Cape Town, South Africa(Studies in Family Planning, 2015-05-28) Lam, David; Marteleto, Letitia; Ranchhod, Vimal
- ItemMetadata onlyThe matric certificate is still valuable in the labour market(Econ3x3.org, 2015-05-28) Hofmeyr, Clare; Branson, Nicola; Leibbrandt, Murray; Ardington, Cally; Lam, David