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Oluyemi Adeosun

Bio: Oluyemi Adeosun is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Electricity. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 1 publications receiving 1 citations.
Topics: Electricity

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Posted ContentDOI
03 Aug 2021
TL;DR: In this article, the authors assess the impact of household electricity access on labour market outcomes in Uganda and find that access to electricity significantly increases wages while decreasing the time spent at work.
Abstract: This study is designed to assess the impact of household electricity access on labour market outcomes in Uganda. The quasi-experimental method is applied on a sample of 28,035 households, divided into two counterfactual of treatment (n=8,925) and control (n=19,110) groups. Results strongly show that access to electricity significantly increases wages while decreasing the time spent at work. Specifically, the average wage of the households with access to electricity increased by 155%, 124% and 154% with the Kernel Matching (KM), Nearest-Neighbor Matching (NNM) and Radius Matching (RM) technique, respectively. The average job duration of households with electricity access decreased by 1.34%, 2.01% and 2.5% with KM, NNM and RM technique, respectively. It is recommended that the government of Uganda should increase electricity generation coverage through alternative sources as renewable and nuclear energy and improve the quality of existing energy infrastructures. JEL codes: C13, C31

1 citations


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TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated how electrification affects female and male labor supply decisions within rural households in Nigeria and found that such dependence is strongly at work and critical to consider when assessing the impact of electrification on spouses' labor supply outcomes.
Abstract: Using recent household survey data, this paper investigates how electrification affects female and male labor supply decisions within rural households in Nigeria. Focusing on matched husband-wife data, we propose to consider dependence in spouses' labor supply decisions and to address adequately zero hours of work using a copula-based bivariate hurdle model. In parallel, we opt for an instrumental variable strategy to identify the causal effect of electrification. Our findings show that such dependence is strongly at work and critical to consider when assessing the impact of electrification on spouses' labor supply outcomes. Electrification is found to increase the working time of both spouses in a separate examination of their labor supply, while the joint analysis emphasizes only a positive effect of electrification on husbands' working time. However, whatever the econometric specification, we find no significant effect of electricity on spouses' employment probability.

22 citations