Papers
AEJ Applied2026

Age at School Entry and Human Capital Development: Evidence from Lesotho

Jan-Walter De Neve, Ramaele Moshoeshoe, Jacob Bor

Source versions
1
Latest record
2026-04-01
Primary source
AEJ Applied
TL;DR

Evidence on school-entry age impacts in lower-income countries is limited.

AEJ AppliedEducationLaborRD
Metadata matches
Sources
AEJ Applied
Fields
EducationLabor
Methods and data
RD
Abstract

Evidence on school-entry age impacts in lower-income countries is limited. We assess how school starting age affects human capital development in Lesotho, exploiting an enrollment age threshold. Children who start primary school at older ages overcome initial skill deficits as they progress. They are more likely to remain in school, spend less time on economic and household activities, and obtain substantially higher total years of schooling. In adulthood they are more likely to have professional occupations and less likely to be married or have children as teenagers, become HIV infected (men), and experience the death of a child (women). (JEL I12, I21, I25, I26, J13, J24, O15)

Source versions
AEJ Applied2026-04-01
American Economic Journal Applied Economics 18(2):330-368
10.1257/app.20230709
Related papers