Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10419/127419 
Year of Publication: 
2015
Series/Report no.: 
Discussion Paper Series No. 602
Publisher: 
University of Heidelberg, Department of Economics, Heidelberg
Abstract: 
This paper investigates the effects of India’s rural roads program (PMGSY) on morbidity, using data on 279 households drawn from 30 villages in a region of upland Orissa. The households were surveyed in 2010 and 2013, yielding an unbalanced panel of 1580 individuals, 1076 of whom were present in both years. Ten villages had received a direct all-weather road connection by 2013. Treating the village as a unit within the whole road network, the provision of a connection, whether direct or in the neighbourhood, is estimated to have reduced an inhabitant’s probability of falling sick by an estimated 3.6 percentage points, and the expected duration of incapacitating illness by 0.46 days, for each km. of unpaved track so replaced.
Subjects: 
Rural roads
morbidity
India
Persistent Identifier of the first edition: 
Document Type: 
Working Paper

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