WORKING PAPER 08/234
Title:
Testing the impact of health, subjective life expectancy and interaction with peers and parents on educational expectations, using Cape Area Panel Survey Data
Author(s): Ariane De Lannoy
Date of Publication: December 2008
Price: R 5.00
Abstract
Theories of Human Social Capital Investment typically hypothesise that the
AIDS pandemic will have a negative influence on people’s real and subjective
life expectancy, and that it will consequently also impact negatively on their
willingness to invest in, for example, education. If such were the case, we would
expect to see an influence of HIV-related factors on young adults’ educational
expectations. Unlike previous analyses on expectations, this study therefore
analyses the significance of orphanhood, health, subjective life expectancy, and
perceived risk of HIV infection. Data were collected by the Cape Area Panel
Study (CAPS), covering an original sample of about 5000 young adults within
the Cape Town Metropolitan Area. Findings illustrate that educational
expectations are in fact very high among young adults, especially among those
of the most heavily affected African population group. Analyses do show a
remaining, significant and positive impact of health on expectations for all
population groups. Subjective life expectancy, however, is insignificant in all
groups. Perceived HIV risk is significantly negative only in the African sample,
which might indicate some validity of the mentioned hypotheses. The study
indicates, however, that measures of affectedness, health, perceived life
expectancy, and even perceived infection risk are poorly understood. I argue
therefore that much more in-depth work is needed to fully understand, for
example, young adults’ subjective life expectancy and expressions of health
before they can be used as building blocks in the development of influential
hypotheses.
To Order Download paper